The stage of a thunderstorm that rain begins to fall is when the clouds begin to turn black and during and after the lightning strikes.
The precipitation stage
it is dangerous to shelter under a tree during a lightning storm because the tree is likely to be hit so it will fall on you and you'll get squashed.
That depends entirely on how heavy the precipitation is. Usually instead of individual drops, rainfall is measured in mm.
Heavy precipitation is an example of one of the effects of a thunderstorm. They can also cause trees to fall, and damage power lines.
The first stage is the cumulus cloud stage in which the fluffy cumulus cloud in an unstable (warm and moist near surface and very cold aloft) builds into a towing cumulus. All we have is an updraft! In the next stage, the mature stage rain begins to fall dragging down cool air and evaporating into the downdraft and cooling it. Then we have an updraft and a downdraft together. When the mature thunderstorm reaches way up in the atmospehere to the tropopause (boundary between the layer of the atmospehere where sensible weather occurs and the stratosphere) an anvil shape becomes evident. The final stage is the dissipating stage. The rain and rain cooled air become so dominant that the updraft dies and all that is left is the downdraft. The thunderstorm dies without an updraft.
Temperatures fall with height in a thunderstorm cell. Temperatures generally fall with height in the atmosphere unless there's an inversion present (and those lead to a stable atmosphere not favorable for thunderstorm development)....So if there's thunderstorms present, temperatures should be falling with height.
The Cumulus stage
No. Hail consists of pieces of ice that fall during a thunderstorm. The energy they have is kinetic energy.
it is dangerous to shelter under a tree during a lightning storm because the tree is likely to be hit so it will fall on you and you'll get squashed.
There will Probably lightning in the thunderstorm and the lightning is Probably going to hit the tallest object and electrocute anyone and anything that is near the struck object. Also the tall object might fall over during the thunderstorm and crush anyone or anything nearby.
if the temperature is above 90 degrees ,the answer is no !
That depends entirely on how heavy the precipitation is. Usually instead of individual drops, rainfall is measured in mm.
Heavy precipitation is an example of one of the effects of a thunderstorm. They can also cause trees to fall, and damage power lines.
The first stage is the cumulus cloud stage in which the fluffy cumulus cloud in an unstable (warm and moist near surface and very cold aloft) builds into a towing cumulus. All we have is an updraft! In the next stage, the mature stage rain begins to fall dragging down cool air and evaporating into the downdraft and cooling it. Then we have an updraft and a downdraft together. When the mature thunderstorm reaches way up in the atmospehere to the tropopause (boundary between the layer of the atmospehere where sensible weather occurs and the stratosphere) an anvil shape becomes evident. The final stage is the dissipating stage. The rain and rain cooled air become so dominant that the updraft dies and all that is left is the downdraft. The thunderstorm dies without an updraft.
Temperatures fall with height in a thunderstorm cell. Temperatures generally fall with height in the atmosphere unless there's an inversion present (and those lead to a stable atmosphere not favorable for thunderstorm development)....So if there's thunderstorms present, temperatures should be falling with height.
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Convection cause the rising of air, rising air expands due to decreased pressure, which causes it to cool, which causes condenation. Condensation = rapid cloud building. The cumulus stage is characterized by updraft only.
the lightning can fall on plants and it can kill the plants