There's More Than One Type Of Thunderstorm. Here Are 4 To know About. | Weather.com
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Thunderstorms Come In Different Types. Here Are 4 Different Ones You Might Hear Meteorologists Talk About.

While the United States experiences tens of thousands of thunderstorms each year, they come in different types. Here's what to know about four of them, from a supercell to the multi-cell.

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Knowing Your Thunderstorms Can Be Useful

More than 100,000 thunderstorms hit the United States annually, but did you know there are different types?

Let's step into a little meteorology 101 and take a look at a few of the ones you might hear meteorologists talk about, and who knows, maybe it'll come in handy for a trivia night, or at the very least you can impress your friends.

Supercell

This is the king of all thunderstorms and they are often accompanied by dangerous weather conditions, including large hail, damaging winds and, sometimes, tornadoes.

Supercell thunderstorms can last several hours and track hundreds of miles. They often have a distinct appearance on radar, with a hook echo on the southwest corner of the storm (lower left below) which sometimes indicates a tornado is in progress. To the north and northeast of that hook is the storm's main cell where huge hail, high winds and heavy rain can occur.

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When viewed in an open area, classic supercells have a "mothership" appearance often photographed in the Plains states. Most large and violent tornadoes are spawned by supercells.

They develop in volatile severe weather setups that contain plenty of wind shear. This change in wind speed and direction with height in the atmosphere keeps the storm's downdraft separated from its updraft, allowing it to grow and sustain itself for long periods of time.

(MORE: Everything To Know About Supercells)

Dopper radar of a supercell that produced an EF5 tornado that hit Moore, Oklahoma, in May 2013.
Dopper radar of a supercell which produced an EF5 tornado that hit Moore, Oklahoma, in May 2013.
(NOAA)

Squall Line

Also known as a multi-cell line, this type of thunderstorm can pack widespread damaging winds as well as an embedded tornado threat.

As the name implies, squall lines are thunderstorms arranged in a line, often from north to south. They can be hundreds of miles long but are usually only about 10 to 20 miles wide. An extreme form of a squall line that meets a certain longevity threshold is called a derecho.

In addition to the threat of high winds and tornadoes, squall lines contain blinding rain and frequent lightning as well.

Within a squall line is often one or more bow echoes on radar, which can produce bursts of stronger winds in concentrated areas.

Example radar image of a squall line.
Example radar depiction of a squall line.
(NOAA)

Pulse Thunderstorm

These storms can rapidly form and then fall apart just as quickly.

They are sometimes also called pop-up thunderstorms, popcorn thunderstorms or air mass thunderstorms. We see them commonly pulse up with daytime heating in summer, especially in the South.

Pulse thunderstorms generally last less than an hour and can occasionally turn severe with strong wind gusts being the primary threat, but they also pack torrential downpours and frequent lightning.

These storms form when the sun heats humid air and causes it to rise, cool and condense, allowing a cumulonimbus thunderstorm cloud to form.

Since there is often little wind shear in the atmosphere where these storms form, they don't last very long. That's because the lighter winds in upper atmosphere cause the storm's downdraft to be located too close to the updraft. This results in the inflow of upward-rising air that fuels thunderstorms to get choked off by the rain and hail-laden downdraft.

And example of a lone pulse-type thunderstorms in Georgia during August 2016.
(Chris Dolce)

Multi-Cell Cluster

These clusters of thunderstorms are commonly seen year-round and can last several hours, though they are most common in warmer times of the year.

Within the larger cluster are multiple individual thunderstorm cells that last 30 to 60 minutes, according to NOAA. The outflow from each cell helps form what's called a gust front, where converging winds cause new cells to develop, allowing the cluster to persist.

Severe weather can occur in multi-cell storms with hail, strong winds and sometimes brief tornadoes being threats.

They can also be prolific rainfall producers that cause flooding when additional cells form on the upwind side of the cluster and then "train" heavy rain over an area already soaked by a previous cell or cells.

Radar example of multi-cell thunderstorms in New England during September 2023.
(NOAA's Storm Prediction Center.)

Chris Dolce has been a senior digital meteorologist with weather.com for nearly 15 years after beginning his career with The Weather Channel in the early 2000s.

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