Ten people have been injured following a severe thunderstorm in Istanbul, Turkey, on Thursday 27 July 2017. The storm only lasted about 20 minutes, but brought with it winds gusting at up to 98 kilometres per hour, 22 mm of rain (the city typically receives about 34 mm of rain in the entire of July) and hail stones described as 'the size of golf balls'. The storm is reported to have uprooted about 230 trees, damaged the roofs of about 90 buildings and started a number of fires, mostly due to lightning strikes, though the worst of which was due to a crane collapsing at Haydarpasa Port.
Damage to a mosque in Istanbul following a storm on 27 July 2017. Anadolu Agency.
Storm
systems form due to heating of air over the sea. As
the air is heated the the air pressure drops and the air rises, causing
new air to rush in from outside the forming storm zone. If this zone is
sufficiently large, then it will be influenced by the Coriolis Effect,
which loosely speaking means the winds closer to the equator will be
faster than those further away, causing the storm to rotate, clockwise
in the northern hemisphere and anticlockwise in the southern hemisphere.
Such storms can carry large amounts of water, evaporated from the
surface of the sea by the warmth of the Sun, which can then be released
abruptly as rain or hail when the moist air encounters cooler conditions
over land (the amount of water the air can hold relates directly to its
temperature).
Thunderstorms
occur when warm, moist bodies of air encounter cooler, drier air
packages. The warm air rises over the cooler air until it rises above
its dew point (the point where it cools to far to retain its water
content as vapour), and the water precipitates out, falling as rain,
sleet or hail. Warm
moist air passing over the surface of the Earth acts as an electrical
generator, creating a negative charge in the cloud tops and a positive
charge at the ground (or occasionally in a second cloud layer). The
atmosphere acts as an electrical insulator, allowing this potential to
build up, until water begins to precipitate out. This allows a channel
of ionised air to form, carrying a current between the clouds and the
ground, which we perceive as lightning.
Flooding during following a storm in Istanbul on 27 July 2017. Bulent Kilic/Getty Images.
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