Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAnd For My 45,000th Post: 3 CA Fires Hot/Big Enough To Produce Clouds Typical Of Volcanic Eruptions
Three terrible wildfires are burning in California right now. And all three are more visually menacing than usual, thanks to a unique weather phenomenon the flames are creating. The fires are burning so hot that they're making their own pyrocumulus cloud systems, each up to five miles high. These clouds are also making firefighting efforts more difficult.
Normal clouds are formed when the sun heats the earths surface, causing water to evaporate and rise into the atmosphere, where it cools and condenses into a cloud. This is a relatively slow process compared to the formation of a pyrocumulus cloud, where the intense heat of a huge wildfire burns the moisture out of the vegetation. This moisture then accumulates on smoke particles and rapidly condenses as it rises.
Pyrocumulus clouds are more commonly seen above volcanic eruptions, which produce lots of steam. If youve ever seen an evil-looking cloud creating dry lightning above a volcano, thats a pyrocumulus cloud. Theyre colored black or dark brown by the volcanic ash, whereas ones created by wildfires are usually dark gray, due to the smoke and ash.
The speed with which pyrocumulus clouds form and change, combined with the heat of the fire, can lead to quick, massive temperature swings in the atmosphere, producing unpredictable and severe winds. These can exacerbate the intensity of wildfires, and cause them to move or otherwise behave in unpredictable ways. And that all can put the lives of firefighters and the public at risk.
EDIT
https://www.outsideonline.com/2330891/california-wildfire-pyrocumulus-clouds
lunasun
(21,646 posts)NNadir
(33,518 posts)...someone has to do it.
I like your voice.
hatrack
(59,585 posts)And did I mention absolutely no shortage of material?