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Daily Archives: January 27, 2025
Is there such a thing as “thundersnow”?
A reader recently asked us if thunder ever occurs with snowfall. It turns out that such “thundersnow” does, in fact, occur occasionally in very intense winter storms. Clouds and precipitation develop when the air is forced to rise to higher heights where the pressure is always lower. The rising air expands into its lower pressure environment and the expansion results in a cooling of the air. This cooling raises the relative humidity of the air and sometimes brings it to saturation, at which point invisible water vapor condenses into liquid water or goes straight to the solid ice phase. During winter, the dynamical forces that create ascending air are very strong and well organized on large scales. However, the stability of the stratification is stronger, partly because the air is generally much drier, which discourages thunderstorm development. During summertime the large-scale is less organized but there is more abundant water vapor, weaker stratification and stronger individual updrafts of air that form intense thunderstorms. Thundersnow is not very common because it requires moist, poorly stratified air (more characteristic of the warm season) and strong large-scale dynamics (more characteristic of the cold season) to occur simultaneously. Continue reading