Swirling supercell thunderstorms brewed over the border between North
and South Carolina in May, showering the area with chunks of hail as big
as baseballs.
The huge storm column stretched 50,000 feet (15,000 meters) tall. NASA's Earth Observatory recently
released a photo that a pilot took as he flew an ER-2 aircraft over the
storms on May 23. Normal commercial airplanes fly at around 30,000 feet
(9,000 m), but the ER-2 soared around 65,000 feet (20,000 m).
An anvil-shaped cloud typically
forms in a thunderstorm when cooler winds push warm air up into the
atmosphere, and a particularly powerful updraft can produce a huge
dome-shaped cap called an "overshooting top." Severe storms, like the
supercell in the photo, tend to have large and long-lasting overshooting
tops.
A spinning vortex of air called a mesocyclone lies at the heart of a
supercell. When the mesocyclone interacts with strong updrafts, the
storms can churn out tornadoes and produce destructive hailstorms.
Most of the supercells over the Carolinas in May produced quarter-size
hail, but some of the strongest storms rained down baseball-size pieces.
The ER-2 flight was part of a mission called the Integrated
Precipitation and Hydrology Experiment (IPHEx) led by NASA, Duke
University and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) that ran from May 1 to June 15. IPHEx was designed to evaluate
the accuracy of satellite precipitation estimates compared to ground
measurements. Researchers set up ground rain gauges and radar to measure
true rainfall amounts. The team then compares the true precipitation
measurements to about 95 hours' worth of precipitation data collected by
satellites and two aircraft.
NASA hopes to use the data to create models to predict storm activity
over the Appalachian Mountains and measure how much water remains in
rivers and aquifers. The models could help direct water conservation
efforts and help predict floods and landslides around the area's rivers.
IPHEx is part of a
larger mission called Global Precipitation Project, a joint effort
between NASA and Japan's Aerospace Exploration Agency to monitor global rainfall and snowfall.
The mission uses a constellation of satellites that work together to
record worldwide precipitation data every 2 to 3 hours. Scientists hope
the data will reveal more about water cycle patterns around the world.
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