DAMAGING WIND SCALES and PATTERNS
SCALE 620 miles
62 miles
0.6 miles
|
In
1987, when Robert Johns and William Hirt revived the 19th century term
"derecho" to describe long-lived convective windstorms,
they equated the term with the scale of winds known as a "family
of downburst clusters." Thus, to qualify as a "derecho,"
the series of microbursts and downbursts must be greater than 240 miles
(400 km) in length. More
information and another diagram illustrating the spatial relationship
between downbursts and other locally damaging winds is available in
Derecho-producing storms. | ||