Extreme Weather Climate 1st Edition By Ahrens Samson – Test Bank
Chapter 11
Thunderstorms
Multiple Choice Exam Questions
- All thunderstorms require:
- hot, humid air
- divergence of the air aloft
- lifting along some barrier such as a mountain or front
- surface heating
- rising air
ANSWER: e
- Ordinary thunderstorms only last about one hour and begin to dissipate when:
- lightning neutralizes all the electrical charge in the cloud
- when all the precipitation particles in the cloud turn to ice
- when the downdraft spreads throughout the cloud and cuts off the updraft
- when solar heating at the ground begins to decrease
ANSWER: c
- An ordinary cell thunderstorm is most intense during the __________ stage.
- mature
- multicell
- cumulus
- dissipating
ANSWER: a
- The most likely time for an ordinary call thunderstorm to form is
- just after sunrise
- just before sunrise
- around midnight
- late afternoon
- at noon
ANSWER: d
- A supercell storm is:
- a thunderstorm that produces several tornadoes
- a thunderstorm that produces a category F-5 tornado
- a thunderstorm with an extremely large downburst
- an enormous thunderstorm that lasts for several hours
ANSWER: d
- Severe thunderstorms are capable of producing:
- large hail
- tornadoes
- flash floods
- all of the above
ANSWER: d
- A Mesoscale Convective Complex is actually:
- a rapidly rotating tornado cyclone inside a massive thunderstorm
- another name for a suction vortex
- a complex display of lightning from distant thunderstorms
- a family of tornadoes that do a great deal of damage
- individual thunderstorms that grow into a large, long-lasting weather system
ANSWER: e
- The downdraft in an ordinary thunderstorm is created mainly by:
- the melting of snow in the anvil
- electrical attraction between the cloud and ground
- the release of latent heat as water in the cloud freezes
- evaporating raindrops that make the air cold and heavy
- upper level wind motions
ANSWER: d
- A small thunderstorm cloud with virga falling out of its base and blowing dust at the ground could warn of a severe hazard to an airplane because:
- this could be the first indication of a tornado
- it is likely that hail will soon begin to fall
- this could indicate an intense downdraft or microburst
- the airplane could be struck by lightning
ANSWER: c
- The wind shear associated with several major airline crashes is believed to have been caused by:
- microbursts
- dry lines
- the jet stream
- mesocyclones
ANSWER: a
- Squall lines generally do not form:
- behind a cold front
- when the air aloft develops waves downwind from a cold front
- along a dry line
- in the warm sector where warm, dry air meets warm, humid air
- ahead of an advancing cold front
ANSWER: a
- Thunderstorms that move to the right of the winds aloft tend to:
- form along warm fronts
- cut off the supply of humid air to thunderstorms to the north of them
- form in the northern United States and Canada where the Coriolis force is
greatest
- form near mountains where upper-level winds develop into waves
- form over water due to the reduced friction there
ANSWER: b
- Many flash floods, including those that occurred in Rapid City, South Dakota, and in Colorado’s Big Thompson Canyon, are the result of thunderstorms that:
- contain no lightning
- form in a dry air mass
- move slowly
- have weak or non-existent downdrafts
ANSWER: c
- In the United States, dryline thunderstorms are most common
- in the Rocky Mountains
- in the desert southwest
- in the Great Plains
- in California
- in Florida
ANSWER: c
- Lightning may occur:
- within a cloud
- from a cloud to the ground
- from one cloud to another cloud
- all of the above
ANSWER: d
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