Convective overshoot is the phenomenon of convection carrying material beyond an unstable region of the atmosphere into a stratified, stable region. Overshoot is caused by the momentum of the convecting material, which carries the material beyond the unstable region.
Thunderstorms
One example is
thermal columns extending above the top of the
troposphere in
thunderstorms: unstable air rising from the surface 'should' stop ascending at the
tropopause spreading out as an
anvil cloud, but its momentum carries it up into the
stratosphere as an
overshooting top or
dome. This overshoot is responsible for most of the
turbulence experienced in the cruise phase of commercial air flights.
Stars
Another example of convective overshoot is at the base of the
convection zone in the
solar interior. The heat of the Sun's thermonuclear fusion is carried outward by
radiation in the deep interior
radiative zone and by convective circulation in the outer
convection zone, but cool sinking material from the surface penetrates farther into the radiative zone than naive theory would suggest. This affects the heat transfer rate and the temperature of the solar interior.
Severe weather and convection | Clouds | Cumulus