When you can't escape the heat, you're in a 'heat dome' - Action News
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Science

When you can't escape the heat, you're in a 'heat dome'

During a heat wave, it can feel like you're being trappedby rising temperatureson all sides and that'sbasically what's happening to the air in an event that has become known as a "heat dome."

As global temperatures rise, heat waves and 'heat domes' will be hotter and longer

A 'heat dome' happens when there is little or no variation in temperature and high pressure in the atmosphere traps hot air at the Earth's surface. This has often occurred during a lengthy heat wave, like what's heading toward southern Ontario and Quebec. (Graham Hughes/Canadian Press )

During a heat wave, it can feel like being trappedby rising temperatureson all sides and that'sbasically what's happening to the air in an event that has become known as a "heat dome."

The term is used to describe a "lid" that forms when high pressure hovers in the atmosphere, stopping the hot air from escaping andtrapping it at the Earth's surface.

"It's like putting a dome or a lid on a frying pan:the sun comes in and bakes those temperatures at the ground and the air rises,"Environment Canada senior climatologist Dave Phillips said in an interview with CBC News Network.

"But the lid, it suppresses or compresses the air,and it sinks to the ground and it warms up even more, and just absolutely creates furnace-like conditions."

Right now, there are at least two of these weather systems over North America, said Phillips. There's one "dome" in the westand another in the east, the latter of which will make its way to southern Ontario and Quebec this weekend.

These types of heat waves dominate all day and are hard to escape, he said.

An image of a dome with heat rising, getting trapped and making its way back down.

A "heat dome" isn't a defined meteorological term, saidPeter Kimball, a warning preparedness meteorologist with the Meteorological Service of Canada. But it has been used in recent years to talk about intense heat waves.

"It's basically hot weather," he said.

The effect occurs when there is little or no variation in the temperature and the heat becomes trapped without anycooler air moving in, Kimball said, which is why the high temperatures can last over days.

High temperatures this weekend

And while the forecast for southern Ontario will definitely be hot this weekend, Kimball said it may not actually break any records.

In Windsor, Ont., for example, it's predicted to be 35 C on Friday.But the city's record-hightemperature for that date is 36.7 C, recorded at the airport in 1946, Kimball said.

And the Riverside weather station in Windsor, which has been collecting temperatures for more than 100 years, has therecord temperature for July 20 (Saturday)set at36.7 C in 1926.

"The conclusion from this is that hot air in southern Ontario is not a new phenomenon," Kimball said.

With global temperatures having increased by one degree since the 1950s, researchers say more heat waves for longer periods should be expected. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

On average, however, global temperatures are on the rise.The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's latest climate report found that June 2019 was the globe's hottestinthe 140 years that records have been kept.

It's expected that higher temperatures for longer periods of time will become the norm, saidXuebin Zhang, a research scientist with Environment and Climate Change Canada.

"We can attribute this increase to global warming," Zhang said. "The consequence is now we have more heat waves and temperatures are now one degree hotter than in the 1950s."

In the North, average temperatures have gone up by three degrees, he said.

Northern heat wave

Heat waves are also happening right now innorthern areas, Zhang said, but the threshold is different.

"In Nunavut, if it's20 or 22 C, they might feel it's really hot."

Man sits in front of green space.
Xuebin Zhang is a research scientist with Environment and Climate Change Canada. (Anand Ram/CBC)

On Thursday, there were several heat warnings in effect for parts of the Northwest Territories, with forecasted temperatures around 29 C.

Earlier this month, Anchorage, Alaska recorded temperatures over 30 C for the first time.

And in Alert, Nunavut, a heat wave earlier this week brought temperatures of 21 C at a time when the average temperature is usually 6 or 7 C.

"That was a three-day eventnot just a bubble of heat that lasted for a couple of hours," said Phillips."A three-day heat wave in the most northerly place in the world."