Depends on what crap looks like
Posted by
Mike_Doran on 8/14/2009, 3:07 pm
I am going to agree and disagree with you. Inbetween TDII and 90L is the zone I am looking at and assuming as you appear to be agreeing with me the creation of ozone that then gets 'coupled' to the fair weather area inbetween these two storms could cause subsistance.
Imagine, for instance, that there are cirrus clouds in the outflow of a tropical storm. Cirrus clouds are basically tiny ice crystals which have the properties more than just about any cloud of reflecting IR heat back down to earth. Basically they help keep the warm core warm and I could get you studies to back this up, but you can look them up yourself with the researchers "Hartmann" and "Fu" out of UWash.
So if you push down just a tiny bit on those clouds they are into warmer zones of the atmosphere and they melt faster . . . trap heat slightly less, and they go away and the atmosphere relatively subsists.
So with that I agree.
However, where the water in the storm is on either side of where electrics is playing the storm has moisture that BLOCKs couplings, as water, particularly ice water, is a very strong dielectric. There this moist air is drawn into the surface low and convection occurs explosively. On the opposing sides of the storms the coupling isn't occurring and the cirrus is trapping a lot of heat. This leads to an organization of the storms over time. It's an electrical organization or pattern, not just a barotropical one.
Meanwhile both storms have been drawing warm and moist, and also coupled air to their southwest. |
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In this thread:
EMF discussion of TD2 -
Mike_Doran,
8/12/2009, 1:07 pm- Update 8/14 - Mike_Doran, 8/14/2009, 2:50 pm
- Oops. Weeks. NT. - Mike_Doran, 8/14/2009, 2:57 pm
- X-ray Glasses - JAC, 8/14/2009, 2:56 pm
- Depends on what crap looks like - Mike_Doran, 8/14/2009, 3:07 pm
- Xray activity died-so has TD2 - Mike_Doran, 8/13/2009, 1:28 am
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