1. Cumulus Stage
2. Mature Stage
3. Dissipating Stage
The formation stages of a thunderstorm are: 1) Cumulus stage - warm air rises, forming cumulus clouds, 2) Mature stage - updrafts and downdrafts strengthen, leading to heavy rain, lightning, and gusty winds, 3) Dissipating stage - downdrafts dominate, causing the storm to weaken and eventually dissipate.
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A thunderstorm typically goes through four stages: cumulus stage (initial development of updrafts), mature stage (strongest updrafts and downdrafts, heavy precipitation, lightning, and possibly hail), dissipating stage (weakening of updrafts and downdrafts), and the final stage (dissipation of the storm).
The Cumulus stage, in which air ascends due to convection and clouds form.
A sea breeze may lead to a thunderstorm if the cool sea breeze forces warm air to rise which creates a convection cell that creates strong updrafts that lead to a thunderstorm. This is how a sea breeze may lead to the formation of a thunderstorm.
1. What stages do stars go through?
The Cumulus/Developing stage
forming, storming, norming, and performing
forming, storming, norming, and performing
forming, storming, norming, and performing
The most intense stage of a thunderstorm. It begins when precipitation reaches the ground and is characterized by both an updraft and a downdraft. This is the stage in which you can expect heavy rainfall, hail, lightning, and high wind speeds. This stage ends when there is no longer any updraft and the cloud begins to dissipate.
A thunderstorm typically goes through three stages: the cumulus stage (building phase where air rises and clouds form), the mature stage (the peak of the storm with heavy rain, lightning, and strong winds), and the dissipating stage (when the storm weakens and eventually breaks apart).