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Global Warming to Fuel More Severe Tornadoes and Thunderstorms

Global warming will make severe thunderstorms and tornadoes a more common feature of U.S. weather, NASA scientists said today.


Climate models have previously shown that Earth will see more heavy rainstorms as the atmosphere warms, but a new climate model developed by NASA researchers is the first to show the difference in strength between storms that occur over land and those over the ocean and how storms strengths will change in general.


The models don’t directly simulate thunderstorms and lightning, but look for conditions that are ripe for severe storms to form.


The model was tested against current climate conditions and produced well known major global storm features, including the high levels of lightning seen over Africa and the Amazon basin and the near absence of lightning in ocean storms.


Researchers then ran the model for a future climate scenario where carbon dioxide levels were double their current level and the Earth’s surface was 5 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than it is now. The model’s projections showed that continents warm more than oceans (a result which is expected because water needs to absorb more heat than land to raise its temperature) and that lightning occurs at a higher altitude where storms are usually more vigorous.


These effects would combine to cause more continental storms to be of the strongest kind we see today, though there would be fewer storms overall.


LiveScience



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