What are sundogs?

On a day with high ice clouds, you are likely to see shiny, colored regions at either side of the sun. These are sundogs, an optical effect caused by refraction and dispersion of the Sun’s light through ice crystals. When the light rays strike the boundary between the air and water, like an ice crystal, several things can happen. Some rays are turned back in the direction from which they came, the familiar process of reflection. Other rays are transmitted into the crystal. Some of the transmitted rays change direction, a process known as refraction.

Sundogs appear because ice crystals in the shape of hexagonal dinner plates tend to drift downward with their flat bases parallel to the ground. The sunlight passes through the crystal and refracts sideways. If the Sun is low enough in the sky, you see spots of bright light on one or both sides of the sun, depending on where the clouds are. Refraction causes blue light to be bent more than red light, and so sundogs can show a spectrum of colors with red nearest the Sun.

Sundogs are usually 22 degrees away from the sun, or about a hand width from the center of the Sun when your arm is fully extended. Sundogs are often accompanied by a halo around the sun. A halo is a white ring that encircles but does not touch the sun. It is an optical phenomenon that also owes its existence to refraction of light by ice crystals. Because the light must shine through a fairly uniform layer of ice crystals that are thin enough to let light through, halos are usually associated with high, thin cirrostratus clouds.

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Are there fall weather changes beyond turning leaves and falling temperatures?

As we head into the second half of August a subtle transition in our weather begins to occur — a transition that is probably hard to detect at first but that eventually becomes very obvious and then lasts for approximately eight months.

We are not talking about the gradual reduction in daytime high temperatures or the increasingly cooler to cold nights, though these are also beginning to invade. Instead, we are talking about the nature of the storms that deliver our precipitation.

Throughout the summer (even in this drought year), most of our precipitation comes in the form of thunderstorms wherein large amounts of precipitation fall in short amounts of time from what we call convective clouds. Most often these storms have lifecycles of only a few hours and drop precipitation over a relatively small area.

As we transition to late summer/early autumn, the thunderstorm frequency abruptly decreases and precipitation tends to occur in persistent, light to moderate rain events that will sometimes last an entire day. This mode of precipitation is associated with the passage of what are known as mid-latitude cyclones — storms that live for over a week during which time they can cover an area the size of 10 states.

As they progress across the country, these mid-latitude cyclones can drop precipitation (rain or snow) over enormous portions of the country. Though not entirely missing from summertime precipitation, such events are definitely the exception rather than the rule in the summer.

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What is a drought?

A drought means different things to different people. Technically, a drought is a period of abnormally dry weather sufficiently long enough in a given area to cause a shortage of water, whether it is for crops, recreation, water supply utilities or other purposes. As you can imagine, a drought for someone who lives in a desert region would be very different than for a person living among Wisconsin’s many lakes.

There are several definitions of drought, but in general there are three types. A meteorological drought is any substantial and prolonged lack of rainfall over a period of time in a given region. A hydrological drought is a deficiency in surface or subsurface water supplies. An agriculture drought exists when there is not enough soil moisture to meet the needs of a crop at a particular time.

Because there are different types of droughts, there are different methods of measuring the severity of a drought. For example, a meteorological drought can be defined in terms of the percent deviation from the normal precipitation in the region, while a hydrological drought is defined in terms of stream flow, lake levels and groundwater levels.

An effective measure of the impact of drought on agriculture is the Palmer Drought Severity Index. This index, developed in the 1960s, is based on the supply and demand of a water balance equation. It takes into account the precipitation deficit of a location, the temperature of the region and the locally available water content of the soil.

Currently, the Palmer Drought Severity Index lists southern Wisconsin as having “severe drought” conditions, though conditions are improving with the recent rains.

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Are there different types of lightning?

Lightning is a huge electrical discharge that results from the rising and sinking air motions that occur in thunderstorms. Lightning can be either cloud-to-cloud or cloud-to-ground and is accompanied by thunder. Lighting also has different appearances.

Staccato lightning is a cloud-to-ground lightning strike that is a short-duration stroke that often, but not always, appears as a single very bright flash and often has considerable branching. Forked lightning is a name, not in formal usage, for cloud-to-ground lightning that exhibits branching of its path. Ribbon lightning occurs in thunderstorms with high cross winds and multiple strokes. The wind will blow each successive stroke slightly to one side of the previous stroke, causing a ribbon appearance. Bead lightning is a type of cloud-to-ground lightning which appears to break up into a string of short, bright sections. It is relatively rare.

Heat lightning is a common name for a lightning flash that appears to produce no discernible thunder because it occurs too far away for the thunder to be heard. The sound waves dissipate before they reach the observer.

During the past two decades scientists have discovered and confirmed the existence of lightning that shoots upward into the upper atmosphere from thunderstorms. Red sprites and elves occur over cloud-to-ground lightning bolts and can extend to near the top of the atmosphere. They are too quick and weak to be seen by the naked eye. Blue jets, in contrast, are limited to the stratosphere and last long enough to be seen by pilots. Much is still not understood about these electrical phenomena.

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Will this be the hottest summer on record?

Our remarkably warm summer continues to take aim at some all-time record measures of heat here in Madison.

Just as we poked into the severe drought category on July 18, we were visited by fairly widespread heavy rains that night that delivered 1.43 inches of rain to Dane County Regional Airport. The morning of July 24 brought another 0.56 inches of rain and still more came that night into the morning of July 25. Thus, at least some relief of the drought has recently come our way.

Through the end of the day on July 24, Madison had had 28 days with high temperatures at or above 90 degrees. The all-time record number of such days is 40 recorded in 1955 (two were in June, 19 were in July, 15 were in August and four were in September that year).

In the last 41 years, only six summers (1975, 1976, 1983, 1988, 1995 and 2012) have had 20 or more such days. Of the five such summers before this one, the number of days at or above 90 degrees after July 31 was seven, 10, six, 16, and 10, respectively.

In other words, in such warm summers in the past, we have averaged 9.8 days at or above 90 in August and September. Given that we are very likely to have totaled 30 such days by the end of this July, if past trends in such years apply to 2012, it is quite likely that this summer will set the all-time record for most days at or above 90 degrees in Madison.

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