Research news on local storm

A local storm is a mesoscale atmospheric phenomenon characterized by convective or frontal activity confined to a limited geographic area and short temporal duration, typically driven by localized instabilities in temperature, moisture, and wind fields. It often arises from buoyant updrafts in conditionally unstable air masses, enhanced by mesoscale convergence zones such as sea breezes, orography, or differential surface heating. Local storms can include intense precipitation, gusty winds, lightning, and occasionally hail or downbursts, with spatial scales from a few to tens of kilometers. Their evolution is strongly influenced by boundary-layer processes and vertical wind shear, making them challenging to predict with coarse-resolution numerical models.

Tornadoes kill more than 20 in south-central US

Severe storms swept through the US states of Missouri and Kentucky, leaving at least 21 people dead, laying waste to local communities and cutting off electricity to nearly 200,000 people, authorities said Saturday.

What makes a 1-in-1,000-year storm, really?

In July 2022, dramatic thunderstorms swept across the central United States, drenching the region and causing historic flash flooding. The heaviest rain fell on the greater St. Louis metropolitan area July 26 and then moved ...

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