IT is called CONVECTION
The primary cause of damaging winds in a thunderstorm is something called a downburst. This occurs when a mass of air within a thunderstorm cools and starts to fall. It hits the ground at great speed and spreads out horizontally, producing damaging winds that in some cases can be well over 100 mph.
Large chunks of frozen water falling from the sky are called hail. Hail forms when strong updrafts and downdrafts within a thunderstorm cause water droplets to freeze into ice pellets before falling to the ground.
Vertical grooves are called "striations."
A fault with little or no vertical movement is called a strike-slip fault. In this type of fault, the rocks on either side of the fault move horizontally past each other, usually in a side-to-side motion. This movement can cause earthquakes when the stress along the fault overcomes friction and the rocks suddenly slip.
GRANA is the answer to:vertical stacks of disks are called
IT is called CONVECTION
there are four options 1. wind 2. air current 3. air turbulence 4. air mobility
The mature stage of a thunderstorm is called the cumulonimbus stage. This is when the storm has reached its peak intensity, with strong updrafts and downdrafts, leading to heavy precipitation and thunder and lightning.
convection cell
The tornado itself is vertical when it first forms. The rotation that forms it starts out as what is called horizontal vorticity. This vorticity can get caught in the updraft of a thunderstorm, tilting it into a vertical position. The new vertical rotation joins with the updraft to become a mesocyclone. Under the right conditions the mesocyclone can tighten and intensify to produce a tornado.
The primary cause of damaging winds in a thunderstorm is something called a downburst. This occurs when a mass of air within a thunderstorm cools and starts to fall. It hits the ground at great speed and spreads out horizontally, producing damaging winds that in some cases can be well over 100 mph.
A geodetic instrument called an extensometer or tiltmeter is used to measure tiny vertical or horizontal movements of markers set up on opposite sides of a fault. These instruments can detect even small changes in the Earth's crust, helping to monitor potential fault movements and seismic activity.
Convection currents are the vertical circular movements of fluids that transfer due to changes in density.
Such thunderstorms are called supercells.
Vertical grooves are called "striations."
Large chunks of frozen water falling from the sky are called hail. Hail forms when strong updrafts and downdrafts within a thunderstorm cause water droplets to freeze into ice pellets before falling to the ground.
Thermal Updrafts