Well, looking at the obs from Salisbury shocked me -- 87F at 2 am? It's real. :scooter:
While not really rare for the plains (though quite uncommon -- there are a handful of observed events every year) it is exceeding rare for the east coast. The attached sounding from Wallops Island, VA will give an idea of what happens.
WAL__4_26_08_Heat_burst_.gif (39.62K)
Number of downloads: 26
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As you can se there is a sharp inversion in the surface layer. Well, inversion happen all the time overnight so what makes this special? Well, it the depth of the inversion (shallow), the dry air throughout the sounding and the steep lapse rates above said inversion.
As the thunderstorm decayed in this environment a saturated parcel of air from aloft began to sink and eventually the liquid water content evaporated away. Saturated air will increase at a given rate when it descends, known as the moist adiabatic lapse rate (typically around 6C per km). When the condensed water evaported, the now dry parcel descending and warmed at the dry adiabatic lapse rate, or 9.8C per km.
This is where the steep lapse rate comes into play, because as this occured the parcel remained negatively bouyant -- meanin that while this warming occured on the parcel's descent, the parcel itself remained cooler than the environment and continued to accelerate to the ground. At least until the parcel hit the inversion. At this point the air became warmer than the environment and began to accelerate upward -- in otherwords the rapidly sinking air began to slow down.
Well, the fact that the inversion was so shallow meant that the parcel hit the ground before it could stop its downward motion. AT this point, the parcel was apparently near 90 degrees as observed at SBY! As anticipated, the dewpoint also crashed, falling from the 50s to 41F. Winds also gusted to 52 mph, which is pretty high for a heat burst event, but not unprecedented. Hours later, the temp fell back into the 70s and the dewpoint climbed back into the 50s.
Forecast soundings show a similar environment tonight, so maybe we can catch another!


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