Navigation
- Home
- News & Blog
- Forecasts
- NWS 5 Day Forecast
- Today's Weather Story
- 48 Hour Point Forecast
- Forecast Discussion
- Mountain Area Forecast
- Avalanche Info & Forecast
- Colorado City Forecasts
- National Weather Outlook
- U.S. Cities Forecasts
- Long Range Climate Fcsts
- Advisories & Warnings
- Forecasts By Email
- Air Quality Forecast
- WeatherNation TV
- Live Conditions
- Weather Webcams
- Radar & Maps
- Lightning
- Severe Weather
- Winter Weather
- Almanac
- Thornton Weather Data
- Astronomy & Space
- National Weather Service
- Weather Extremes
- Trends & Statistics
- Climatology & Records
- Regional Temp & Precip
- River Heights
- Earthquakes - Local
- Earthquakes - Global
- Wildland Fire Activity
- Today in History
- NASA EO Imagery
- NOAA Image of the Day
- Weather Education
- Area Information
- About Us
- Weather Links
- Search Site
- Donate
Active Alerts
NOAA Environmental Visualization Laboratory Image of the Day |
NASA Earth Observatory Imagery Current Satellite Imagery |
Converging Air Masses Makes for a Rough Day in the Central Plains
Cold, dry air sweeping down from Canada mixing with warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico and Pacific Ocean are merging in the U.S. Plains today, creating conditions for some very turbulent weather. A tornado outbreak today in the early morning hours caused destruction in Kansas and Oklahoma. This image shows the air temperature at 40,000 Pascals (about 23,000 feet high in the atmosphere) using data outputs from the NOAA North America Model for 2100z on May 20, 2013, combined with an overlay of the winds at the same elevation. Tornadoes typically occur at the convergence of these two different air masses. A distinct boundary of "cold meeting warm" is visible in this temperature data, extending from Texas into Illinois. Courtesy of NOAA Environmental Visualization Laboratory |
|

