Is the Occluded Front
I think it is called a - Squall Line - a solid or nearly solid line or band of active thunderstorms.
May Day on the Front Line was created in 1993.
Squall Leonhart's lover is Rinoa Heartily.Though some fanfictions may say otherwise. :D
A Thunderhead is a type of cloud. A Thunderhead may be seen during a thunderstorm and the best chance to see them would be along cold front squall lines.
A soldier in the front line may be there for about 70 days in a year.
In the South, tornadoes are most often associated with a cold front, though in Texas they may form along a dry line. In some cases, though, the tornadoes may form without a front. For example, landfalling hurricanes, which are not associated with fronts, often spawn tornadoes.
A tornado is not necessarily associated with a front at all. Tornadoes will often form along or ahead of a cold front or dry line, and can occasionally form along a wamr front. One common area where tornadoes may form is Larko's triangle, which is near the center of a low pressure system between the cold front, the warm front, and the first isobar. Tornadoes will often form in the outerbands of a tropical cyclone, where no fronts are involved.
A squall will usually occur when there is active weather, such as thunderstorms, rain showers or heavy snow. There is an increase of wind over a short period of time and there may higher gusts of wind.
The squall may have passed you but the rain is still falling elsewhere. If sunlight passes through the rain, you will see a rainbow as the water droplets work as a prism and split the sunlight into it's component colours.
The symbol of a squall often represents sudden and intense upheaval or turmoil, reflecting the unpredictable nature of life and emotions. In literature and art, it can signify conflict, chaos, or a transformative event that disrupts the status quo. Additionally, a squall may symbolize a looming crisis or challenge that necessitates resilience and adaptability in the face of adversity.
A squall is a weather phenomenon, a string gust of wind often associated with storms. It does not have adaptations.
No. Significant tornadoes can occur in areas below a 10% probability. In 2013, for example, an EF4 tornado killed 6 people in Granbury Texas, even though the SPC never listed a tornado risk higher than 5%. Presenting such percentages somewhat oversimplifies a scenario. In some cases, severe thunderstorms may be few and far between, but those that do develop pose a significant threat. In other cases low probabilities are not the result of actual low potential but a lack of consensus between predictions. For example, in some events it may not be clear whether storms will primarily form a squall line or discrete supercells. Risk percentages would consider both scenarios and split the difference. If the storms form a squall line, the tornado risk will be lower than forecast, if they form supercells, the risk will be higher.