Weather Notebook
Bryan Yeaton
 


 
Dust Devils
Fri Jun 20, 2003

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In their most impressive state, dust devils are often confused with tornadoes. While similar in many aspects, they are also very different from their destructive cousins. Hi, I'm Bryan Yeaton for The Weather Notebook.

Dust devils emerge from large rotating columns of rising air. The second most common natural atmospheric vortex, they can be found almost anywhere, even Mars. An estimated ten dust devils are churning the Earth at this moment.

When under intense solar heating, surface temperatures soar, often as high as 130 degrees, and this generates hot air columns, rising as invisible chimneys. As this air rises, something gives it a little spin perhaps the breeze aloft, perhaps a passing car at ground level.

If the whirling updraft column continues to intensify, the vortex tightens and thus rotates faster, like a spinning figure skater. When the invisible winds pick up loose surface dust, a dust devil is born.

The largest dust devils can spread to 300 yards wide and hundreds of feet tall, but most often they are only a few feet in diameter and less than 100 in height. Their lifespan is typically 15 minutes, though a well-established devil can persist for an hour.

Because of their small size and brief life, dust devils are not influenced by the Coriolis parameter and thus may rotate either clockwise or counterclockwise.

Average dust devil winds swirl at 20 mph, but strong ones have been clocked at 90 mph. And once established, they tear forward across the terrain at 15 to 60 mph.

Thanks to our contributing writer, meteorologist Keith Heidorn. The Weather Notebook receives funding from Subaru of America and The National Science Foundation.

Today's Links

Observing Dust Devils
http://www.australiasevereweather.com/techniques/moreadv/funnels.htm#3

Dust Devils
http://members.attcanada.ca/~stefanac/weather/dustdevils.html

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