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Dust Devil

By General Aviation News Staff · October 23, 2017 ·

Frequent contributor Glenn Brasch, the creator of Airport Courtesy Cars, sent us this photo he captured of a dust devil over Ryan Field Airport (KRYN) near Tucson, Arizona. He notes: “Strangest one I have ever seen, went straight up, then a huge arch.”

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Comments

  1. cindy brickner says

    October 24, 2017 at 12:04 pm

    Thanks for being motivated to take a click of fun stuff in the atmosphere. It is great when we have particulates in the airmass to visualize what is really happening. As a gliderpilot, I would guess that the thermal kicked off and then encountered wind shearing as it cleared the gradient shadowing of buildings or vegetation and moved into the free-stream airflow. Flying gliders, we have to visualize how the thermals move, bend, drift, as they climb into the upper layers of atmosphere.
    (Shear and gradient are different things.)
    I tell students thermals are not like columns in front of the court building. They are actually a messy stack of Oreo cookies sometimes riding downwind on a skateboard. Think of the blade of grass in the wind, how it bends and undulates. It is not always standing up straight vertically….. Again, thanks for a photo that I can use with my students !

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