Actually, water evaporated into water vapor, the water vapor meet cold air, causing condensation to occur, creating clouds. For this to happen the parcel of air at the level must be saturated, aka, 100% humidity, so the excess water vapor can start to spill out and start the condensation process. This is why humid is important for a good storm to occur. After this cumulus clouds will be formed, and they can start to merge together both horizontally and vertically, cresting the cumulonimbus. After that the cumulonimbus can basically “splatter” on the tropopause, which acts as a ceiling, due to the area above being too warm causing the cumulonimbus to beginning forming mostly horizontally. This type of cumulonimbus can be referred to as an anvil cloud. After this we can explain the supercell now. For the supercell to form, air on the ground needs to moves a different direction than in the atmosphere. This cause a horizontal tube of air to form. After rising warm air in the storm, or updrafts, occur, this can flip the tube into a vertical orientation. This causes the whole storm to start rotating, creating a mesocyclone, which can then be called a supercell. So no god does not have anything to do with this, rather the peculiar nature of the atmospheric sciences .
Due to the atmosphere having a lot of instability and upper level shear with winds turning with height the energy of the storm feeds of the instability, moisture and heat from the storm. I could assume the winds turned with height and winds increased but that is one way of the cause of super cellular storms. There is many ways. Could you describe how this storm was formed?
Im not a pro but from my logic: the upper clouds that were heated by the sun would get a different temperature than the bottom part of the cloud, so the difference in the temperatures with some X more factors to it would start the dynamics of the wheel for a storm or a supercell storm to be formed. But my guess is that the difference in the temperatures is the heads up start that pulls more dynamics to come into a play.
So these clouds I see out here (Colorado) they are Monsters. I always wondered why a cloud would need to be that big, I wish I could show you some of the pictures I’ve taken of these absolutely enormous clouds that form somewhere towards the Eastern Plains of Colorado, east of the Mountains. It’s incredible
Perfect text book example of how the horizontal vortex got split in half by the powerful updraft and created two opposite spinning updrafts. The anti cyclonic one on the left will either die or become the left moving hailer cell, and the right one spinning cyclonic will be the one that matures to possibly drop a tornado.
How it rains: The sun staring at a pond of water when it gets hot, turns into gas and goes to the sky whenever the cloud is On top. When the gas touches the cloud, it starts raining
Really? Where I live, storms like this pop up out of nowhere several times a month during the spring/summer. They look like atomic bombs, truly a sight to behold. Less than a week ago I was surrounded by 3 of them, with clear skies right above me
As a person who has seen a tornado form. I have a tip for people who live or are going to live in big fields. Don’t live in big fields. Live somewhere where there are houses or mountains. Then it’s most likely that you won’t see a tornado.
Mountains sure but houses? It’s a myth that they don’t hit cities because they do - in the US & europe around 3 tornadoes hit cities with over 50K pop directly each year excluding surburbs and what not
Mountains take a lot of the impact from massive storms, resulting in lots of snow usually. If you live deep in the mountains, winters are BRUTAL. However, if you're okay with that, go on your merry way. It's not like people who move there don't know what they're getting into. Just... Get yourself an off-road/snow capable vehicle. Snowmobiles are especially magical in certain scenarios. Although I suppose it depends on the mountains. Some mountains are just over glorified hills.
@@CodyUnderstorms a little longer than I expected. I was in Wisconsin, and I watched a supercell develop a few feet ahead of me. This one took anywhere from 20 minutes, maybe longer.
And I like how it gets big and then it’s like very dark so fasinating idk if I spelt it right but correct me if I’m wrong. And creepy at the same time.
@@Seek203 The phone has a camera, therefore the man recording could be referred to as a cameraman. More importantly, why would he unal*ve from this? It's just a storm in the distance lol
"Here is the task I cannot finish - Here, the words I will not speak. Here, the black pool in the storm cloud. Here, the blind spot [Read. More.] in the glance of an eye." -{-Yves Bonnefoy}