The birth place of Tropical Storms that impact the Eastern U.S. and Southern Islands. |
1) A tropical thunderstorm
2) It must be 300 miles from the equator. (500 kilometer's)
3) The water temperature of the ocean must be 80 degrees F (27C) or warmer to a depth of at least 165 feet deep (50 meters apprx.) in the ocean.
4) The atmosphere must be saturated with moisture.
5) Very low wind shear is needed. too much and the storm will not be able to spin.
A tropical storm will form once all of these conditions are met, pressure in the center of the depression will drop allowing strong winds to rush towards it when it achieves a wind speed past 39 miles per hour it is then officially called a "tropical storm", it is then named. Irma performed just like this on August 30th, 2017 picking up speed and energy as it transversed the Atlantic Ocean driven by the trade winds. Measuring and tracking all of the data collected by means of instruments on islands, buoy's and aircraft that fly directly into the storms measuring wind speeds. Predicting the path of a storm as well as all of the parameter's involved is expensive, each prediction cost several million dollars, many lives are saved when the predictions are accurate.
Hurricanes gather energy as they move across regions of water that is warmer than is common, and the wind shear is minimal causing the pressure in the eye to drop even further. That is when the wind really intensify's, as the monster is being created it is able to gain or lose strength as it progresses across the wide span of warm tropic water. Hurricanes are cataloged as dictated by the Saffir-Simpson scale, the base measurement is their wind speed, then a prediction of the extent of potential damage is enabled. When the wind speed is 74 miles per hour or greater the tropical storm is then categorized as a Hurricane. There are 5 Hurricane categories, most of us have heard the terminology I will list and briefly explain them:
Lightning and thunder are part of it all, tornado's are as well. |
2) Category 2: Wind speed of 96-110, property damage is significant with flooding, falling and blowing debris increases the threat to humans, power outages become a multi-day event.
3) Category 3: Wind speed of 111-130 mph, property damage is intensive with mobile homes destroyed and extensive flooding, evacuations of humans is mandatory, lose of all utilities for up to several weeks.
4) Category 4: Wind speed of 131-151 mph, great property damage is incurred houses and structures destroyed beyond repair, threat of death is serious in certain areas for humans, very long term utility outages.
5) Category 5: Wind speed of greater than 155mph, complete destruction of homes and shopping centers, many trees are blown over uprooting them, the possibility of lack of utility's is extended to months.
For a comparison Hurricane Irma achieved wind speeds of 185 miles per hour, that's a powerful wind. I was once in a wind storm that had gusting winds of up to 80 mph, once in a while we have those kinds of winds, it destroyed our dock, breaking the 12" diameter wood pylons off at the mud line on the bottom. I was on the dock at the time tying down a huge boat we were storing for a person, the wind caught the boat by the broadside causing pressure on the pylons. The first pylon sounded like an explosion, then immediately after that the other two snapped, wind is powerful.
That's how Hurricanes are made, and it's only one half of the Hurricanes life cycle, the second act is the degrading cycle and how it loses it's energy and dissipates into thin air. Warm moist water feeds them, the warmer the ocean temp the more energy a Hurricane gathers, that is until it makes landfall. As the storm loses the warm water it weakens, there is no water over land so they basically run out of gas however when they reach wind speeds of under 75 miles per hour they are down graded to "tropical storm" status. A Hurricane can head back out to sea, enabling it to once again achieves wind speeds that classify it as a Hurricane, sometimes as with Hurricane Hermine in 2016 they make landfall and are down graded only to energize after returning to sea, they can make land fall again. But when the Hurricane is on land it gradually weakens to the point of becoming a storm as it moves North, dumping great amounts of rain with gusting winds it is doomed to never live in it's glory days ever again, it has died.
Even though not classified as a Hurricane a tropical storm is still capable of causing extensive damage, as in 2012 "Super-storm Sandy" was not a Hurricane when it made landfall and destroyed New Jersey and New York. It's hard to even imagine a storm being more destructive than a tropical storm that morphs into a Hurricane, I've tried in my mind to equate blizzards and wildfire destruction to them, there is no comparison. The extremely high winds and massive amounts of rain causing flooding, as well as the unbelievable cleanup in its path make Hurricanes the worst storm we encounter. Earthquakes can cause as much damage, without water, when the flooding is added it's like making bread, a little water goes a long way in the batter.
It doesn't take a lot of water to make bread, it doesn't take a lot during a hurricane to make it unmanageable. |
thanks for reading and sharing, leave a comment or question, I answer everyone, I enjoy writing and talking to everyone.
jacquesandkate emergencykitsplus.com
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