Environment & Energy
Related: About this forum3" Of Rain In 45 Minutes In DC Friday Afternoon, Extreme Events Globally, But Nothing To See Here
Climate change related hydrological events. Rain bombs. These are somewhat uncomfortable subjects. But its a basic fact that if you warm the Earth, you also crank up rates of evaporation and precipitation. And since weve warmed the Earth by about 1.2 C above preindustrial levels by burning fossil fuels and dumping so much carbon into the atmosphere, weve loaded the climate dice for producing both more extreme rainfall and more extreme drought events.
In the mid-Atlantic today, a strange summer Noreaster is dropping multiple inches of rain over parts of Maryland, Virginia and Delaware in very short time periods. In an area just northwest of Silver Spring, M.D., an amazing 3.19 inches of rain fell in just 45 minutes.
A resident of Gaithersburg, M.D., I experienced a comparable deluge situation in which my hilltop residence and home office saw a river forming in its back yard. Just about an hour before, my phone was sending me warnings to avoid the valley regions. Considering the flooding we saw in the hills, its tough to imagine what the low-lands might have looked like.
(Extreme rainfall creates streams through the hilltop residences of Gaithersburg, MD on July 28 as a strange summer NorEaster taps very high atmospheric moisture levels over the region to produce 1-4 inch per hour rainfall rates.)
Its worth noting that 1 inch per hour rainfall rates are considered to be extreme. But the short-period volumes of rain being produced by this system (1-4 inch per hour rates) are pretty much off the charts. Its coming from a storm that has been fueled by an upper level trough dipping down over Canada. One that pushed a large frontal system over the Great Lakes region on Wednesday night. This front then moved across the Ohio Valley on Thursday and out over the Atlantic by Friday. Packed with cooler temperatures, the front ran over ocean waters that are ranging between 1 to 4 degrees Celsius above average. The extra ocean heat helped to create a very moisture-rich environment. A coastal low subsequently forming in this very wet column of air began cranking that moisture over the mid-Atlantic even as its associated instability produced some extraordinarily powerful rainstorms.
EDIT
https://robertscribbler.com/2017/07/28/strange-summer-noreaster-drops-3-inches-of-rain-in-45-minutes-over-parts-of-d-c-area/#comments
And from the comments thread - long but striking:
msongs
(67,129 posts)reasons why her business should not be at that location in the first place
babylonsister
(170,928 posts)gave a damn. The "media" all but ignores all these ominous signs.