Dictionary Definition
squally adj
1 characterized by short periods of noisy
commotion; "a home life that has been extraordinarily squally"
[syn: squalling]
2 characterized by brief periods of violent wind
or rain; "a gray squally morning"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
squally- characterized by squalls
Extensive Definition
A squall is a sudden, sharp increase in wind
speed which is usually associated with active weather, such as rain
showers, thunderstorms, or heavy snow. Squalls refer to an increase
in the sustained winds over a short time interval, as there may be
higher gusts during a squall event. They usually occur in a region
of strong mid-level height falls, or mid-level tropospheric
cooling, which force strong localized upward motions at the leading
edge of the region of cooling, which then enhances local downward
motions just in its wake.
Origin of the term
The word appears to be Nordic in origin, but its etymology is considered obscure. It probably has its roots in the word skvala an Old Norse word meaning literally, to squeal. The first known use of the term on surface weather analyses was in the United States in the late Nineteenth Century on U. S. Signal Corp Maps, begun in 1871.Character of the wind
The term "squall" is universally used to refer to a sudden wind-speed increase, both historically and in the present day. To be called a squall in the United States, the wind must increase at least 18 miles per hour (8 meters per second) and must attain a top speed of at least 25 miles per hour (11 meters per second), lasting at least a full minute in duration. In Australia, a squall is defined to last for several minutes before the wind returns to the long term mean value. In either case, a squall is defined to last about half as long as the definition of sustained wind in its respective country. Usually, this sudden violent wind is often associated with briefly heavy precipitation.Regional terms
Argentina
Known locally as pamperos, they are used to describe strong downsloped winds that move across the pampas, eventually making it to the Atlantic Ocean.Central America
Offshore Central America, the term gully squall is used to describe strong increases of the wind forced through sharp mountain valleys on the Pacific Ocean side of the isthmus.Cuba
Bayamo is a term used to describe squalls emanating from tropical thunderstorms near the Bight of Bayamo.East Indies
In the East Indies, brubu is a name for a squallPacific Northwest - United States
In the Pacific Northwest, a squall is a short but furious rainstorm with strong winds, often small in area and moving at high speed, especially as a maritime term. Such a strong outflow occurring in fjords and inlets is referred to by mariners as a squamish.South Africa
Bull's Eye Squall is a term used offshore South Africa, describing a squall forming in fair weather. It is named for the appearance of the small isolated cloud marking the top of the squall.Southeast Asia
Barat is a term for a northwest squall in Manado Bay in Sulawesi. Squall lines require significant low-level warmth and humidity, a nearby frontal zone, and vertical wind shear from an angle behind the frontal boundary. The strong winds at the surface are usually a reflection of dry air intruding into the line of storms, which when saturated, falls quickly to ground level due to its much higher density before it spreads out downwind. In England, a squall associated with tempestuous weather is known as a blunk. Significant squall lines with multiple bow echoes are known as derechos.Squall Line Life Cycle
There are several forms of mesoscale
meteorology, including simplistic isolated thunderstorms
unrelated to advancing cold fronts, to the more complex
daytime/nocturnal
Mesoscale Convective System (MCS) and
Mesoscale Convective Complex (MCC), to squall line
thunderstorms.
Squall Line Formation
The main driving force behind squall line
creation is attributed to the process of in-filling of multiple
thunderstorms and/or a single area of thunderstorms expanding
outward within the leading space of an advancing cold
front.
Updrafts
The leading area of a squall line is composed
primarily of multiple updrafts, or singular regions of an updraft, rising from ground
level to the highest extend of the troposhere, condensing water
and building a dark, ominous clouds to one with a noticeable
overshooting top and anvil (thanks to synoptic
scale winds). Because of the chaotic nature of updrafts and
downdrafts, pressure
perturbations are important.
Pressure Perturbations
Pressure perturbations within an extent of a
thunderstorm are noteworthy. With buoyancy rapid within the lower
and mid-levels of a mature thunderstorm, one might believe that low
pressure dominates in the mesoscale environment. However, this is
not the case. With downdrafts ushering colder air from mid-levels,
hitting ground and propagating away in all directions, high
pressure is to be found at surface levels, usually indicative of
strong (potentially damaging winds).
Wind Shear
Wind shear is an important aspect to
measuring the potential of squall line severity and duration. In
low to medium shear environments, mature thunderstorms will
contribute modest amounts of downdrafts, enough to turn will aid in
create a leading edge lifting mechanism - the gust front. In high
shear environments created by opposing low level jet winds and
synoptic winds, updrafts and consequential downdrafts can be much
more intense (common in supercell mesocyclones). The cold air
outflow leaves the
trailing area of the squall line to the mid-level jet, which aids
in downdraft processes.
Squall Line Evolution
Updrafts
As thunderstorms fill into a distinct line,
strong leading-edge updrafts - occasionally visible to a ground
observer in the form of a shelf cloud,
appear as an ominous sign of potential severe weather.
Beyond the strong winds because of
updraft/downdraft behavior, heavy rain (and hail) is another sign of a squall
line. In the winter,
squall lines can occur albeit less frequently - bringing heavy
snow and/or thunder and lightning - usually
over inland lakes (i.e.
Great
Lakes region).
Bow Echoes
Following the initial passage of a squall line,
light to moderate stratiform precipitation is
also common. A Bow echo is
frequently seen on the northern and southern most reaches of squall
line thunderstorms (via satellite imagery. This is where the
northern and southern ends curl backwards towards the middle
portions of the squall line,
making a "bow" shape. Bow echoes are frequently featured within
supercell mesoscale
systems.
Mesolow
The northern end of the squall line is commonly
referred to as the cyclonic end, with the southern side rotating
anticyclonically. Because of the coriolis
force, the northern end may evolve further, creating a "comma
shaped" mesolow, or may continue in a squall-like pattern.
Squall Line Dissipation
As supercell or multi-cell thunderstorms
disappate because of a weak shear, poor lifting mechanisms: (e.g.
considerable terrain or
lack of daytime heating. The squall line
associated gust front may
outrun the squall line, the synoptic scale low may fill - leading
to a weaking of a cold front, or the thunderstorm has exhausted its
updrafts, becoming purely a downdraft dominated system. The areas
of disappating squall line thunderstorms may be regions of low
CAPE, low
humidity, insufficient
wind shear, or poor synoptic dynamics (e.g. an upper level low
filling) leading to frontolysis.
From here, a general thinning of a squall line
will occur: within, winds decaying with time, outflow boundaries
weakening updrafts substantially, and clouds losing their
thickness.
Signs in the sky
Shelf clouds and roll clouds are usually seen above the leading edge of a squall, also known as a thunderstorm's gust front. From the time these low cloud features appear in the sky, one can expect a sudden increase in the wind in less than 15 minutes.Tropical cyclones
Tropical cyclones normally have squalls coincident with spiral bands of greater curvature than many mid-latitude systems due to their smaller size. This squalls can harbor waterspouts and tornadoes due to the significant vertical wind shear which exists in the vicinity of a tropical cyclone's outer bands.Winter weather
Snow squalls can be spawned by an intrusion of cold air aloft over a relatively warm surface layer. Lake effect snows can be in the form of a snow squall. In Scotland, snow squalls are known as bluffarts.Literary usage
Squall is a vocabulary word in the book Sarah, Plain and Tall in the title of the book "White Squall", written by John Conroy Hutcheson in 1900.See also
References
squally in Bulgarian: Шквал
squally in Catalan: Torbonada
squally in German: Bö
squally in Spanish: Turbonada
squally in French: Grain (météorologie)
squally in Korean: 스콜
squally in Italian: Groppo
squally in Dutch: Bui
squally in Japanese: スコール
squally in Norwegian: Bygelinje
squally in Norwegian Nynorsk: Bygelinje
squally in Polish: Szkwał
squally in Portuguese: Aguaceiro
squally in Russian: Шквал
squally in Sicilian: Gruppu (nudu
ntricatu)
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aeolian, airish, airy, blasty, blowy, blustering, blusterous, blustery, boreal, breezy, brisk, castellatus, cirrose, cirrous, cloud-flecked, clouded, cloudy, cumuliform, cumulous, dark, dirty, drafty, favonian, flawy, fresh, gloomy, gusty, heavy, lenticularis, mammatus, nebulous, nimbose, nubilous, overcast, overclouded, puffy, stormy, stratiform, stratous, thunderheaded, windy