*Some people say they don’t see the gulf radar returns on certain apps.
*I may have jumped the gun on this one about the 58k’ cloud. Though unusual for a non tropical storm, cloud tops can get that high or higher for extremely strong convective storms.
I would expect all kinds of crazy weather in the coming months. I know 'Haarp'' doesn't exist, but they may use it anyway. 🤔😮😉
He's not kidding >>> https://www.wunderground.com/wundermap?lat=25.901&lon=-97.498&zoom=8&radar=1&wxstn=0
Their radar map needs to be updated - still says "Gulf of Mexico." lol
Whoa! Crazy!
Is this suppose to link to something? You say see radar returns, check the storm but have no sauce.
Just check a radar, see if it’s there south of Galveston.
https://www.wunderground.com/wundermap?lat=25.901&lon=-97.498&zoom=8&radar=1&wxstn=0
It,s working now, https://www.wunderground.com/wundermap?lat=25.901&lon=-97.498&zoom=8&radar=1&wxstn=0
I like this site: https://www.ventusky.com/
It's not uncommon for thunderstorms to tower tens of thousands of feet into the atmosphere, forcing pilots to navigate around them. Mature thunderstorms often reach 40,000 to 60,000 feet, and it is not unheard of to see thunderstorms reach upward of 75,000 feet in the tropics.
https://www.wunderground.com/article/news/weather/news/thunderstorm-cruising-altitude-commercial-aircraft
Nothing unusual. I've seen hella storms in my area. Gorilla hail! kek
The tropopause is conventionally accepted as the capping altitude for clouds, as it is where the stratosphere begins, causing a temperature inversion. Its altitude varies with latitude, being about 17 km at 0 deg latitude (equator) and 9 km at 90 deg latitude (pole). Using the latitude of El Paso, Texas (31.75 deg N) as a surrogate for North Mexico, the tropopause altitude would be about 10 km (32,800 ft). However, the tropopause altitude is at an inflection point where it can go much higher just a few degrees away, so it is not unreasonable that some clouds can be driven higher by strong convection.
Clouds are water vapour, how cold is it at 58,000ft?
Surely that’s insta-snow?
Low altitude clouds are a mixture of water vapor and water droplets. High altitude clouds are a mixture of water vapor and ice crystals. The rain generation process involves the accumulation of droplets that are cycled from low to higher altitudes where they freeze into hail and then melt on the down cycle. When they fail to melt, we get hail. The air temperature at 58,000 feet is about -55 C, far below freezing.
Thanks pal. That’s some cold air, what would stop the cloud turning to ice and falling as one big huge lump of ice?
They are ice, but in crystals. If particles are small enough, they become aerosols and viscous forces become more important in their movement than buoyancy. Also, the water vapor in which they are suspended is lighter than air, so the cloud mass has neutral buoyancy. When the crystals accumulate or grow, they become snow and precipitate (but mostly at lower altitudes).
I used to wonder at the question of how clouds could be water droplets, yet be aloft. Until I realized that the droplets are in equilibrium with their own vapor, and water vapor has a molecular weight of 18 and air has a molecular weight slightly higher than 28, so the water vapor was providing buoyancy.
It’s crazy until you realise air is a liquid.
Thanks KSR.
No, air is a gas. Water vapor is a gas, but there is both liquid water and solid water. Air is a fluid, but fluid media includes both gases and liquids.
Big thunderstorms regularly go to 50k feet and even a bit higher.
Regular supercell thunderstorms can go as high as 60k feet, its a common measure of the strength of the storm in question. Nothing to see here
Caution. Links with a ? mark are buggy sometimes
Who knows what crazy graphics they'll out in the weather maps.
Thunderheads building up because of the Summer heat is all I see. Not to say they cannot make this happen but in the South you have these giant thunderheads build up every afternoon this time of year all the way through Summer.