Hurricanes - Cobb Learning
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Transcript Hurricanes - Cobb Learning
Hurricanes
2010
Hurricanes
A tropical cyclone that
occurs in the Atlantic.
Also a generic term for
low pressure systems
that develop in the
tropics.
Starts as a tropical
depression (winds less
than 39mi/hr).
Becomes a tropical
storm and is given a
name when the winds
exceed 39mi/hr.
Finally becomes a
hurricane when the
winds reach 74mi/hr.
How Hurricanes Form
Form in warm, tropical waters.
Water must be at least
80°F(27°C).
Needs warm, moist air and
converging winds.
Has a large difference in air
pressure.
Formed by the heat energy and
as long as the water is warm are
self-sustaining.
The moist, warm air circulates
around a well defined center.
The lower the pressure at the
center, the faster the winds
will rush in to try to fill it.
Hurricane Formation
Parts Continued
Eye: center of the hurricane.
Weather is calm, may be
clear, and will have no rain.
Winds will come from the
opposite direction after the
eye passes.
Rain bands will move counterclockwise around the eye.
These bands with hurricane
force winds can extend over
300 kilometers from the eye.
So the storms can affect a
wide area.
Parts of a hurricane
Hurricane
Movement
Hurricanes are steered
by the global winds.
So the storms in the
tropics are steered to
the west by the trade
winds. When they get
far enough north the
westerlies take over
and steer them east.
Once over land (or cold
water), they lose
strength as they no
longer have a source of
warm water to draw
energy from.
Friction with the land
can slow the winds down
also.
Hurricanes die out when over
land or cold water as they have
no energy to sustain them.
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale
The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale is a 1-5 rating
based on the hurricane's present intensity (wind speed).
This is used to give an estimate of the potential
property damage and flooding expected along the coast
from a hurricane landfall.
Wind speed is the determining factor in the scale
Called Categories (Katrina was a Category 5 hurricane.)
Hurricane Damage
Hurricane can cause
enormous damage when
they come ashore.
While high winds do a
lot of damage, flooding
is more serious.
Heavy rains cause
flooding, especially if
the hurricane is slow
moving.
Storm surge is even
more serious. It is a
dome of water caused
by low pressure and high
winds. If it coincides
with the high tide, many
coastal areas will be
devastated.
Hurricane Names
Since at least 1945, the
US Navy and later the
Air Force started
naming tropical cyclones.
At first they used
exclusively English
female names, but since
1978 have started to
alternate male and
female names
(alphabetically).
Different areas of the
world tend to use local
names for their areas.
Hurricane Names
There is a six year
list.
If they run out of
names in a year they
use the Greek
alphabet.
Hurricanes that do
significant damage
will have their name
retired.
Atlantic Hurricane Names
Typhoons and Cyclones
Tropical Storm Warnings
TROPICAL STORM
WATCH - Tropical Storm
conditions with sustained
winds from 39 -74 mph are
possible in your area within
the next 36 hours.
TROPICAL STORM
WARNING - Tropical
Storm conditions are
expected in your area
within the next 24 hours.
Hurricane Warnings
HURRICANE WATCH Hurricane conditions
with sustained winds of
74 mph or greater are
possible in your area
within the next 36
hours. Time to think
about evacuating!
HURRICANE
WARNING - Hurricane
conditions are
expected in your area
within 24 hours. Past
time to evacuate!