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Central pressure in a thunderstorm

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User 4319
(@user4319)
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Hi all
"In the mature stage of a thunderstorm, the central pressure is (a) decreasing, (b) stable, (c) increasing."
This question was on a practice PPL exam in my flying school. I assume 'central pressure' means the pressure at the centre of the storm but whether at ground level or some other place is not clear. I have not been able to find an answer in the various textbooks including the Bureau of Meteorology's text on aviation meteorology... Clearly in the Developing stage the pressure is dropping, and in the Dissipating stage it is increasing again, and in the Mature stage there are updrafts and downdrafts fighting each other, so I'm guessing the correct answer is (b). Does anyone have an authoritative answer?
cheers



   
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Bob Tait
(@bobtait)
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Joined: 16 years ago
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The question has to be referring to a tropical cyclone not a thunderstorm. I think you'll find it's a typo in the question itself. Central pressure in a thunderstorm makes no sense.



   
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User 4319
(@user4319)
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Joined: 17 hours ago
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Topic starter  

Thank you Bob!! That was it.
I may have misremembered the question (don't want to libel my flying school)
So the correct answer (with 'tropical cyclone' instead of 'thuderstorm') would have been (b) pressure is steady



   
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Bob Tait
(@bobtait)
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Joined: 16 years ago
Posts: 2538
 

Yep. That's it!



   
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