• 2 months ago
Esto es debido a una inestabilidad meteorológica. La experta explicó todo.

En el nuevo capítulo de "Tu Día", Michelle Adam reveló que algunas regiones del centro del país tendrán una inestabilidad meteorológica que podría provocar lluvias y tormentas eléctricas. Precisó dónde será y a qué hora.

"Cuando se habla de inestabilidad se refiere a posible formación de nubes que pueden dejar precipitaciones y también tormentas eléctricas, lo que podría ocurrir el jueves 12 en la tarde", explicó la meteoróloga.

Esto ocurrirá en el interior de la región de Valparaíso y la zona norte de la Región Metropolitana. "Dejará algunas gotitas y algo de tormenta eléctrica", reveló.

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00:00We are going to ask Michelada if we start with 6 degrees this morning, probably less,
00:06earlier.
00:07We are going to wait for a spring or cold day.
00:10You know that when I get up and turn on TV at 3 in the morning, at 6 and a quarter
00:17I turn on the TV, it said 7 degrees.
00:217 degrees, yes.
00:23That means that the temperature dropped.
00:25The temperature dropped and in fact the minimum was 5.8 at the Quinta Normal station.
00:32And from there it started to rise slowly, gradually.
00:35At the moment we have 6 degrees in Santiago.
00:38But look how beautiful it looks!
00:40Look!
00:41Or not?
00:42The sky is practically clear at this time of the morning in Santiago.
00:47And the maximum of the day is going to be 22 degrees.
00:52A pleasant temperature, spring, very rich.
00:56We want that same temperature for next week, Michel.
00:58Yes, I know, I know, we all want the same, but we have to see what will happen.
01:02What is true is that tomorrow the temperature tends to go down.
01:08Do you remember that at the beginning of the week we said that it was going to go down to Thursday?
01:14Why?
01:15Because although tomorrow is Wednesday, tomorrow is Thursday.
01:21Don't scare me, Michel!
01:23It's going to be longer this week.
01:25This week of the change.
01:27Hey, the change now, how are you?
01:28I'm still not used to it.
01:30Oh, you're pretty.
01:31Still.
01:32Yes, I would leave a single schedule, nothing more than that.
01:35But it seems that it takes about two weeks.
01:37Two weeks.
01:38They want to adjust the biological clock.
01:39We adapt.
01:40Yes.
01:41And then we're going to start getting up with more light.
01:43Yes, with more light, with more daylight.
01:45Well, it turns out that today, Wednesday, the maximum temperature reaches 22 degrees.
01:49And tomorrow, Thursday, as we said at the beginning of the week, I'm summarizing.
01:55The maximum is going to be 18 degrees.
01:57Tomorrow.
01:58Tomorrow the temperature goes down because tomorrow is going to be one of the coldest days of the week.
02:04And it turns out that tomorrow ...
02:06No, let's start today.
02:08Chris Windiman, help me please.
02:12I want us to look and see that the Pacific subtropical anticyclone, which is this mass of warm air,
02:19which should be positioned, right?
02:22In this part, providing us with the heat, is a little retracted.
02:27It is a little displaced.
02:28Retracted to the continent.
02:29And retracted from the ocean and even displaced a little to the south.
02:34Because here there is a frontal system, there is a low-pressure L that is passing precisely through Rapa Nui.
02:44And it is leaving tides between today and tomorrow.
02:48Already?
02:49Already.
02:50And that low, between the low and the high.
02:52Between the low and the high.
02:53Which one will prevail?
02:54Which one will prevail?
02:59I would say that the anticyclone.
03:00The high.
03:01Yes, it will prevail.
03:03It will prevail, but the following will happen.
03:06Chris Windiman, please.
03:09Let's put Windy tomorrow at 8 in the morning to show the following.
03:15Ah, it prevails.
03:16It prevails, the anticyclone.
03:18But let's see what happens with the precipitation.
03:21Please, Chris Windiman.
03:22The precipitation tomorrow, Thursday at 8 in the morning.
03:27There are precipitations in the south, which are conditions that we have seen for much of this week.
03:32Including last week.
03:34Precipitations in the Aysén region, the Magallanes region.
03:37With important winds, winds that have reached speeds these last days of up to 80 km per hour.
03:43Especially in the last cities of our country.
03:46Some snowfalls and also there in the Lagos region.
03:51But if at the end of tomorrow's day, Thursday.
03:57I want us to please put Chris Windiman at 5 in the afternoon.
04:01At 5 p.m.
04:04Because something happens.
04:05You know that the high comes with humidity.
04:08Notice that there is a little spot.
04:10Yes, it splashes me.
04:12Because it happens that at high altitudes it does not happen the same as on the surface.
04:16Windy shows the high and low pressures that are on the surface.
04:21But it turns out that at high altitudes the atmosphere has different levels.
04:25And not always at high altitudes the same thing happens that happens on the surface.
04:29And tomorrow something is going to happen at high altitudes that is going to leave instability.
04:34When one talks about instability, meteorology refers to possible cloud formation.
04:39These cloud formations can leave precipitations.
04:43The precipitations, in turn, can leave electric storms.
04:48And tomorrow, Thursday afternoon.
04:50Particularly towards the interior of the Valparaiso region.
04:55And north of the metropolitan region.
04:58There is a probability that we have some droplets.
05:05And there is also the possibility of having some electric storm.
05:09Please.
05:10Electric storm.
05:11Yes.
05:12Let's zoom in.
05:13Look, look.
05:14You're right, Michelle.
05:16We have this small, and I say small, instability.
05:19Because it could be much bigger.
05:21But it is associated with a high altitude condition.
05:24That leaves this possibility of an electric storm.
05:27We know that many times we predict an electric storm.
05:31And nothing happens.
05:32Because a little more temperature is missing.
05:35But tomorrow the maximum is 18 degrees.
05:37We have the temperature.
05:38We are going to have some cloudiness.
05:41So the conditions are going to be so that this condition is registered.
05:45Tomorrow, after 5 p.m.
05:48Michelle.
05:49One thing is what Wendy says.
05:50Yes.
05:51That Wendy can handle everything.
05:53Of course.
05:54And here we use it, but it shows, let's say, a version.
05:58Many times we have shown our audience with Wendy.
06:02And it has been fulfilled.
06:04Yes, yes, yes.
06:05Do you remember that big cyclone?
06:07It was seen in Wendy.
06:08But not only that.
06:09Okay, but this is not what you study.
06:12Because you study different models.
06:14Of course.
06:15Wendy makes an interpretation that is super didactic to show it.
06:18Exactly.
06:19That's why it's very good to use it.
06:20But what is it called?
06:22In this story.
06:23Do you see it in what you have seen in another model?
06:26Yes.
06:27And you see an instability that is well balanced.
06:29But it just coincides with the region of Valparaíso.
06:35Especially with the city of Los Andes.
06:37San Felipe.
06:38And also with the northern part of the metropolitan region.
06:41And part of the zone of the Cajón del Maipo.
06:43The Cajón del Maipo arrives much more weakened.
06:46But it does look to the north of the area.
06:51Towards the hill zone.
06:53But well thrown towards the Barnechea, around there.
06:55But more than anything, concentrated in San Felipe, Los Andes.
06:58In that sector, we could have this probability of an electric storm tomorrow afternoon.
07:03Look, look.
07:04Here, just above the Casa Lapriz.
07:05I see a lightning.
07:07Here, here.
07:08From La Pichel.
07:09It's good.

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