Define it!
True or False?
Clouds
Precipitation
Thunderstorms
Grab Bag
100

This type of lightning typically accompanies thunderstorms and is commonly referred to as “sheet lightning.”

Cloud-to-cloud lightning
(lights up the sky in big sheets)

100

The stepped leader of a lightning bolt is responsible for most of its light and sound.

False (the return stroke is responsible)

100

This kind of cloud is needed for a tornado to form.

Cumulonimbus

100

This is the difference between drizzle and rain.

The size of the raindrop (drizzle has very small water droplets, while raindrops are bigger)

100

This is what starts a thunderstorm.

A strong updraft of air

100

This is why lightning bolts strike targets that are high.

Positive charges in the ground tend to pile up in a tall object (to get closest to the negative charges in the cloud)

200

This type of lightning is not as common in thunderstorms and strikes the ground in a bolt.

Cloud-to-ground lightning

200

The most destructive stage of a tornado is its mature stage.

True

200

This type of cloud starts the Bergeron process.

Cold cumulonimbus cloud

200

This is the difference between sleet, hail, and freezing rain.

Sleet is much smaller than hail, but both are frozen before hitting the ground. Freezing rain is liquid until it hits a cold surface. (Also, unlike sleet, hail is recycled several times through a cloud before falling.)

200

This is where the thunder in a thunderstorm comes from.

It is from superheated air traveling out from a lightning bolt in waves. (When the waves hit our eardrums, we interpret them as sound.)

200

These are the conditions in the eye of a hurricane.

Calm
(often sunny, as well)

300

A current of rising air.

Updraft

300

The five stages of a tornado in order are: the whirl stage, the organizing stage, the mature stage, the shrinking stage, and the decaying stage.

True

300

This type of cloud starts the Collision-coalescence process.

Warm nimbostratus cloud

300

Not considered to be precipitation, these two forms of atmospheric moisture bring water back to earth.

Dew and Frost (Unlike precipitation, they form on surfaces rather than fall from the sky.)

300

These are the three stages of a thunderstorm cell.

1. Cumulus stage, 2. Mature stage, and 3. Dissipation stage

300

This is used to determine which classification a building hurricane is in.

Wind speed

400

A substance that does not conduct electricity very well.

Insulator

400

The 4 classifications that lead to a hurricane are, in order: tropical cyclone, tropical disturbance, tropical depression, tropical storm.

False
(tropical cyclone is last, with the highest wind speed; starting w/tropical disturbance the rest are in order)

400

During this stage of a thunderstorm, as the updraft pulls more and more warm, moist air into the atmosphere, a rapidly growing cumulus cloud begins to form.

Cumulus stage

400

This process describes precipitation from a nimbostratus cloud, which is lower in the atmosphere and is likely to be warm.

Collision-coalescence process

400

Lightning forms due to an electrical charge imbalance. The imbalance starts 1. here and happens due to 2. this.

1. Starts in a cumulonimbus cloud 2. Due to water droplets or ice crystals rubbing against each other in glancing collisions

400

This term describes the temperature at which dew forms, and depends on the pressure and humidity of the air.

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