PIMS UVic Thunderstorms in the Present, Past and Future: Courtney Schumacher
Topic
Thunderstorms in the present, past and future [video]
Speakers
Details
- What do thunderstorms look like on the inside?
- Were they any different 30 to 50 thousand years ago?
- How might they change in the next 100 years as global temperatures continue to rise?
The presentation will start with how a thunderstorm looks in 3-D using radar technology and lightning mapping arrays. We will then travel tens of thousands of years into the past using chemistry analysis of cave stalactites in Texas to see how storms behaved as the climate underwent large shifts in temperature driven by glacial variability. I will end the talk with predictions of how lightning frequency may change over North America by the end of the century using numerical models run on supercomputers, and the potential impacts to humans and ecosystems.
Additional Information
This event took place via zoom and a recording is available on mathtube.org.
Professor Courtney Schumacher Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Texas A&M University, College of Geosciences
Professor Courtney Schumacher Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Texas A&M University, College of Geosciences
This is a Past Event
Event Type
Scientific, Distinguished Lecture
Date
March 24, 2022
Time
-
Location