HEAT 101: An ASU primer for summer in the desert


A towering cloud of dust moves through a desert city

|

The Arizona monsoon technically starts June 15 each year, but every desert dweller knows that it's July when the fireworks usually get going — and we're not talking the Uncle Sam variety.

Monsoon rains, dusty haboobs and sunsets spectacularly punctuated by lightning: These are the moments that break up the monotony of months of 105-plus temperatures and send reporters dashing to the nearest intersection with puddles.  

We love to watch the weather, tweet about it and share the latest photos of it, but how much do we really understand what's happening? To broaden our haboob-dotted horizons, we turned to Randy Cerveny, President's Professor in the School of Geological Sciences and Urban Planning. He's one of Arizona State University's weather experts, serving as rapporteur on extreme records for the United Nations/World Meteorological Organization, for which he researches and verifies global weather records

Here, he walks us through four aspects of desert summers.

How do those marching armies of dust happen?

No rain downtown? Here's why

Are you using 'monsoon' correctly?

Recipe for a storm

Top image: A haboob rolls through Casa Grande, Arizona. Photo by Roxy Lopez [CC BY-SA 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], from Wikimedia Commons

More Science and technology

 

Artist's depiction of a nova explosion.

A spectacular celestial event: Nova explosion in Northern Crown constellation expected within 18 months

Within the next year to 18 months, stargazers around the world will witness a dazzling celestial event as a “new” star appears in the constellation Corona Borealis, also known as the Northern Crown.…

A male professor with short dark hair wearing a black blazer and a white t-shirt sits next to an ambient mass spectrometer

ASU researcher points to fingerprints as a new way to detect drug use

Collecting urine samples, blood or hair are currently the most common ways to detect drug use, but Arizona State University researcher Min Jang may have discovered something better.Fingerprints…

Gloved hands holding a magnifying glass up to fingerprints

Learn about the secrets of forensic science straight from the experts

Over the next week, true crime enthusiasts will have a rare opportunity to discover the secrets of forensic science as experts share techniques for tracking down criminals.Behind Crime Scene…