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<br /> <br />Severe Weather <br /> <br />shutoff event targeted to a small at-risk area can affect a larger area outside the risk zone. The duration of a <br />shutoff is tied directly to the severe weather that triggers it; the shutoff typically ends within 24 hours after the <br />severe weather has passed (Pacific Gas & Electric n.d.). <br /> <br />14.1.5 Thunderstorms <br />A thunderstorm is a rain event that includes thunder and lightning. A thunderstorm is classified as “severe” when <br />it contains one or more of the following: hail with a diameter of three-quarter inch or greater, winds gusting in <br />excess of 50 knots (57.5 mph), or a tornado. Approximately 10 percent of the 100,000 thunderstorms that occur <br />nationally every year are classified as severe. <br /> <br />Three factors cause thunderstorms to form: moisture, rising unstable air (air that keeps rising when disturbed), and <br />a lifting mechanism to provide the disturbance. The sun heats the surface of the earth, which warms the air above <br />it. If this warm surface air is forced to rise (hills or mountains can cause rising motion, as can the interaction of <br />warm air and cold air or wet air and dry air) it will continue to rise as long as it weighs less and stays warmer than <br />the air around it. As the air rises, it transfers heat from the surface of the earth to the upper levels of the <br />atmosphere (the process of convection). The water vapor it contains begins to cool and it condenses into a cloud. <br />The cloud eventually grows upward into areas where the temperature is below freezing. Some of the water vapor <br />turns to ice and some of it turns into water droplets. Both have electrical charges. Ice particles usually have <br />positive charges, and rain droplets usually have negative charges. When the charges build up enough, they are <br />discharged in a bolt of lightning, which causes the sound waves we hear as thunder. Thunderstorms have three <br />stages (see Figure 14-1): <br /> <br /> Figure 14-1. The Thunderstorm Life Cycle <br /> <br /> The developing stage of a thunderstorm is marked by a cumulus cloud that is being pushed upward by a <br />rising column of air (updraft). The cumulus cloud soon looks like a tower (called towering cumulus) as <br />the updraft continues to develop. There is little to no rain during this stage but occasional lightning. The <br />developing stage lasts about 10 minutes. <br /> The thunderstorm enters the mature stage when the updraft continues to feed the storm, but precipitation <br />begins to fall out of the storm, and a downdraft begins (a column of air pushing downward). When the <br />downdraft and rain-cooled air spread out along the ground, they form a gust front, or a line of gusty <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />14-3