Severe Thunderstorm Warning

A severe thunderstorm warning is issued when trained spotters or doppler radar indicate a strong thunderstorm is producing dangerously large hail or high winds, capable of causing significant damage. It does not account for lightning or flooding. In the U.S., the National Weather Service defines large hail as being at least 3/4 inch (19mm) in diameter, and high winds as being 55 miles per hour (88km/h) or greater. A severe thunderstorm warning means there is significant danger for the warned area. In rare instances, severe thunderstorms can and do produce a tornado without warning. Frequently, a severe thunderstorm will produce serious wind damage as severe as a tornado. Some storms, especially in the Great Plains, may produce massive hailstones the size of baseballs or even grapefruit, falling fast enough to kill a person by repeated blunt trauma. Everyone in the path of such a storm should take cover immediately, as it is very dangerous and possibly life-threatening. In the United States, the National Weather Service issues warnings for tornados and severe thunderstorms on a per-county basis. A warning must not be confused with a severe thunderstorm watch.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
norman borlaug
mike judge
jungfrau
coital alignment technique
will durant
100 mile house, british columbia
108 mile ranch airport
flat coated retriever
konkordiaplatz
slate (disambiguation)
emirate
slate (language)
tornado warning
1989 in aviation
charles kettering
canter & siegel
precedence
jan hendrik schn
classification of demons
microscope image processing
frank wilczek
hierarchy of demons
tornado watch
severe thunderstorm watch
openlab
beauceron
deconvolution
odr
larry agran
color gel
newspaper rock state historic monument
number of demons
gobo
grus
laurent garnier
shared nothing architecture
reliable system design
peene
vorpommern
ramapough mountain indians
irvine company
tabla
list of electronic music artists and djs
robozilla