A heat dome occurs when the atmosphere traps hot ocean air like a lid or
cap.
As per National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), USA, a
heat dome is created when strong high-pressure atmospheric conditions
combine with weather patterns like La Niña.
Causes of Heat Dome Formation:
Ocean Temperature Gradient: Heat domes originate from significant
changes in ocean temperatures, promoting convection. This leads to warm air
rising over the ocean surface.
Jet Stream Effect: Prevailing winds transport the heated air
eastward, where the jet stream's northward shift traps and directs it toward
land. Here, the air sinks, resulting in heat waves.
Atmospheric Pressure Shifts: High-pressure systems in the
atmosphere drive warm air downward, intensifying heat. Heat rising from the
ocean amplifies this effect, altering weather patterns, reducing wind and
cloud cover, and creating stifling conditions.
Climate Change Impact: Global warming has exacerbated heat waves,
making them hotter, longer-lasting, and more frequent. Scientists attribute
today's severe heat waves to human-induced climate change.
Heat Domes and their impact on Human Beings
A heat dome can have serious impacts on people, because the stagnant
weather pattern that allows it to exist usually results in weak winds and an
in- crease in humidity. Both factors make the heat feel worse - and become
more dangerous because the human body is not cooled as much by sweating.
All these, increases the risk of heat illnesses and deaths with global
warming, temperatures are already higher, too.
The heat index, a combination of heat and humidity, is often used to
convey this danger by indicating what the temperature will feel like to most
people. The high humidity also reduces the amount of cooling at night.
One of the worst recent examples of the impacts from a heat dome with high
temperatures and humidity in the U.S. occurred in the summer of 1995, when
an estimated 739 people died in the Chicago area over five days.
Study
A 2022 study found that this heat dome was amplified by climate change
and it could become a once-in-10-year event if global temperatures aren't
kept under two degree Celsius above pre-industrialization levels.