Weather Alert in Connecticut
Special Weather Statement issued August 13 at 2:32PM EDT by NWS Upton NY
AREAS AFFECTED: Northern New Haven
DESCRIPTION: At 230 PM EDT, Doppler radar was tracking a strong thunderstorm over Middlebury, or near Naugatuck, moving east at 20 mph. HAZARD...Winds in excess of 25 mph, along with heavy rainfall. SOURCE...Radar indicated. IMPACT...Gusty winds could knock down tree limbs and blow around unsecured objects. Locations impacted include... Waterbury, Meriden, Wallingford, Naugatuck, Southbury, Hamden, Cheshire, North Haven, Prospect, Middlebury, Beacon Falls, Bethany, and Oxford.
INSTRUCTION: If outdoors, consider seeking shelter inside a building. Torrential rainfall, with up to one inch an hour possible, was also occurring with this storm and may lead to localized flooding. Do not drive your vehicle through flooded roadways.
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Weather Topic: What are Mammatus Clouds?
Home - Education - Cloud Types - Mammatus Clouds
Next Topic: Nimbostratus Clouds
A mammatus cloud is a cloud with a unique feature which resembles
a web of pouches hanging along the base of the cloud.
In the United States, mammatus clouds tend to form in the warmer months, commonly
in the Midwest and eastern regions.
While they usually form at the bottom of a cumulonimbis cloud, they can also form
under altostratus, altocumulus, stratocumulus, and cirrus clouds. Mammatus clouds
warn that severe weather is close.
Next Topic: Nimbostratus Clouds
Weather Topic: What is Precipitation?
Home - Education - Precipitation - Precipitation
Next Topic: Rain
Precipitation can refer to many different forms of water that
may fall from clouds. Precipitation occurs after a cloud has become saturated to
the point where its water particles are more dense than the air below the cloud.
In most cases, precipitation will reach the ground, but it is not uncommon for
precipitation to evaporate before it reaches the earth's surface.
When precipitation evaporates before it contacts the ground it is called Virga.
Graupel, hail, sleet, rain, drizzle, and snow are forms of precipitation, but fog
and mist are not considered precipitation because the water vapor which
constitutes them isn't dense enough to fall to the ground.
Next Topic: Rain
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