Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T16:02:16.529Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Thunderstorm Project

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2016

Extract

The thunderstorm was a hazard which had still not been investigated at the end of the war, a hazard that had caused many serious aircraft accidents. No longer could the old admonition to stay out of thunderstorms be strictly followed by commercial or military pilots, whose flights could not be restricted to fair weather so as to avoid the severe turbulence occurring inside most thunderstorms.

This led to the ‘Thunderstorm Project’ in the USA in 1946-47 in Florida and Ohio'. Since the hazardous features of a thunderstorm are associated with individual cells, it is important for an understanding of the storm as it affects flight operations, to be aware of the nature of these features and their variation with stages of cell development.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1968 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

1.US Weather Bureau. The Thunderstorm. Horace A. Byers. June 1949.Google Scholar
2. Saunders, W. E. Tests of Thunderstorm Forecasting Methods. 1965.Google Scholar
3. Laykhtman, D. L. Method of Calculating the Energy of Convective Motion.Google Scholar
4. Tkachenko, A. V. On the Power of Convection and its Utilisation in Local Forecasting. Meteorological Abstracts No. 152/1960.Google Scholar
5. White, D. G., D'Allenger, P. K. Reports on Progress made in the Investigation of Technique No. 2 Met 08 List at RAF Colerne and Abingdon. 1965.Google Scholar
6. Malkus, J. S. Effects of Wind Shear on Some Aspects of Convection. Trans Amer Geopho Un, 30: 1925, 1949.Google Scholar
7. Fujita, T. and Byers, H. R. Model of a Hail Cloud as Revealed by Photogrammetric Analysis. Meteorological Abstracts No. 219/1957.Google Scholar
8. Takeda, T. The Downdraft of Convective Shower-Cloud under the Vertical Wind Shear and its Significance for the Maintenance of Convective Systems. Effects of the Prevailing Wind with Vertical Shear on the Convective Cloud Accompanied by Heavy Rainfall—Meteorological Abstracts No. 234, November 1966.Google Scholar
9. Browning, K. A. and Ludlam, F. H. Airflow in Convective Storms, QJnlR Met Soc, London, Vol 88, p 117, 1962.Google Scholar

Bibliography

Met Office. Handbook of Aviation Meteorology. Google Scholar
American Meteorological Society. Compendium of Meteorology. Google Scholar
Byers, H. R., Hall, H. C. Inflow Pattern of Thunderstorms as Shown by Winds Draft. Bull Amer Meteor Soc 30: pp 9096, 1949.Google Scholar
Byers, H. R. and Batten, L. J. Some Effects of Vertical Wind Shear on Thunderstorm Structure. Bull Amer Meteor. Soc, 30: pp 9096, 1949.Google Scholar