The boom of thunder and crackle of lightning generally mean one thing: a storm is coming. Curiously, though, the biggest storms of all, hurricanes, are notoriously lacking in lightning. Hurricanes blow, they rain, they flood, but seldom do they crackle.
Surprise: During the record-setting hurricane season of 2005 three of the most powerful storms–Rita, Katrina, and Emily–did have lightning, lots of it. And researchers would like to know why.
A hurricane’s winds are mostly horizontal, not vertical. So the vertical churning that leads to lightning doesn’t normally happen.
It’s tempting to think that, because Emily, Rita and Katrina were all exceptionally powerful, their sheer violence somehow explains their lightning. But Blakeslee says that this explanation is too simple. “Other storms have been equally intense and did not produce much lightning,” he says. “There must be something else at work.”
Well, don’t ask me. I just look for stuff to read — written by experts. So much of today’s science is so fascinating — in so many fields, specialties — I wonder how a young student begins to decide upon a discipline.
Simple explanation: Last February a large alien space ship crashed into the South Atlantic ocean, releasing a generous dollop of The Force into the sea. It’s a no brainer.
These are actually force storms created when a dark Jedi duels…
OB: Star Wars: “Your lack of faith disturbs me.”
But seriously folks….
I haven’t been through a hurricane, but have been through Tropical Storm Frederick in 1979. Definitely some lightning once it was reduced to a tropical storm.
And then there are tornadoes associated with hurricanes. Tornadic activity is usually associated with supercells, which are especially big thunderstorms.
I wonder if the lightning activity in hurricanes simply wasn’t examined in the past because the wind damage (from the hurricane and the tornadoes) was far worse.
“Global warming… Corporations!!!”
-from Team America
“THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW”
Maybe hurricanes do not have lighning, but the tornadoes spawned by a hurricane do. In addition to 2 chimneys, 1/4 of my roof and several fences, I lost a tree to Wilma – not blown over – but electrocuted. We thought the boom was somthing hitting the house. The neighbor on that side and I coincidentally had the receivers in both our electric garage doors fried too.
All the damage that did occur in the neighborhood was neatly lined up in a path. And the freight train sound – yep – but Hurricanes do the same sound.