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  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Hurricanes usually form in tropical areas of the world.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Hurricanes develop over warm water and use it as an energy source.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Hurricanes lose strength as they move over land.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Coastal regions are most at danger from hurricanes.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    As well as violent winds and heavy rain, hurricanes can also create tornadoes, high waves, and widespread flooding.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    90% of the deaths that occur during hurricanes is because of the floods created by this disaster.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    A hurricane that occurred in Bangladesh in 1970 took away the lives of one million people. This hurricane is supposedly the worst tornado, in terms of loss of life.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The winds in the hurricane can cause above 2 million trillion gallons of rains per day.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    In years with an El Niño, fewer tropical storms and hurricanes appear because vertical shear increases during El Niño years. The vertical shear can prevent tropical cyclones from forming and becoming intense.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    In years with La Niña (opposite of El Niño), researchers have found that there are chances of an increased number of hurricanes and an increased chance that the United States and the Caribbean will experience hurricanes.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Hurricanes upon entering the land bring in strong winds, heavy rains and waves which are strong enough to cause damages like washing away the entire cityscape. These are known as storm surge.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Most of the category 5 hurricanes occurred in the years 2000-2009, with eight. These include Isabelle (2003), Ivan (2004), Emily (2005), Katrina (2005), Rita (2005), Wilma (2005), Dean (2007), and Felix (2007).

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The first hurricane of the year is given a name beginning with the letter “A.”

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Hurricanes are named because it’s much easier to remember the name of a storm than using latitude and longitude. The tracking becomes easy. It also helps prevent confusion when there is more than one tropical storm or hurricane occurring at the same time.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    A name is retired when the storm caused so many deaths or so much destruction that it becomes insensitive to use the name again. The World Meteorological Organization is in charge of retiring hurricane names and choosing new names.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The headline-making hurricanes of 2004 — Charley, Frances, Ivan and Jeanne have all been retired. They will be replaced by Colin, Fiona, Igor, and Julia when the list is used again.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The names of costliest hurricanes include Katrina, Maria, Irma, Harvey, Sandy and Andrew.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Hurricane Katrina is one of the costliest category 5 type hurricanes, which has caused damage over $100 billion.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    2020 Atlantic hurricane season activity is projected to be extremely active, according to the team at Colorado State University (CSU) with 24 named storms (including the nine named storms that already formed as of July 4), 12 hurricanes, and 5 major hurricanes, with above-normal probability for major hurricanes making landfall along the continental United States coastline and in the Caribbean.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    It is a myth that opening windows will help equalize pressure in your house when a hurricane approaches. Your windows should be boarded up with plywood or shutters. If your windows remain open, it will just bring a lot of rain into your house and flying debris into your home, too. Don’t waste time taping your windows, either. It won’t help prevent hurricane damage.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The term ‘hurricane’ is derived from Taino Native American word ‘hurucane,’ which means the evil spirit of the wind.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The first hurricane that caused people to fly in it occurred in 1943 during World War II.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    A tropical storm is a hurricane that travels for 74 miles per hour or higher than that.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Hurricanes are the only weather disasters, each of them having its own name.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    Hurricanes are first formed in a warm moisture atmosphere by swirling above tropical ocean water.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The center of the hurricane, which is the ‘Eye,’ can be as huge as 32 kilometers. The weather in this center (the eye) is usually calm with low winds.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The ‘Eye Wall’ is the ring of clouds and thunderstorms occurring closely around the eye. This experiences the most terrible hurricanes with extremely heavy rains.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The first condition is that ocean waters must be above 26 degrees Celsius (79 degrees Fahrenheit). Below this threshold temperature, hurricanes will not form or will weaken rapidly once they move over the water below this threshold. Ocean temperatures in the tropical East Pacific and the tropical Atlantic routinely surpass this threshold.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The second ingredient is the distance from the equator. Without the spin of the earth and the resulting Coriolis force, hurricanes would not form. Since the Coriolis force is at a maximum at the poles and a minimum at the equator, hurricanes can not form within 5 degrees latitude of the equator. The Coriolis force generates a counterclockwise spin to low pressure in the Northern Hemisphere and a clockwise spin to low pressure in the Southern Hemisphere.

  • HURRICANE FACTS

    The fifth ingredient is high relative humidity values from the surface to the mid-levels of the atmosphere. Dry air in the mid-levels of the atmosphere impedes hurricane development in two ways. First, dry air causes the evaporation of liquid water. Since evaporation is a cooling process, it reduces the warm core structure of the hurricane and limits the vertical development of convection. Second, dry air in the mid-levels can create what is known as a trade wind inversion. This inversion is similar to sinking air in a high-pressure system. The trade wind inversion produces a layer of warm temperatures and dryness in the mid-levels of the atmosphere due to the sinking and adiabatic warming of the mid-level air. This inhibits deep convection and produces a stable lapse rate.

This discussion has been closed.