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Thunderstorms affect relatively small areas when compared with hurricanes and winter storms. The typical thunderstorm is 15 miles in diameter and lasts an average of 30 minutes. Nearly 1,800 thunderstorms are occurring at any moment around the world. That's 16 million a year!
Despite their small size, all thunderstorms are dangerous. Every thunderstorm produces lightning, which kills more people each year than tornadoes. Heavy rain from thunderstorms can lead to flash flooding. Strong winds, hail, and tornadoes are also dangers associated with some thunderstorms.
Of the estimated 100,000 thunderstorms that occur each year in the United States, only about 10 percent are classified as severe.
Your National Weather Service considers a thunderstorm severe if it produces hail at least 3/4-inch in diameter, wind 58 mph or higher, or tornadoes.
Take the time now to understand these dangers and learn basic safety rules!
Contact your local National Weather Service office, American Red Cross chapter, or local emergency management office for a copy of "Flash Floods and Floods...The Awesome Power" (NOAA PA 92050/ARC 4493) and "Tornadoes...Nature's Most Violent Storms" (NOAA PA 92052/ARC 5002).
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In recent years, sophisticated lightning detection equipment has monitored cloud-to-ground lightning strikes. The map at right shows which areas were most prone to lightning during one year.
A cloud-to-ground lightning strike begins as an invisible channel of electrically charged air moving from the cloud toward the ground. When one channel nears an object on the ground, a powerful surge of electricity from the ground moves upward to the cloud and produces the visible lightning strike!
Heat lightningoccurs after very hot summer days and poses no threat.
When skies darken or thunderstorms are forecast, look and listen for:
To estimate the distance in miles between you and the lightning flash, count the seconds between the lightning and the thunder and divide by five.
Doppler Radars, which are being strategically deployed around the country, are capable of seeing inside
a thunderstorm to detect hazardous weather conditions. New storms often form along leading edge of the storm's cool-air outflow; this feature is able to be detected on Doppler Radar.
Stay informed about the storm by listening to NOAA Weather Radio, commercial radio, and television for the latest severe thunderstorm Watches and Warnings.
When conditions are favorable for severe weather to develop, a severe thunderstorm Watch is issued.
Weather Service personnel use information from weather radar, satellite, lightning detection, spotters, and other sources to issue severe thunderstorm Warnings for areas where severe weather is imminent.
Severe thunderstorm warnings are passed to local radio and television stations and are broadcast over local NOAA Weather Radio stations serving the warned areas. These warnings are also relayed to local emergency management and public safety officials who can activate local warning systems to alert communities.
NOAA Weather Radio is the best means to receive warnings from the national weather service.
The National Weather Service continuously broadcasts updated weather warnings and forecasts that can be received by NOAA Weather Radios, which are sold in many stores. The average range is 40 miles, depending on topography. Your National Weather Service recommends purchasing a radio that has both a battery backup and a tone-alert feature that automatically alerts you when a watch or warning is issued.
Families should be prepared for all hazards that could affect their area. NOAA's National Weather Service, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and the American Red Cross urge every family to develop a family disaster plan.
Where will your family be when disaster strikes? They could be anywhere at work, at school, or in the car. How will you find each other? Will you know if your children are safe? Disaster may force you to evacuate your neighborhood or confine you to your home. What would you do if basic services water, gas, electricity or telephones were cut off?
Follow these basic steps to develop a family disaster plan...
Source:
A PREPAREDNESS GUIDE FROM THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Weather Service
January 1994
NOAA, FEMA, The American Red Cross
Every thunderstorm needs:
Thunderstorms are most likely to happen in the spring and summer months and during the afternoon and evening hours, but can occur year-round and at all hours. Along the Gulf Coast and across the southeastern and western states, most thunderstorms occur during the afternoon. Thunderstorms frequently occur in the late afternoon and at night in the Plains states. Thunder and lightning occasionally accompany snow or freezing rain. During the blizzard of March 1993, lightning resulted in power outages near Washington, D.C.!