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Chapter 3 Weather Patterns Section 2 Storms
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What Is A Storm? A storm is a violent disturbance in the atmosphere.
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Thunderstorms are heavy rainstorms with thunder and lightning.
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Lightning During a thunderstorm, positive and negative charges build up. Lightning is a sudden spark, or discharge, of these charges in one of 3 ways: Within one cloud From cloud to cloud From cloud to ground
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Tornadoes A tornado is a rapidly whirling, funnel-shaped cloud that reaches down from a storm cloud to touch Earth’s surface.
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How Tornadoes Form Tornadoes develop in low, heavy, cumulonimbus clouds – the same clouds that bring thunderstorms. Most likely to occur in spring and early summer, usually found in the middle of the U.S.
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Hurricanes A hurricane is a tropical storm with winds of 119 km/h or higher. In the Pacific ocean, hurricanes are called typhoons.
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How Hurricanes Form A hurricane begins over warm water as a low-pressure area, or tropical disturbance. If it grows in size and strength, it will become a tropical storm, which may then become a hurricane.
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How Hurricanes Form A hurricane gets its energy from warm, humid air.
The southern Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico provide the heat and moisture needed to feed a very large hurricane.
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The Eye of the Hurricane
The center of the hurricane is a ring of clouds surrounding a quiet “eye.” The winds get stronger as you get closer to the eye, but once you are in the eye, it calms down suddenly.
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Hurricane Damage One of the most dangerous features of a hurricane is the storm surge. A storm surge is a “dome” of water that sweeps across the coast where the hurricane lands.
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Lake-Effect Snow When a continental polar air mass (cold and dry) crosses a body of water, it picks up moisture and gets a bit warmer. This warm air rises, cools, condenses, and falls back down as snow.
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Lake Effect Snow
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