No. Its is the other way around. Thunderstorms usually dissipated when the downdraft overpowers the updraft. The updraft is what drives a thunderstorm.
Thunderstorms can travel hundreds of miles, sometimes even across continents, depending on the atmospheric conditions and wind patterns. They typically move with the prevailing winds, which can vary in speed and direction. However, some thunderstorms can also form and dissipate in a localized area, not traveling far from their point of origin.
Tornadoes are typically produced by thunderstorms called supercells.
Cirrus clouds generally do not bring thunderstorms. They are high-level clouds composed of ice crystals and are typically associated with fair weather. Thunderstorms are usually associated with cumulonimbus clouds, which are large and dense clouds that can reach high altitudes and produce thunder, lightning, and heavy precipitation.
Tornadoes are produced by very strong thunderstorms. Thunderstorms typically produce rain.
Thunderstorms typically include lightning as a result of electrical discharge between clouds or between a cloud and the ground. However, in some cases, thunderstorms can occur without visible lightning due to certain weather conditions, such as the absence of sufficient charge separation or the lightning occurring within the cloud itself, known as "intra-cloud" lightning.
Thunderstorms can travel hundreds of miles, sometimes even across continents, depending on the atmospheric conditions and wind patterns. They typically move with the prevailing winds, which can vary in speed and direction. However, some thunderstorms can also form and dissipate in a localized area, not traveling far from their point of origin.
Tornadoes are produced by very strong thunderstorms. Thunderstorms typically produce rain.
memory
Thunderstorms form high up in the sky (troposphere). They typically form over land, but not necessarily.
Typically they form in rain forest usually during spring or summer.
Typically a couple months on average.
Fronts are typically associated with rain showers and thunderstorms.
heat sinks
Tornadoes are typically produced by thunderstorms called supercells.
All tornadoes form in thunderstorms and so are typically accompanied by thunder and lightning.
Yes, they can on occasions, but they will likely be of the landspout variety. Such tornadoes are typically weak.
Tornadoes are produce my strong thunderstorms. Typically these thunderstorms form along a boundary where cool air pushes into a mass of warm air, forcing it upward.