Thermals - Can You Give Me a Lift? |
The air stops rising once it has cooled to the same temperature as the air around it. Thermal columns of hot air can rise as high as a mile. The rising air is strong enough to lift all kinds of things like dust, water vapor, and broad-winged hawks. Thermals frequently form above mountains because the sun heats mountainsides unevenly! You often see cumulus clouds above thermals. As the air in a thermal cools, the water vapor in it condenses and forms the cumulus clouds. A hawk will circle up with its wings extended and ride a thermal until the thermal loses its lift. The hawk then peels off from the thermal and glides on to the next thermal and the next one and the next one and so on, as it works its way south to its winter grounds.
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