An Arctic vortex drifted into Illinois on January 6 and
caused an unusual sight – steam rising from Lake Michigan. This phenomenon is
known as a steam devil, and it is due to the cold front of the vortex moving
over the warmer water and humidifying, causing the visible steam.
According to Wiki, a steam devil is a small, weak whirlwind
over water (or sometimes wet land) that has drawn fog into the vortex, thus
rendering it visible. They form over large lakes and oceans during cold air
outbreaks while the water is still relatively warm, and can be an important
mechanism in vertically transporting moisture.
Because of the very high water temperatures, smaller steam
devils and steam whirls can form over geyser basins even in warm weather.
Although steam devils are generally quite a rare phenomenon, hot springs in
Yellowstone Park produce them on a daily basis. You could probably remember the
Yellowstone Park being featured on the movie 2012.
A precondition for the formation of steam devils is the
presence of a layer of moist air on the water with the misty air (called arctic
steam fog) being drawn upwards into fog streamers. For this to happen the body
of water must be unfrozen, and thus relatively warm, and there must be some
wind of cold, dry air to form the fog. The cold air is warmed by the water and
is humidified by evaporation. The warmed air begins to rise, and as it does so
is cooled adiabatically by the falling pressure causing the water vapour
content to condense out into fog streamers.
For steam devils to form the air above the body of water must be very cold, and a fairly brisk (over 25 mph) wind of dry air needs to be blowing across the surface of the water. The temperature difference between the water and the air needs to be quite marked; the steam devils in figure 1 were forming with an air temperature of -21°C (-6°F) and a water temperature of 0.5°C (33°F) - a difference of 22°C (39°F). Under these conditions the air rises so energetically that the air flow becomes unstable and vortices start to form. Fog streamers drawn into the vortices render the vortices visible and they then become steam devils.
The steam fog tends to form irregular hexagonal cells in the
horizontal plane which are elongated in the direction of the wind. In this
honeycomb arrangement, three cells will meet at a junction, and it is in these
places that the steam devils form. This effect is an example of vertex
vortices.
The layer of cumulus seen above steam devils during cold air
outbreaks on Lake Michigan and elsewhere may not be coincidental. Airborne
radar studies during cold air outbreaks on the lake have shown that some steam
devils penetrate through the thermal internal boundary layer (below which
convective circulation takes place) and may be more significant for thermal
mixing than normal convection, transporting moist air vertically above the
convection boundary. The resulting large scale view is a layer of arctic steam
fog close to the water surface, a layer of cumulus just above the convection
boundary and a regular array of steam devils joining the two.
Another proof of climate change? Maybe, maybe not. Nature
will always reveal its course, yet, better be prepared!
Cheerio!
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