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Atlanta
Celsius

Tornadoes are usually drawn to wide-open spaces. That's according to climatologist Dev Niyogi of Purdue University. So Niyogi wondered …

Dev Niyogi: Why did we get a tornado in an urban region like Atlanta?

Niyogi has been studying the tornado that struck Atlanta, Georgia in early 2008 and caused over $200,000,000 in damages. It developed to a passing through what Niyogi described as a 'mosaic' of urban sprawl – moist agricultural areas interspersed with dry, hot paved regions.

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Niyogi said this understanding could benefit urban planning across the U.S., since many cities have a patchwork of sprawl – and heat – like Atlanta's.

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It's going over a wet region and it gets its moisture and all the juice, then it gets over a warmer region and it gets all the heat it needs, and becomes even more intensified. Niyogi believes the storm became a full-blown tornado when it reached the city and mixed with Atlanta's dry heat. The urban region is much warmer than the surrounding region by about five to ten degrees Celsius, at times. So even though we cannot alter every thunderstorm that comes our way, we can certainly use some science that is evolving now to see what kind of buffers ought to be developed around the cities to reduce the threats of thunderstorms.