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Different types of thunderstorms explained and why some strike without warning

Front-driven storms form along a dividing line between humid warm air out ahead of a line of storms and cooler, drier air behind it. That contrast is exactly why thunderstorms develop.

Radek Przygodzki

Jun 10, 2026, 9:12 AM

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Thunderstorms can be triggered by a variety of factors: first, fronts; then an outflow boundary, which is a push of wind out ahead of a main line of storms; and lastly, popcorn or pulse thunderstorms that appear almost out of nowhere.

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Front-driven storms form along a dividing line between humid warm air out ahead of a line of storms and cooler, drier air behind it. That contrast is exactly why thunderstorms develop.

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The second type is a gust front—an area of wind out ahead of the main line of storms that can trigger additional thunderstorms. Sometimes these storms also become severe.

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The third type is the most difficult for a meteorologist to forecast. "Popcorn" storms, like popcorn popping in a microwave, are hard to predict which one will pop first. They are often very tiny, sometimes five miles in diameter, where one neighborhood is sunny and another gets a downpour.

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