Cap'n Jack
Final Approach
I read thid from AOPA Flight Training:
I have a picture in my mind of what's happening...but not how the storms form.
What's the trigger that causes the uplift? Why does the low level jet cause the storm to form?
Thanks much!
MCCs grow and continue after sunset because low-level jet streams bring in warm, humid air from the Gulf of Mexico. They begin blowing when the ground south of the thunderstorms cools after sunset. As this happens, an inversion- air aloft that's warmer than the air at ground level-forms because the air aloft doesn't cool as fast as air next to the ground.
The inversion shuts down the up-and-down air motions that make flights on sunny days bumpy at low altitudes. Meteorologists say that an inversion decouples the upper-altitude winds from the surface. Without slow-moving air rising from below and some of the fast-moving air aloft sinking, the air aloft is no longer "connected" to slow-moving air near the ground. In the morning as the sun heats the ground the inversion is erased and the low-level jet fades away. When this happens, the MCC's thunderstorms weaken and die. But, the MCC itself isn't completely dead. During the night an area of low atmospheric pressure with the winds blowing counterclockwise around it forms 15,000 to 20,000 feet above the ground in the MCC. After the rest of the MCC fades away in the morning, upper air winds carry the swirl of low-pressure air toward the east where it can organize any thunderstorms that form under it into another MCC.
I have a picture in my mind of what's happening...but not how the storms form.
What's the trigger that causes the uplift? Why does the low level jet cause the storm to form?
Thanks much!