Difference between revisions of "Tropical cyclone" - New World Encyclopedia

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(Moist air, drawn in over warm ocean waters, rises because it is less dense than surrounding cooler air, but at higher altitude it condenses.)
 
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A '''[[tropical cyclone]]''' is a storm system originating in the [[tropics]] which circulates around a center of [[low pressure area|low pressure]]. It is powered [[condensation]]. Moist air, drawn in over warm ocean waters, rises because it is less dense than surrounding cooler air, but at higher altitude it condenses. Depending on their strength and location, a tropical cyclone can be called a '''tropical depression''', '''tropical storm''', '''hurricane''', or '''typhoon''', among other names.
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They are distinguished from other cyclonic storms, such as winter blizzards and [[nor'easter|nor'easters]], by the heat mechanism that fuels them. 
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[[Image:Cyclone Catarina from the ISS on March 26 2004.JPG|thumb|250px|[[Cyclone Catarina]], a rare [[South Atlantic tropical cyclone]] viewed from the [[International Space Station]] on March 26, 2004.]]
  
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A '''tropical cyclone''' is a meteorological term for a [[storm|storm system]] characterized by a [[low pressure]] center and [[thunderstorms]] that produces strong [[wind]] and flooding [[rain]]. A tropical cyclone feeds on the heat released when moist air rises and the water vapor it contains [[condensation|condenses]]. They are fueled by a different heat mechanism than other cyclonic windstorms such as [[nor'easter]]s, [[European windstorm]]s, and [[polar low]]s, leading to their classification as "warm core" storm systems.
  
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The adjective "tropical" refers to both the geographic origin of these systems, which form almost exclusively in [[tropics|tropical]] regions of the globe, and their formation in [[Air mass#Classification|Maritime Tropical air masses]]. The noun "cyclone" refers to such storms' [[cyclone|cyclonic]] nature, with [[Clockwise and counterclockwise|counterclockwise]] rotation in the [[Northern Hemisphere]] and clockwise rotation in the [[Southern Hemisphere]]. Depending on their location and strength, tropical cyclones are referred to by various other names, such as '''hurricane''', '''typhoon''', '''tropical storm''', '''cyclonic storm''', and '''tropical depression'''.
They can carry extremely high winds, tornadoes, torrential rain, and [[storm surge]] onto coasts, leading to mudslides, flash floods, and lightning-sparked fires in addition to wind damage. Though the effects on populations and ships can be catastrophic, tropical cyclones carry away heat that builds up in the tropics, and have been known to relieve and end droughts in areas they impact. They are a part of the larger [[atmospheric circulation]] that maintains equilibrium in the environment.
 
  
==Mechanics of tropical cyclones==
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While tropical cyclones can produce extremely powerful winds and torrential [[rain]], they are also able to produce high waves and damaging [[storm surge]]. They develop over large bodies of warm water, and lose their strength if they move over land. This is the reason coastal regions can receive significant damage from a tropical cyclone, while inland regions are relatively safe from receiving strong winds. Heavy rains, however, can produce significant flooding inland, and storm surges can produce extensive coastal [[flood]]ing up to 25 [[mile|mi]] (40 [[kilometre|km]]) from the coastline. Although their effects on human populations can be devastating, tropical cyclones can also relieve [[drought]] conditions. They also carry heat and energy away from the tropics and transport it towards [[temperate]] [[latitudes]], which makes them an important part of the global [[atmospheric circulation]] mechanism. As a result, tropical cyclones help to maintain equilibrium in the Earth's [[troposphere]], and to maintain a relatively stable and warm temperature worldwide.
[[Image:Hurricane profile graphic.gif|frame|right|Hurricanes form when the energy released by the condensation of moisture in rising air causes a [[positive feedback loop]]. The air heats up, rising further, which leads to more condensation. The air flowing out of the top of this “chimney” drops towards the ground, forming powerful winds.]]
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{{toc}}
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[[Image:Hurricane Wilma eye.jpg|thumb|250px|Eye of hurricane Wilma.]]
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Many tropical cyclones [[tropical cyclogenesis|develop]] when the atmospheric conditions around a weak disturbance in the atmosphere are favorable. Others form when [[#Related cyclone types|other types of cyclones]] acquire tropical characteristics. Tropical systems are then moved by [[#Steering winds|steering winds]] in the [[troposphere]]; if the conditions remain favorable, the tropical disturbance intensifies, and can even develop an [[eye (cyclone)|eye]]. On the other end of the spectrum, if the conditions around the system deteriorate or the tropical cyclone makes landfall, the system weakens and eventually dissipates.
  
Structurally, a tropical cyclone is a large, rotating system of [[cloud]]s, [[wind]], and [[thunderstorm]]s. Its primary [[energy]] source is the release of the [[heat of condensation]] from water vapor [[condensation|condensing]] at high altitudes, the heat ultimately derived from the [[sun]]. Therefore, a tropical cyclone can be thought of as a giant vertical [[heat engine]] supported by mechanics driven by physical forces such as the [[rotation]] and [[gravity]] of the [[Earth]]. Condensation leads to higher wind speeds, as a tiny fraction of the released energy is converted into mechanical energy;<ref name=NHCC5C>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/C5c.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject C5c] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> the faster winds and lower pressure associated with them in turn cause increased surface evaporation. Much of the released energy drives updrafts that increase the height of the storm clouds, speeding up condensation.<ref name="NOAA Question of the Month">[http://www.noaa.gov/questions/question_082900.html NOAA Question of the Month for August 2000] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> This gives rise to factors that provide the system with enough energy to be self-sufficient and cause a [[positive feedback loop]] where it can draw more energy as long as the source of heat, warm water, remains. Factors such as a continued lack of [[equilibrium]] in air mass distribution would also give supporting energy to the cyclone. The orbital revolution of the Earth causes the system to spin, an effect known as the [[Coriolis effect]], giving it a cyclonic characteristic and affecting the trajectory of the storm.
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==Physical structure==
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[[Image:Hurricane structure graphic.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Structure of a tropical cyclone.]]
  
The factors to form a tropical cyclone include a pre-existing weather disturbance, warm tropical oceans, moisture, and relatively light winds aloft. If the right conditions persist and allow it to create a feedback loop by maximizing the energy intake possible, for example, such as high winds to increase the rate of evaporation, they can combine to produce the violent winds, incredible waves, torrential rains, and [[floods]] associated with this phenomenon.
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All tropical cyclones are areas of [[low pressure area|low]] [[atmospheric pressure]] near the Earth's surface. The pressures recorded at the centers of tropical cyclones are among the lowest that occur on Earth's surface at [[sea level]].<ref name="ABC pressures">Steve Symonds, [https://web.archive.org/web/20071011194541/http://www.abc.net.au/northcoast/stories/s989385.htm Highs and Lows] ''Australian Broadcasting Corporation'', 2003. Retrieved June 9, 2020.</ref> Tropical cyclones are characterized and driven by the release of large amounts of latent [[heat of condensation]], which occurs when moist air is carried upwards and its water vapor condenses. This heat is distributed vertically around the center of the storm. Thus, at any given altitude (except close to the surface, where water temperature dictates air temperature) the environment inside the cyclone is warmer than its outer surroundings.<ref name = whatis/>
  
[[Condensation]] as a driving force is what primarily distinguishes tropical cyclones from other meteorological phenomena.<ref name="BOM Question 6">[http://www.bom.gov.au/weather/wa/cyclone/about/faq/faq_def_6.shtml Bureau of Meteorology FAQ Question 6] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> Because this is strongest in a [[tropical climate]], this defines the initial domain of the tropical cyclone. By contrast, [[mid-latitude cyclone]]s draw their energy mostly from pre-existing horizontal temperature [[gradient]]s in the atmosphere.<ref name="BOM Question 6"/> In order to continue to drive its [[heat engine]], a tropical cyclone must remain over warm water, which provides the atmospheric moisture needed. The evaporation of this moisture is accelerated by the high winds and reduced atmospheric pressure in the storm, resulting in a [[positive feedback loop]]. As a result, when a tropical cyclone passes over land, its strength diminishes rapidly.<ref name=NHCC2>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/C2.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject C2] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
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===Banding===
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[[Rainbands]] are bands of showers and thunderstorms that spiral cyclonically toward the storm center. High wind gusts and heavy downpours often occur in individual rainbands, with relatively calm weather between bands. Tornadoes often form in the rainbands of landfalling tropical cyclones.<ref name="JetStream structure">''National Weather Service'', [https://www.weather.gov/jetstream/tc_structure Tropical Cyclone Structure]. National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> [[Annular hurricane|Intense annular tropical cyclones]] are distinctive for their lack of rainbands; instead, they possess a thick circular area of disturbed weather around their low pressure center.<ref name="KnaffJournal">John A. Knaff, James P. Kossin, and Mark DeMaria, [http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/~kossin/articles/annularhurr.pdf Annular Hurricanes]. ''Weather and Forecasting''. 18(2) (2003):204-223. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> While all surface low pressure areas require divergence aloft to continue deepening, the divergence over tropical cyclones is in all directions away from the center. The upper levels of a tropical cyclone feature winds directed away from the center of the storm with an [[anticyclonic]] rotation, due to the [[Coriolis effect]]. [[Wind]]s at the surface are strongly cyclonic, weaken with height, and eventually reverse themselves. Tropical cyclones owe this unique characteristic to requiring a relative lack of vertical [[wind shear]] to maintain the warm core at the center of the storm.<ref>R. Craig Kochel, Victor R. Baker, and Peter C. Patton, ''Flood Geomorphology'' (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Interscience, 1988, ISBN 0471625582).</ref>
  
Scientists at the [[National Center for Atmospheric Research]] estimate that a hurricane releases heat energy at the rate of 50 to 200 [[trillion]] [[watt]]s.<ref name="NOAA Question of the Month"/> By comparison, this is about the amount of energy released by exploding a 10-megaton [[nuclear bomb]] every 20 minutes or <ref name=UCAR>[[University Corporation for Atmospheric Research]][http://www.ucar.edu/news/features/hurricanes/index.jsp Hurricanes: Keeping an eye on weather's biggest bullies] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> or 200 times the total energy production capacity of the entire world.<ref name="NOAA Question of the Month"/>
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===Eye and inner core ===
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A strong tropical cyclone will harbor an area of sinking air at the center of circulation. If this area is strong enough, it can develop into an [[eye (cyclone)|eye]]. Weather in the eye is normally calm and free of clouds, though the sea may be extremely violent.<ref name="JetStream structure"/> The eye is normally circular in shape, and may range in size from 3 to 370&nbsp;km (2–230&nbsp;miles) in diameter. Intense, mature hurricanes can sometimes exhibit an inward curving of the eyewall's top, making it resemble a football stadium; this phenomenon is thus sometimes referred to as the ''[[Eye (cyclone)#Stadium effect|stadium effect]]''.<ref> Judson Jones, [https://www.cnn.com/2018/09/05/us/anatomy-of-a-hurricane-trnd-wxc/index.html Hurricane categories and other terminology explained] ''CNN'', September 5, 2018. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
  
While the most obvious motion of clouds is toward the center, tropical cyclones also develop an upper-level (high-altitude) outward flow of clouds. These originate from air that has released its moisture and is expelled at high altitude through the "chimney" of the storm engine. This outflow produces high, thin cirrus clouds that spiral away from the center. The high cirrus clouds may be the first signs of an approaching hurricane.
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There are other features that either surround the eye, or cover it. The [[central dense overcast]] is the concentrated area of strong thunderstorm activity near the center of a tropical cyclone.<ref>American Meteorological Society, [http://glossary.ametsoc.org/wiki/Central_dense_overcast central dense overcast]. ''Meteorology Glossary''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> The [[eyewall]] is a circle of strong thunderstorms that surrounds the eye; here is where the greatest wind speeds are found, where clouds reach the highest, and precipitation is the heaviest. The heaviest wind damage occurs where a hurricane's eyewall passes over land.<ref name="JetStream structure"/> Associated with eyewalls are [[Eye (cyclone)#Eyewall replacement cycle|eyewall replacement cycles]], which occur naturally in intense tropical cyclones. When cyclones reach peak intensity they usually—but not always—have an eyewall and [[radius of maximum wind]]s that contract to a very small size, around 10&ndash;25&nbsp;km (5 to 15&nbsp;miles). At this point, some of the outer rainbands may organize into an outer ring of thunderstorms that slowly moves inward and robs the inner eyewall of its needed moisture and [[angular momentum]]. During this phase, the tropical cyclone weakens (i.e., the maximum winds die off somewhat and the central pressure goes up), but eventually the outer eyewall replaces the inner one completely. The storm can be of the same intensity as it was previously or, in some cases, it can be even stronger after the eyewall replacement cycle. Even if the cyclone is weaker at the end of the cycle, the storm may strengthen again as it builds a new outer ring for the next eyewall replacement.<ref>Jeff Haby, [https://www.theweatherprediction.com/habyhints2/412/ Eyewall Replacement Cycle] ''TheWeatherPrediction.com''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
  
==Formation==
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===Size===
[[Image:Atlantic hurricane graphic.gif|frame|right|Waves in the trade winds in the Atlantic Ocean&mdash;areas of converging winds that move along the same track as the prevailing wind&mdash;create instabilities in the atmosphere that may lead to the formation of hurricanes.]]
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The size of a tropical cyclone is determined by measuring the distance from their center of circulation to their outermost closed [[isobar]]. If the radius is less than two [[latitude|degrees of latitude]] (120&nbsp;nm, 222&nbsp;km), then the cyclone is "very small" or a "midget." Radii of 2–3&nbsp;degrees (120–180&nbsp;nm, 222–333&nbsp;km) are considered "small."  Radii between 3 and 6&nbsp;latitude degrees (180–360&nbsp;nm, 333–666&nbsp;km) are considered "average sized." Tropical cyclones are considered "large" when the closed isobar radius is 6–8&nbsp;degrees of latitude (360–480&nbsp;nm, 666–888&nbsp;km), while "very large" tropical cyclones have a radius of greater than 8&nbsp;degrees (480&nbsp;nm, 888&nbsp;km). Other methods of determining a tropical cyclone's size include measuring the radius of gale force winds and measuring the radius of the central dense overcast.
  
The formation of tropical cyclones is the topic of extensive ongoing research, and is still not fully understood. Six general factors are necessary to make tropical cyclone formation possible, although tropical cyclones may occasionally form despite not meeting these conditions:
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==Mechanics==
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[[Image:Hurricane profile.svg|thumb|250px|right|Tropical cyclones form when the energy released by the condensation of moisture in rising air causes a [[positive feedback loop]] over warm ocean waters.]]
  
# [[Sea surface temperature|Water temperatures]] of at least 26.5&nbsp;&deg;C (80&deg;F)<ref name="NHCA15">[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/A15.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject A15] accessed March 30, 2006</ref> down to a depth of at least 50&nbsp;m (150&nbsp;feet). Waters of this temperature cause the overlying atmosphere to be unstable enough to sustain convection and thunderstorms.<ref name="NHCA16">[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/A16.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject A16] accessed March 30, 2006</ref>
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A tropical cyclone's primary [[energy]] source is the release of the [[heat of condensation]] from water vapor [[condensation|condensing]] at high altitudes, with [[solar heating]] being the initial source for evaporation. Therefore, a tropical cyclone can be visualized as a giant vertical [[heat engine]] supported by mechanics driven by physical forces such as the [[rotation]] and [[gravity]] of the [[Earth]]. In another way, tropical cyclones could be viewed as a special type of [[Mesoscale Convective Complex|mesoscale convective complex]], which continues to develop over a vast source of relative warmth and moisture. Condensation leads to higher wind speeds, as a tiny fraction of the released energy is converted into mechanical energy;<ref name=mitigation>[https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd-faq/#hurricane-mitigation Other Common Misconceptions About Hurricane Mitigation: Nuclear Weapons] ''NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> the faster winds and lower pressure associated with them in turn cause increased surface evaporation and thus even more condensation. Much of the released energy drives [[vertical draft|updrafts]] that increase the height of the storm clouds, speeding up condensation. This gives rise to factors that provide the system with enough energy to be self-sufficient, and cause a [[positive feedback loop]] that continues as long as the tropical cyclone can draw energy from a [[heat sink|thermal reservoir]]. In this case, the heat source is the warm water at the surface of the ocean. Factors such as a continued lack of equilibrium in air mass distribution would also give supporting energy to the cyclone. The rotation of the Earth causes the system to spin, an effect known as the [[Coriolis effect]], giving it a cyclonic characteristic and affecting the trajectory of the storm.
# Rapid cooling with height. This allows the release of [[latent heat]], which is the source of energy in a tropical cyclone.<ref name="NHCA15"/>
 
# High humidity, especially in the lower-to-mid [[troposphere]]. When there is lots of moisture in the atmosphere, conditions are more favourable for disturbances to develop.<ref name="NHCA15"/>
 
# Low [[wind shear]]. When wind shear is high, the convection in a cyclone or disturbance will be disrupted, blowing the system apart.<ref name="NHCA15"/>
 
# Distance from the [[equator]]. This allows the [[Coriolis force]] to deflect winds blowing towards the low pressure center, causing a circulation. The ''approximate'' distance is  500&nbsp;km (500&nbsp;) or 10 degrees.<ref name="NHCA15"/>
 
# A pre-existing system of disturbed weather. The system must have some sort of circulation as well as a low pressure center.<ref name="NHCA15"/>
 
  
Only specific weather disturbances can result in tropical cyclones. These include:
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What primarily distinguishes tropical cyclones from other meteorological phenomena is the energy source. The tropical cyclone gains energy from the warm waters of the tropics through the latent heat of [[condensation]].<ref>Megan Mulford, What is the Difference Between Hurricanes and Mid-Latitude Cyclones? ''Weatherology'', February 22, 2018. </ref> Because convection is strongest in a [[tropical climate]], it defines the initial domain of the tropical cyclone. By contrast, [[mid-latitude cyclone]]s draw their energy mostly from pre-existing horizontal temperature [[gradient]]s in the atmosphere. To continue to drive its heat engine, a tropical cyclone must remain over warm water, which provides the needed atmospheric moisture to maintain the positive feedback loop running. As a result, when a tropical cyclone passes over land, it is cut off from its heat source and its strength diminishes rapidly.<ref>[https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd-faq/#anatomy-and-lifecycle Anatomy and Lifecycle of a Storn] ''NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
  
# [[Tropical waves]], or easterly waves, which, as mentioned above, are westward moving areas of convergent winds. This often assists in the development of thunderstorms, which can develop into tropical cyclones. Most tropical cyclones form from these. A similar phenomenon to tropical waves are West African disturbance lines, which are squally lines of convection that form over [[Africa]] and move into the Atlantic.
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[[Image:GulfMexTemps 2005Hurricanes.gif|thumb|250px|Chart displaying the drop in surface temperature in the [[Gulf of Mexico]] as Hurricanes [[Hurricane Katrina|Katrina]] and [[Hurricane Rita|Rita]] passed over]]
# Tropical upper [[tropospheric]] troughs, which are cold-core upper level lows. A warm-core tropical cyclone may result when one of these (on occasion) works down to the lower levels and produces deep [[convection]].
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The passage of a tropical cyclone over the ocean can cause the upper layers of the ocean to cool substantially, which can influence subsequent cyclone development. Cooling is primarily caused by upwelling of cold water from deeper in the ocean due to the wind stresses the storm itself induces upon the sea surface. Additional cooling may come in the form of cold water from falling raindrops. Cloud cover may also play a role in cooling the ocean, by shielding the ocean surface from direct sunlight before and slightly after the storm passage. All these effects can combine to produce a dramatic drop in sea surface temperature over a large area in just a few days.<ref name=NOAAFAQH>Joe Cione, [http://www.meteo.fr/temps/domtom/La_Reunion/webcmrs9.0/anglais/faq/FAQ_Ang_H.html How does the ocean respond to a hurricane and how does this feedback to the storm itself?] Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, Hurricane Research Division. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
# Decaying frontal boundaries may occasionally stall over warm waters and produce lines of active convection. If a low level circulation forms under this convection, it may develop into a tropical cyclone.
 
  
===Locations of formation===
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While the most obvious motion of clouds is toward the center, tropical cyclones also develop an upper-level (high-altitude) outward flow of clouds. These originate from air that has released its moisture and is expelled at high altitude through the "chimney" of the storm engine. This outflow produces high, thin [[cirrus cloud]]s that spiral away from the center. These high cirrus clouds may be the first signs of an approaching tropical cyclone when seen from dry land.<ref name=NOAAFAQH/>
Most tropical cyclones form in a worldwide band of thunderstorm activity called the Intertropical Discontinuity (ITD), also called the [[Intertropical Convergence Zone]] (ITCZ).
 
  
Nearly all of these systems form between 10 and 30 degrees of the [[equator]] and 87% form within 20 degrees of it.  Because the [[Coriolis effect]] initiates and maintains tropical cyclone rotation, such cyclones almost never form or move within about 10 degrees of the equator <ref name=BOMmap>[[Bureau of Meteorology]] [http://www.bom.gov.au/bmrc/pubs/tcguide/ch1/figures_ch1/figure1.9.htm Worldwide Tropical Cyclone Tracks 1979-88]</ref>, where the Coriolis effect is weakest. However, it is possible for tropical cyclones to form within this boundary if there is another source of initial rotation. These conditions are extremely rare, and such storms are believed to form at most once per century. A combination of a pre-existing disturbance, upper level divergence and a [[monsoon]]-related cold spell led to  [[Typhoon Vamei]] at only 1.5 degrees north of the equator in [[2001]]. It is estimated that such conditions occur only once every 400 years.<ref name="USAToday Vamei">{{cite news | title= Scientists dissect rare typhoon near Equator | publisher = Associated Press | url = http://www.usatoday.com/weather/news/2003-04-05-typhoon-vamei_x.htm | accessdate=2006-03-31}}</ref>
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==Major basins and related warning centers==
 
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{| style="float: right; clear: right; background-color: transparent; margin-left: 0em"
However, the hurricanes that enter the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa have actually originated from the Indian Ocean. The storms develop over the Indian Ocean and head westward. As the disturbances move west, they hit eastern Africa, and the moisture from these disturbances builds up as the storm system moves over the mountains in eastern Africa. As the moisture leaves the mountains, high level winds propell it west as it crosses the continent of Africa. Once the disturbance has cleared Africa, it moves off the west coast of Africa by the Cape Verde Islands. Of course not all these storms turn into tropical storms or hurricanes, but the ones that do move into the warm areas of the Atlantic Ocean and develop into full-fledged hurricanes. Originally, these mammoth storms are formed by disturbances in the Indian Ocean.{{fact}}
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{|class="wikitable" style="float: right; font-size: 92%; margin-right: 0px;"
====Major basins====
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! colspan=2 style="background: #ccf;" | Basins and [[World Meteorological Organization|WMO]] Monitoring Institutions
There are seven main basins of tropical cyclone formation. They are the north [[Atlantic Ocean]], the eastern and western parts of the [[Pacific Ocean]], the southwestern Pacific, and the southwestern and southeastern [[Indian Ocean]]s, and the northern Indian Ocean. Worldwide, an average of 80 tropical cyclones form each year.<ref name=NHCE10>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/E10.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject E10] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
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|-
 
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! Basin !! Responsible RSMCs and TCWCs
{|class="wikitable"
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!colspan=2|Zones and Forecasters<ref name=NHCF1>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/F1.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject F1] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
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| Northern Atlantic || [[National Hurricane Center]]
 
|-
 
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! Basin !! WMO Regional Specialized Meteorological Center(s)
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| Northeastern Pacific || [[National Hurricane Center]]
 
|-
 
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| North Atlantic || [[National Hurricane Center]]
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| North Central Pacific || [[Central Pacific Hurricane Center]]
 
|-
 
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| Eastern North Pacific || [[National Hurricane Center]] & [[Central Pacific Hurricane Center]]
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| Northwestern Pacific || [[Japan Meteorological Agency]]
 
|-
 
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| Western North Pacific || [[Japan Meteorological Agency]]
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| Northern Indian Ocean || [[Indian Meteorological Department]]
 
|-
 
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| North Indian || [[Indian Meteorological Service]]
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| Southwestern Indian Ocean || [[Météo-France]]
 
|-
 
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| South Pacific || [[Fiji Meteorological Services]] & [[New Zealand Meteorological Service]] & [[Papua New Guinea National Weather Service]] & [[Bureau of Meteorology|Australian Bureau of Meteorology]]
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| South and<br />Southwestern Pacific || [[Fiji Meteorological Service]]<br />[[Meteorological Service of New Zealand]]<sup>†</sup><br />Papua New Guinea National Weather Service<sup>†</sup><br />[[Bureau of Meteorology]]<sup>†</sup> (Australia)
 
|-
 
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| Eastern South Indian || [[Bureau of Meteorology|Australian Bureau of Meteorology]]
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| Southeastern Indian Ocean|| [[Bureau of Meteorology]]<sup>†</sup> (Australia)<br/>[[Badan Meteorologi dan Geofisika|Meteorological and Geophysical Agency]]<sup>†</sup> (Indonesia)
 
|-
 
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| Western South Indian || [[Méteo France]]
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! colspan=2 style="font-size: 92%; text-align: right;" | <sup>†</sup>: '''''Indicates a Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre'''''
 
|}
 
|}
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[[Image:Global tropical cyclone tracks-edit2.jpg|thumb|right|372px|Map of the cumulative tracks of all tropical cyclones during the 1985–2005 time period. The [[Pacific Ocean]] west of the [[International Date Line]] sees more tropical cyclones than any other basin, while there is almost no activity in the [[Atlantic Ocean]] south of the [[Equator]].]]
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|}
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There are six [[Regional Specialized Meteorological Centre]]s (RSMCs) worldwide. These organizations are designated by the [[World Meteorological Organization]] and are responsible for tracking and issuing bulletins, warnings, and advisories about tropical cyclones in their designated areas of responsibility. Additionally, there are six [[Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre]]s (TCWCs) that provide information to smaller regions. The RSMCs and TCWCs, however, are not the only organizations that provide information about tropical cyclones to the public. The [[Joint Typhoon Warning Center]] (JTWC) issues informal advisories in all basins except the Northern Atlantic and Northeastern Pacific. The [[Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration]] (PAGASA) issues informal advisories and names for tropical cyclones that approach the [[Philippines]] in the Northwestern Pacific. The [[Canadian Hurricane Centre]] (CHC) issues advisories on hurricanes and their remnants when they affect Canada.
  
* '''North Atlantic Basin:''' The most-studied of all tropical basins, it includes the [[Atlantic Ocean]], the [[Caribbean Sea]], and the [[Gulf of Mexico]].  Tropical cyclone formation here varies widely from year to year, ranging from over twenty to one per year. The average is about ten. The [[United States]] Atlantic coast, [[Mexico]], [[Central America]], the [[Caribbean Islands]] and [[Bermuda]] are frequently affected by storms in this basin. Venezuela, the south-east of Canada and Atlantic [[Macaronesia|"Macaronesian" islands]] are also occasionally affected. Hurricanes that strike [[Mexico]], [[Central America]], and [[Caribbean]] island nations, often do intense damage, as hurricanes are deadlier over warmer water.  Additionally, they can hit the coast of the U.S., especially [[Florida]], [[North Carolina]], the [[Gulf Coast of the United States|U.S. Gulf Coast]] and occasionally [[New Jersey]], [[New York]] and [[New England]] (usually hurricanes weaken to tropical storms before they reach these northern regions). The coast of [[Atlantic Canada]] receives hurricane landfalls on rare occasions, such as [[Hurricane Juan]] in [[2003]].  Many of the more intense Atlantic storms are [[Cape Verde-type hurricane]]s, which form off the west coast of [[Africa]] near the [[Cape Verde]] islands.
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== Formation==
* '''Western North Pacific Ocean:''' Tropical storm activity in this region frequently affects [[China]], [[Japan]], the [[Philippines]], and [[Taiwan]], but also many other countries in South-East Asia, such as [[Vietnam]], [[South Korea]] and [[Indonesia]], plus numerous [[Oceania|Oceanian]] islands. This is by far the most active basin, accounting for one-third of all tropical cyclone activity in the world. The eastern coasts of Taiwan and Philippines also have the highest tropical cyclone landfall frequency in the world.{{fact}}
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{{main|Tropical cyclogenesis}}
* '''Eastern North Pacific Ocean:''' This is the second most active basin in the world, and the most dense (a large number of storms for a small area of ocean). Storms that form here can affect western [[Mexico]], [[Hawaii]], northern [[Central America]], and on extremely rare occasions, [[California]].
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===Times===
* '''South Western Pacific Ocean:''' Tropical activity in this region largely affects [[Australia]] and [[Oceania]].
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Worldwide, tropical cyclone activity peaks in late [[summer]], when the difference between temperatures aloft and sea surface temperatures is the greatest. However, each particular basin has its own seasonal patterns. On a worldwide scale, May is the least active month, while September is the most active.<ref name = HurricaneSeason> [https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd-faq/#hurricane-season Hurricane Season Information] ''NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
* '''Northern Indian Ocean:''' This basin is divided into two areas, the [[Bay of Bengal]] and the [[Arabian Sea]], with the Bay of Bengal dominating (5 to 6 times more activity).  This basin's season has an interesting double peak; one in April and May before the onset of the [[monsoon]], and another in October and November just after. Hurricanes which form in this basin have historically cost the most lives &mdash; most notably, the [[1970 Bhola cyclone]] killed 200,000. Nations affected by this basin include [[India]], [[Bangladesh]], [[Sri Lanka]], [[Thailand]], [[Myanmar]], and [[Pakistan]]. Rarely, a tropical cyclone formed in this basin will affect the [[Arabian Peninsula]].
 
* '''Southeastern Indian Ocean:''' Tropical activity in this region affects [[Australia]] and [[Indonesia]].
 
* '''Southwestern Indian Ocean:''' This basin is the least understood, due to a lack of historical data. Cyclones forming here impact [[Madagascar]], [[Mozambique]], [[Mauritius]], and [[Kenya]].
 
 
 
====Unusual formation areas====
 
[[Image:Hurricane_Vince_October_9_2005_2300_UTC.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Hurricane Vince on [[October 9]], [[2005]] at 2300 UTC near the [[Madeira Islands]].]]
 
The following areas spawn tropical cyclones only very rarely.
 
* '''South Atlantic Ocean:''' A combination of cooler waters and [[wind shear]] makes it very difficult for the [[South Atlantic]] to support tropical activity. However, three tropical cyclones have been observed here &mdash; a weak tropical storm in 1991 off the coast of [[Africa]], [[Cyclone Catarina]] (sometimes also referred to as Aldonça), which made landfall in [[Brazil]] in 2004 at Category 1 strength, and a smaller storm in [[January 2004]], east of [[Salvador, Brazil]]. The January storm is thought to have reached tropical storm intensity based on [[scatterometer]] winds.
 
* '''Central North Pacific:''' Shear in this area of the [[Pacific Ocean]] severely limits tropical development, with no storms having formed here since 2002. However, this region is commonly frequented by tropical cyclones that form in the much more favorable Eastern North Pacific Basin.<ref name=CPHC>[http://www.prh.noaa.gov/cphc/pages/hurrclimate.php Central Pacific Hurricane Center archives] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
 
*'''Eastern South Pacific:'''  Tropical cyclone formation is rare in this region; when they do form, it is frequently linked to El Niño episodes.  Most of the storms that enter this region formed farther west in the Southwest Pacific.  They affect the islands of [[Polynesia]] in exceptional instances.{{fact}}
 
* '''Mediterranean Sea:''' Storms which appear similar to tropical cyclones in structure sometimes occur in the Mediterranean basin. Examples of these "[[Mediterranean tropical cyclones]]" formed in September [[1947]], September [[1969]], January [[1982]], September [[1983]], and January [[1995]]. However, there is debate on whether these storms were tropical in nature.<ref name=NHCF1/>
 
* '''Temperate subtropics''': areas further than thirty degrees from the equator are not normally conducive to tropical cyclone formation or strengthening, and areas more than forty degrees from the equator are very hostile to such development.  The primary limiting factor is water temperatures, although higher shear at increasing latitudes is also a factor. These areas are sometimes frequented by cyclones moving poleward from tropical latitudes. On rare occasions, such as in [[1988 Atlantic hurricane season#Tropical Storm Alberto|1988]]<ref name=UnisysAlberto>[http://www.weather.unisys.com/hurricane/atlantic/1988/ALBERTO/track.dat Unisys Alberto "Best-track"] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> and [[1975 Pacific hurricane season#Hurricane 12|1975]]<ref name=Unisys12>[http://www.weather.unisys.com/hurricane/e_pacific/1975/12/track.dat Unisys "12" "Best-track"] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> may form or strengthen in this region.
 
* '''Low latitudes'''. Areas within approximately ten degrees latitude of the equator do not experience a significant coriolis force, a vital ingredient in tropical cyclone formation.  However, in December 2001, [[2001 Pacific typhoon season|Typhoon Vamei]] formed in the Southern South China Sea and made landfall in [[Malaysia]]. It formed from a thunderstorm formation in [[Borneo]] that moved into the South China Sea.<ref name="UnisysVamei">[http://www.weather.unisys.com/hurricane/w_pacific/2001/32/track.dat Unisys Vamei "Best-track"] accessed March 30, 2006</ref>
 
 
 
===Times of formation===
 
Worldwide, tropical cyclone activity peaks in late [[summer]] when water temperatures are the warmest. However, each particular basin has its own seasonal patterns. On a worldwide scale, [[May]] is the least active month, while [[September]] is the most active.<ref name=NHCG1>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/G1.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject G1] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
 
  
In the North [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]], a distinct hurricane season occurs from [[June 1]] to [[November 30]], sharply peaking from late August through September. The statistical peak of the North Atlantic hurricane season is [[September 10]]. The Northeast Pacific has a broader period of activity, but in a similar timeframe to the Atlantic. The Northwest Pacific sees tropical cyclones year-round, with a minimum in February and a peak in early September. In the North Indian basin, storms are most common from April to December, with peaks in May and November.<ref name=NHCG1/>
+
In the North [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]], a distinct hurricane season occurs from June 1 to November 30, sharply peaking from late August through September.<ref name = HurricaneSeason/> The statistical peak of the North Atlantic hurricane season is September 10. The Northeast Pacific has a broader period of activity, but in a similar time frame to the Atlantic.<ref name="NHC Atl climatology"> [https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/climo/ Tropical Cyclone Climatology]. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> The Northwest Pacific sees tropical cyclones year-round, with a minimum in February and a peak in early September. In the North Indian basin, storms are most common from April to December, with peaks in May and November.<ref name = HurricaneSeason/>
  
In the [[Southern Hemisphere]], tropical cyclone activity begins in late October and ends in May. Southern Hemisphere activity peaks in mid-February to early March.<ref name=NHCG1/>
+
In the [[Southern Hemisphere]], tropical cyclone activity begins in late October and ends in May. Southern Hemisphere activity peaks in mid-February to early March.<ref name = HurricaneSeason/>
  
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="3" class=wikitable
+
<center>
!colspan=6| Seasons and Numbers of storms<ref name=NHCE10/><ref name=NHCG1/>
+
{|class="wikitable" style="font-size: 92%;"
 +
! colspan=6 style="background: #ccf;" | Season lengths and seasonal averages<ref name = HurricaneSeason/>
 
|-
 
|-
! Basin !! Season Start !! Season End !! Tropical Storms (>34 knots) !! Tropical Cyclones (>63 knots)!! Category 3+ Tropical Cyclones (>95 knots)
+
! Basin !! Season start !! Season end !! Tropical Storms<br />(>34&nbsp;knots) !! Tropical Cyclones<br />(>63&nbsp;knots)!! Category 3+ TCs<br />(>95&nbsp;knots)
 
|-
 
|-
| Northwest Pacific || Year Round || Year Round || 26.7 || 16.9 || 8.5  
+
| Northwest Pacific || April || January || 26.7 || 16.9 || 8.5
 
|-
 
|-
 
| South Indian || October || May || 20.6 || 10.3 || 4.3
 
| South Indian || October || May || 20.6 || 10.3 || 4.3
 
|-
 
|-
| Northeast Pacific || May || November || 16.3 || 9.0 || 4.1  
+
| Northeast Pacific || May || November || 16.3 || 9.0 || 4.1
 
|-
 
|-
| North Atlantic || June || November || 10.6 || 5.9 || 2.0  
+
| North Atlantic || June || November || 10.6 || 5.9 || 2.0
 
|-
 
|-
| Australia Southwest Pacific || October || May || 10.6 || 4.8 || 1.9  
+
| Australia Southwest Pacific || October || May || 10.6 || 4.8 || 1.9
 
|-
 
|-
| North Indian || April || December || 5.4 || 2.2 || 0.4  
+
| North Indian || April || December || 5.4 || 2.2 || 0.4
 
|}
 
|}
 +
</center>
  
==Structure and classification==
+
===Factors===
 
+
[[Image:Atlantic hurricane graphic.gif|thumb|250px|right|Waves in the trade winds in the Atlantic Ocean—areas of converging winds that move along the same track as the prevailing wind—create instabilities in the atmosphere that may lead to the formation of hurricanes.]]
A strong tropical cyclone consists of the following components.
 
 
 
* '''[[low pressure area|Surface low]]:''' All tropical cyclones rotate around an area of low [[atmospheric pressure]] near the [[Earth]]'s surface. The pressures recorded at the centers of tropical cyclones are among the lowest that occur on Earth's surface at [[sea level]].
 
* '''Warm core:''' Tropical cyclones are characterized and driven by the release of large amounts of latent [[heat of condensation]] as moist air is carried upwards and its water vapor condenses. This heat is distributed vertically, around the center of the storm. Thus, at any given altitude (except close to the surface where water temperature dictates air temperature) the environment inside the cyclone is warmer than its outer surroundings.
 
* '''Central Dense Overcast (CDO):''' The Central Dense Overcast is a dense shield of very intense [[thunderstorm]] activity that make up the inner portion of the hurricane. This contains the eye wall, and the eye itself. The classic hurricane contains a symmetrical CDO, which means that it is perfectly circular and round on all sides.
 
[[Image:Hurricane structure graphic.jpg|frame|right|Eye, eyewalls and bands of hurricane]]
 
* '''Eye:''' A strong tropical cyclone will harbor an area of sinking air at the center of circulation. Weather in the eye is normally calm and free of clouds (however, the sea may be extremely violent). Eyes are home to the coldest temperatures of the storm at the surface, and the warmest temperatures at the upper levels.  The eye is normally circular in shape, and may range in size from 8 km to 200 km (5 miles to 125 miles) in diameter. In weaker cyclones, the CDO covers the circulation center, resulting in no visible eye.
 
* '''[[Eyewall]]:''' A band around the eye of greatest wind speed, where clouds reach highest and precipitation is heaviest. The heaviest wind damage occurs where a hurricane's eyewall passes over land.
 
* '''Outflow:''' The upper levels of a tropical cyclone feature winds headed away from the center of the storm with an [[anticyclonic]] rotation. [[Winds]] at the surface are strongly cyclonic, weaken with height, and eventually reverse themselves. Tropical cyclones owe this unique characteristic to the warm core at the center of the storm.
 
 
 
===Intensities of tropical cyclones===
 
[[Image:Td19.jpg|thumb|220px|right|Tropical Depression 19, which formed during the [[2005 Atlantic hurricane season]], showing the lack of organization in tropical depressions when compared to stronger cyclones.]]
 
Tropical cyclones are classified into three main groups, based on intensity: tropical depressions, tropical storms, and a third group of more intense storms, whose name depends on the region.
 
 
 
A ''tropical depression'' is an organized system of clouds and thunderstorms with a defined surface circulation and maximum sustained winds of less than 17&nbsp;[[metre per second|m/s]] (33&nbsp;[[knot (speed)|kt]], 38&nbsp;[[miles per hour|mph]], or 62&nbsp;[[kilometres per hour|km/h]]). It has no eye, and does not typically have the organization or the spiral shape of more powerful storms. It is already becoming a low-pressure system, however, hence the name "depression".
 
 
 
A ''tropical storm'' is an organized system of strong thunderstorms with a defined surface circulation and maximum sustained winds between 17 and 32&nbsp;m/s (34&ndash;63&nbsp;kt, 39&ndash;73&nbsp;mph, or 62&ndash;117&nbsp;km/h). At this point, the distinctive cyclonic shape starts to develop, though an eye is usually not present. Government weather services assign first names to systems that reach this intensity (thus the term ''named storm'').
 
 
 
At hurricane and typhoon intensity, a system with sustained winds greater than 33&nbsp;m/s (64&nbsp;kt, 74&nbsp;mph, or 118&nbsp;km/h), a tropical cyclone tends to develop an ''eye'', an area of relative calm (and lowest atmospheric pressure) at the center of circulation. The eye is often visible in satellite images as a small, circular, cloud-free spot. Surrounding the eye is the [[eyewall]], an area about 10&ndash;50&nbsp;mi (16&ndash;80&nbsp;km) wide in which the strongest thunderstorms and winds circulate around the storm's center.
 
  
The circulation of clouds around a cyclone's center imparts a distinct spiral shape to the system. Bands or arms may extend over great distances as clouds are drawn toward the cyclone. The direction of the cyclonic circulation depends on the hemisphere; it is counterclockwise in the [[Northern Hemisphere]] and clockwise in the [[Southern Hemisphere]]. Maximum sustained winds in the strongest tropical cyclones have been measured at more than 85&nbsp;m/s (165&nbsp;kt, 190&nbsp;mph, 305&nbsp;km/h). Intense, mature hurricanes can sometimes exhibit an inward curving of the eyewall top that resembles a football stadium: this phenomenon is thus sometimes referred to as the [[stadium effect]].
+
The formation of tropical cyclones is the topic of extensive ongoing research and is still not fully understood. While six factors appear to be generally necessary, tropical cyclones may occasionally form without meeting all of the following conditions. In most situations, [[Sea surface temperature|water temperatures]] of at least 26.5&nbsp;°C (80&nbsp;°F) are needed down to a depth of at least 50&nbsp;m (150&nbsp;feet). Waters of this temperature cause the overlying atmosphere to be unstable enough to sustain convection and thunderstorms. Another factor is rapid cooling with height. This allows the release of [[latent heat]], which is the source of energy in a tropical cyclone. High humidity is needed, especially in the lower-to-mid [[troposphere]]; when there is a great deal of moisture in the atmosphere, conditions are more favorable for disturbances to develop. Low amounts of [[wind shear]] are needed, as when shear is high, the convection in a cyclone or disturbance will be disrupted, preventing formation of the feedback loop. Tropical cyclones generally need to form more than 500&nbsp;km (310&nbsp;miles) or 5 degrees of [[latitude]] away from the [[equator]]. This allows the [[Coriolis effect]] to deflect winds blowing towards the low pressure center, causing a circulation. Lastly, a formative tropical cyclone needs a pre-existing system of disturbed weather. The system must have some sort of circulation as well as a low pressure center.<ref>[https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/how-hurricanes-form.html How do hurricanes form?] ''National Weather Service''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
 
 
[[Eyewall#Eyewall replacement cycle|Eyewall replacement cycles]] naturally occur in intense tropical cyclones. When cyclones reach peak intensity they usually - but not always - have an eyewall and radius of maximum winds that contract to a very small size, around 5 to 15 miles. At this point, some of the outer rainbands may organize into an outer ring of thunderstorms that slowly moves inward and robs the inner eyewall of its needed moisture and momentum. During this phase, the tropical cyclone is weakening (i.e. the maximum winds die off a bit and the central pressure goes up). Eventually the outer eyewall replaces the inner one completely and the storm can be the same intensity as it was previously or, in some cases, even stronger.
 
 
 
===Categories and ranking===
 
{{Saffir-Simpson small}}
 
Hurricanes are ranked according to their maximum winds using the [[Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale]]. A ''Category 1'' storm has the lowest maximum winds, a ''Category 5'' hurricane has the highest. The rankings are not absolute in terms of effects. Lower-category storms can inflict greater damage than higher-category storms, depending on factors such as local terrain and total rainfall. For instance, a Category 2 hurricane that strikes a major urban area will likely do more damage than a large Category 5 hurricane that strikes a mostly rural region. In fact, tropical systems of less than hurricane strength can produce significant damage and human casualties, especially from flooding and landslides.
 
 
 
The [[National Hurricane Center]] classifies hurricanes of Category 3 and above as ''major hurricanes''. The [[Joint Typhoon Warning Center]] classifies typhoons with wind speeds of at least 150&nbsp;mph (67&nbsp;m/s or 241&nbsp;km/h, equivalent to a strong Category 4 storm) as ''Super Typhoons''.
 
 
 
The definition of sustained winds recommended by the [[World Meteorological Organization]] (WMO) and used by most weather agencies is that of a 10-minute average. The U.S. weather service defines sustained winds based on 1-minute average speed measured 10&nbsp;m (33&nbsp;ft) above the surface.<ref name="NWSM Defs">http://www.weather.gov/directives/sym/pd01006004curr.pdf</ref><ref name="FEMA glossary">{{cite web | author=[[Federal Emergency Management Agency]] | title = Hurricane Glossary of Terms | year = 2004 | accessdate = 2006-03-24 | url = http://www.fema.gov/hazards/hurricanes/hurglos.shtm}}</ref>
 
 
 
The Australian [[Bureau of Meteorology]] uses a 1-5 scale called tropical cyclone severity categories. Unlike the [[Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale]], severity categories are based on estimated maximum wind [[gust]]s, which are a further 40 percent stronger than the 10-minute average sustained winds.{{fact}} Severity categories are scaled lower than the Saffir-Simpson Scale - for example, a severity category 2 tropical cyclone is roughly equivalent to a strong tropical storm or a weak Saffir-Simpson category 1 hurricane.
 
 
 
<!-- Table incomplete, feel free to expand —>
 
{|class="wikitable"
 
|-
 
! Australian Category<ref>http://www.bom.gov.au/info/cyclone/#severity</ref>
 
! Maximum wind gusts ([[Kilometre per hour|km/h]])
 
! Maximum sustained winds ([[Kilometre per hour|km/h]])<ref>[http://www.bom.gov.au/weather/wa/cyclone/about/faq/faq_def_3.shtml Comparison between strongest gust and suatained winds] from Perth Tropical Cyclone Warning Center</ref>
 
! Corresponding [[Beaufort scale|Beaufort Force]]<ref>[http://www.bom.gov.au/weather/qld/cyclone/windstr.shtml Comparison between Cyclone Category System and Beaufort Scale] from Brisbane Tropical Cyclone Warning Center</ref>
 
|-
 
| 1
 
| ≤125
 
| 63-88
 
| style="background-color: #0000CC;" | <span style="color: white;">Gale (8-9)</span>
 
|-
 
| 2
 
| 125-169
 
| 89-117
 
| style="background-color: #000066;" | <span style="color: white;">Storm (10-11)</span>
 
|-
 
| 3
 
| 170-224
 
| 118-159
 
| style="background-color: black;" rowspan = 3 | <span style="color: white;">Hurricane (12)</span>
 
|-
 
| 4
 
| 225-279
 
| 160-199
 
|-
 
| 5
 
| ≥280
 
| ≥200
 
|}
 
Note: The sustained winds given in the table are based on 10-minute average.
 
  
The BoM also offers this comparison table between classification systems[http://www.bom.gov.au/catalogue/warnings/WarningsInformation_TC_Ed.shtml#Cat]:
+
===Locations===
{| BORDER WIDTH="650" summary="Tropical Storm Classifications"
+
Most tropical cyclones form in a worldwide band of thunderstorm activity called by several names: the Intertropical Discontinuity (ITD), the [[Intertropical Convergence Zone]] (ITCZ), or the [[monsoon trough]]. Another important source of atmospheric instability is found in [[tropical wave]]s, which cause about 85 percent of intense tropical cyclones in the [[Atlantic Ocean]] and become most of the tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific basin.<ref> [https://www.weather.gov/mob/tropical_definitions Tropical Definitions] ''National Weather Service''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
|-
 
! Australian Name
 
! Australian Category
 
! North America
 
! US Saffir-Simpson Category Scale
 
! NW Pacific
 
! Arabian Sea /Bay of Bengal
 
! SW Indian Ocean
 
! South Pacific
 
|-
 
| Tropical Low
 
| -
 
| Tropical Disturbance
 
| -
 
| Tropical Disturbance
 
| Depression
 
| Tropical Disturbance
 
| Tropical Disturbance
 
|-
 
| Tropical Low
 
| -
 
| Tropical Depression
 
| -
 
| Tropical Depression
 
| Deep Depression
 
| Tropical Depression
 
| Tropical depression
 
|-
 
| Tropical Cyclone
 
| 1
 
| Tropical Storm
 
| -
 
| Tropical Storm
 
| Cyclonic Storm
 
| Moderate Tropical Storm
 
| Tropical Cyclone (Gale)
 
|-
 
| Tropical Cyclone
 
| 2
 
| Tropical Storm
 
| -
 
| Severe Tropical Storm
 
| Severe Cyclonic Storm
 
| Severe Tropical Storm
 
| Tropical Cyclone (Storm)
 
|-
 
| Severe Tropical Cyclone
 
| 3
 
| Hurricane
 
| 1
 
| Typhoon
 
| Very Severe Cyclonic Storm
 
| Tropical Cyclone
 
| Tropical Cyclone (Hurricane)
 
|-
 
| Severe Tropical Cyclone
 
| 4
 
| Hurricane
 
| 2-3
 
| Typhoon
 
| Very Severe Cyclonic Storm
 
| Intense Tropical Cyclone
 
| Tropical Cyclone (Hurricane)
 
|-
 
| Severe Tropical Cyclone
 
| 5
 
| Hurricane
 
| 4-5
 
| Typhoon
 
| Super Cyclonic Storm
 
| Very Intense Tropical Cyclone
 
| Tropical Cyclone (Hurricane)
 
|}
 
  
Japan, the Philippines, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan uses the following scale to calssify tropical cyclones. This scale is also for regional exchange among Typhoon Committee members.
+
Tropical cyclones originate on the eastern side of oceans, but move west, intensifying as they move. Most of these systems form between 10 and 30 degrees away of the [[equator]], and 87 percent form no farther away than 20 degrees of latitude, north or south. Because the [[Coriolis effect]] initiates and maintains tropical cyclone rotation, tropical cyclones rarely form or move within about 5 degrees of the equator, where the Coriolis effect is weakest. However, it is possible for tropical cyclones to form within this boundary as [[Tropical Storm Vamei]] did in 2001 and [[Cyclone Agni]] in 2004.
{|class="wikitable"
 
|-
 
! Classification
 
! Maximum sustained winds ([[Kilometre per hour|km/h]])
 
! Maximum sustained winds (knots)
 
! Corresponding [[Beaufort scale|Beaufort Force]]
 
|-
 
| Tropical Depression
 
| ≤62
 
| ≤33
 
| ≤7
 
|-
 
| Tropical Storm
 
| 63-88
 
| 34-47
 
| style="background-color: #0000CC;" | <span style="color: white;">Gale (8-9)</span>
 
|-
 
| Severe Tropical Storm
 
| 89-117
 
| 48-63
 
| style="background-color: #000066;" | <span style="color: white;">Storm (10-11)</span>
 
|-
 
| Typhoon
 
| ≥118
 
| ≥64
 
| style="background-color: black;"  | <span style="color: white;">Hurricane (12)</span>
 
|-
 
|}
 
Note:
 
*The sustained winds given in the table are based on 10-minute average.
 
*Japan and Taiwan use another scale in their own language.
 
*The Philippines merges the category 'Severe Tropical Storm' with 'Tropical Storm' in public advisory.
 
*China uses a very similar scale except for the followings:
 
**2-minute sustained winds are used.
 
**The sustained winds of Tropical Depression is defined as Beaufort Force 6-7.
 
  
 
==Movement and track==
 
==Movement and track==
===Large-scale winds===
+
===Steering winds===
Although tropical cyclones are large systems generating enormous energy, their movements over the earth's surface are often compared to that of leaves carried along by a stream. That is, large-scale winds&mdash;the streams in the earth's atmosphere&mdash;are responsible for moving and steering tropical cyclones. The path of motion is referred to as a tropical cyclone's ''track.''
+
Although tropical cyclones are large systems generating enormous energy, their movements over the Earth's surface are controlled by large-scale winds&mdash;the streams in the Earth's atmosphere. The path of motion is referred to as a tropical cyclone's ''track''.
  
The major force affecting the track of tropical systems in all areas are winds circulating around high-pressure areas. Over the North Atlantic Ocean, tropical systems are steered generally westward by the east-to-west winds on the south side of the Bermuda High, a persistent high-pressure area over the North Atlantic. Also, in the area of the North Atlantic where hurricanes form, [[trade winds]], which are prevailing westward-moving wind currents, steer ''tropical waves'' (precursors to tropical depressions and cyclones) westward from off the African coast toward the Caribbean and North America.  
+
Tropical systems, while generally located [[equator]]ward of the 20<sup>th</sup> parallel, are steered primarily westward by the east-to-west winds on the equatorward side of the [[subtropical ridge]]—a persistent high pressure area over the world's oceans. In the tropical North Atlantic and Northeast Pacific oceans, [[trade winds]]—another name for the westward-moving wind currents—steer [[tropical waves]] westward from the [[Africa]]n coast and towards the [[Caribbean Sea]], North America, and ultimately into the central Pacific Ocean before the waves dampen out. These waves are the precursors to many tropical cyclones within this region. In the Indian Ocean and Western Pacific (both north and south of the equator), tropical cyclogenesis is strongly influenced by the seasonal movement of the [[Intertropical Convergence Zone]] and the [[monsoon]] trough, rather than by easterly waves.
  
 
===Coriolis effect===
 
===Coriolis effect===
The earth's rotation also imparts an acceleration (termed the ''Coriolis Acceleration'' or ''[[Coriolis Effect]]''). This acceleration causes cyclonic systems to turn towards the poles in the absence of strong steering currents (i.e. in the north, the northern part of the cyclone has winds to the west, and the Coriolis force pulls them slightly north. The southern part is pulled south, but since it is closer to the equator, the Coriolis force is a bit weaker there). Thus, tropical cyclones in the Northern Hemisphere, which commonly move west in the beginning, normally turn north (and are then usually blown east), and cyclones in the Southern Hemisphere are deflected south, if no strong pressure systems are counteracting the Coriolis Acceleration. The Coriolis acceleration also initiates cyclonic rotation, but it is not the driving force that brings this rotation to high speeds.  (Much of that is due to the conservation of [[angular momentum]] - air is drawn in from an area much larger than the cyclone such that the tiny angular velocity of that air will be magnified greatly when the distance to the storm center shrinks.)
+
[[Image:Cyclone Monica.gif|thumb|250px|right|Infrared image of [[Cyclone Monica]] near peak intensity, showing [[clockwise]] rotation due to the [[Coriolis effect]].]]
 +
The Earth's rotation imparts an acceleration known as the ''[[Coriolis Effect]],'' ''Coriolis Acceleration,'' or colloquially, ''Coriolis Force.'' This acceleration causes cyclonic systems to turn towards the poles in the absence of strong steering currents. The poleward portion of a tropical cyclone contains easterly winds, and the Coriolis effect pulls them slightly more poleward. The westerly winds on the equatorward portion of the cyclone pull slightly towards the equator, but, because the Coriolis effect weakens toward the equator, the net drag on the cyclone is poleward. Thus, tropical cyclones in the [[Northern Hemisphere]] usually turn north (before being blown east), and tropical cyclones in the [[Southern Hemisphere]] usually turn south (before being blown east) when no other effects counteract the Coriolis effect.
  
===Interaction with high and low pressure systems===
+
The Coriolis effect also initiates cyclonic rotation, but it is not the driving force that brings this rotation to high speeds. These speeds instead result from [[conservation of angular momentum]]. This means that air is drawn in from an area much larger than the cyclone such that the tiny rotational speed (originally imparted by the Coriolis effect) is magnified greatly as the air is drawn into the low pressure center.
Finally, when a tropical cyclone moves into higher latitude, its general track around a high-pressure area can be deflected significantly by winds moving toward a low-pressure area. Such a track direction change is termed ''recurve.'' A hurricane moving from the Atlantic toward the [[Gulf of Mexico]], for example, will recurve to the north and then northeast if it encounters winds blowing northeastward toward a low-pressure system passing over North America. Many tropical cyclones along the East Coast and in the Gulf of Mexico are eventually forced toward the northeast by low-pressure areas which move from west to east over North America.
 
  
===Forecasting===
+
===Interaction with the mid-latitude westerlies===
[[Image:Epsilon_ISS012-E-10097.jpg|thumb|350px|right|[[Hurricane Epsilon (2005)|Hurricane Epsilon]] strengthened and organized in the Central North Atlantic Ocean despite highly unfavorable conditions.  This unusual system defied most [[NHC]] forecasts and demonstrated the difficulties of predicting tropical cyclones.]]
+
[[Image:Ioke 2006 track.png|thumb|right|250px|Storm track of [[Hurricane Ioke|Typhoon Ioke]], showing recurvature off the [[Japan]]ese coast in [[2006 Pacific hurricane season|2006]]]]
Because of the forces that affect tropical cyclone tracks, accurate track predictions depend on determining the position and strength of high- and low-pressure areas, and predicting how those areas will change during the life of a tropical system.
+
When a tropical cyclone crosses the [[subtropical ridge]] axis, its general track around the high-pressure area is deflected significantly by winds moving towards the general low-pressure area to its north. When the cyclone track becomes strongly poleward with an easterly component, the cyclone has begun ''recurvature.''<ref>[http://glossary.ametsoc.org/wiki/Recurvature Recurvature] ''American Metereological Society''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> A typhoon moving through the Pacific Ocean towards [[Asia]], for example, will recurve offshore of [[Japan]] to the north, and then to the northeast, if the typhoon encounters winds blowing northeastward toward a low-pressure system passing over [[China]] or [[Siberia]]. Many tropical cyclones are eventually forced toward the northeast by [[extratropical cyclone]]s, which move from west to east to the north of the subtropical ridge.
 
 
With their understanding of the forces that act on tropical cyclones, and a wealth of data from earth-orbiting satellites and other sensors, scientists have increased the accuracy of track forecasts over recent decades. High-speed computers and sophisticated simulation software allow forecasters to produce [[tropical cyclone prediction model|computer models]] that forecast tropical cyclone tracks based on the future position and strength of high- and low-pressure systems. But while track forecasts have become more accurate than 20 years ago, scientists say they are less skillful at predicting the intensity of tropical cyclones. They attribute the lack of improvement in intensity forecasting to the complexity of tropical systems and an incomplete understanding of factors that affect their development.
 
  
 
===Landfall===
 
===Landfall===
Officially, "landfall" is when a storm's center (the center of the eye, not its edge) reaches land. Naturally, storm conditions may be experienced on the coast and inland well before landfall. In fact, for a storm moving inland, the landfall area experiences half the storm before the actual landfall. For emergency preparedness, actions should be timed from when a certain wind speed will reach land, not from when landfall will occur.
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Officially, ''[[landfall (meteorology)|landfall]]'' is when a storm's center (the center of its circulation, not its edge) crosses the coastline. Storm conditions may be experienced on the coast and inland hours before landfall; in fact, a tropical cyclone can launch its strongest winds over land, yet not make landfall; if this occurs, then it is said that the storm made a ''direct hit'' on the coast. Due to this definition, the landfall area experiences half of a land-bound storm by the time the actual landfall occurs. For emergency preparedness, actions should be timed from when a certain wind speed or intensity of rainfall will reach land, not from when landfall will occur.<ref>[https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/aboutgloss.shtml Glossary of NHC Terms]. ''National Hurricane Center''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
 
 
For a list of notable and unusual landfalling hurricanes, see [[list of notable tropical cyclones]].
 
 
 
===Dissipation===
 
A tropical cyclone can cease to have tropical characteristics in several ways:
 
  
*It moves over land, thus depriving it of the warm water it needs to power itself, and quickly loses strength. Most strong storms lose their strength very rapidly after landfall, and become disorganized areas of low pressure within a day or two. There is, however, a chance they could regenerate if they manage to get back over open warm water. If a storm is over mountains for even a short time, it can rapidly lose its structure. However, many storm fatalities occur in mountainous terrain, as the dying storm unleashes torrential rainfall which can lead to deadly [[flood]]s and [[mudslide]]s.
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==Dissipation==
*It remains in the same area of ocean for too long, drawing heat off of the ocean surface until it becomes too cool to support the storm. Without warm surface water, the storm cannot survive.
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=== Factors ===
*It experiences [[wind shear]], causing the convection to lose direction and the heat engine to break down.
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A tropical cyclone can cease to have tropical characteristics through several different ways. One such way is if it moves over land, thus depriving it of the warm water it needs to power itself, quickly losing strength. Most strong storms lose their strength very rapidly after landfall and become disorganized areas of low pressure within a day or two, or evolve into [[extratropical cyclone]]s. While there is a chance a tropical cyclone could regenerate it managed to get back over open warm water, if it remains over mountains for even a short time, it can rapidly lose its structure. Many storm fatalities occur in mountainous terrain, as the dying storm unleashes torrential rainfall, leading to deadly [[flood]]s and [[mudslide]]s, similar to those that happened with [[Hurricane Mitch]] in 1998. Additionally, dissipation can occur if a storm remains in the same area of ocean for too long, mixing the upper 30&nbsp;meters (100&nbsp;feet) of water. This occurs because the cyclone draws up colder water from deeper in the sea through [[upwelling]], and causes the water surface to become too cool to support the storm. Without warm surface water, the storm cannot survive.
*It can be weak enough to be consumed by another area of low pressure, disrupting it and joining to become a large area of non-cyclonic thunderstorms. (Such, however, can strengthen the non-tropical system as a whole.)
 
*It enters colder waters. This does not necessarily mean the death of the storm, but the storm will lose its tropical characteristics. These storms are [[extratropical cyclones]].
 
*An outer eye wall forms (typically around 50 miles from the center of the storm), choking off the convection toward the inner eye wall. Such weakening is generally temporary unless it meets other conditions above.
 
  
Even after a tropical cyclone is said to be extratropical or dissipated, it can still have tropical storm force (or occasionally hurricane force) winds and drop several inches of rainfall. When a tropical cyclone reaches higher latitudes or passes over land, it may merge with [[weather front]]s or develop into a [[low pressure area|frontal cyclone]], also called [[extratropical cyclone]]. In the [[Atlantic ocean]], such tropical-derived cyclones of higher latitudes can be violent and may occasionally remain at hurricane-force wind speeds when they reach Europe as a [[European windstorm]].
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A tropical cyclone can dissipate when it moves over waters significantly below 26.5&nbsp;°C. This will cause the storm to lose its tropical characteristics (i.e., thunderstorms near the center and warm core) and become a remnant low pressure area, which can persist for several days. This is the main dissipation mechanism in the Northeast Pacific ocean. Weakening or dissipation can occur if it experiences vertical [[wind shear]], causing the convection and heat engine to move away from the center; this normally ceases development of a tropical cyclone.<ref name="EAM">Chih-Pei Chang, ''East Asian Monsoon'' (Singapore: World Scientific, 2004, ISBN 9812387692).</ref> Additionally, its interaction with the main belt of the Westerlies, by means of merging with a nearby frontal zone, can cause tropical cyclones to evolve into [[extratropical cyclones]]. Even after a tropical cyclone is said to be extratropical or dissipated, it can still have tropical storm force (or occasionally hurricane force) winds and drop several inches of rainfall. In the [[Pacific ocean]] and [[Atlantic ocean]], such tropical-derived cyclones of higher latitudes can be violent and may occasionally remain at hurricane-force wind speeds when they reach the west coast of [[North America]]. These phenomena can also affect Europe, where they are known as ''[[European windstorm]]s''; [[Hurricane Iris (1995)|Hurricane Iris]]'s extratropical remnants became one in 1995.<ref>[https://www.wunderground.com/hurricane/archive/AL/2001/Hurricane-Iris/2001278N12302 Hurricane Iris]. ''Weather Underground''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> Additionally, a cyclone can merge with another area of low pressure, becoming a larger area of low pressure. This can strengthen the resultant system, although it may no longer be a tropical cyclone.<ref name="EAM"/>
  
 
===Artificial dissipation===
 
===Artificial dissipation===
In the 1960s and 1970s, the United States government attempted to weaken hurricanes in its [[Project Stormfury]] by [[cloud seeding|seeding]] selected storms with [[silver iodide]]. It was thought that the seeding would cause supercooled water in the outer rainbands to freeze, causing the inner eyewall to collapse and thus reducing the winds. The winds of [[1969 Atlantic hurricane season#Hurricane Debbie|Hurricane Debbie]] dropped as much as 30 percent, but then regained their strength after each of two seeding forays. In an earlier episode, disaster struck when a hurricane east of [[Jacksonville, Florida]], was seeded, promptly changed its course, and smashed into [[Savannah, Georgia]].<ref name="Whipple ch. 5">Whipple, A. (1982, 1984)"Storm" p. 151 Time Life Books ISBN 0-8094-4312-0</ref>Because there was so much uncertainty about the behavior of these storms, the federal government would not approve seeding operations unless the hurricane had a less than 10 percent chance of making landfall within 48 hours. The project was dropped after it was discovered that [[eyewall#eyewall replacement cycles|eyewall replacement cycles]] occur naturally in strong hurricanes, casting doubt on the result of the earlier attempts. Today it is known that silver iodide seeding is not likely to have an effect because the amount of supercooled water in the rainbands of a tropical cyclone is too low.<ref name=NHCC5A>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/C5a.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject C5a] accessed April 2, 2006</ref>
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In the 1960s and 1970s, the [[United States government]] attempted to weaken hurricanes through [[Project Stormfury]] by [[cloud seeding|seeding]] selected storms with [[silver iodide]]. It was thought that the seeding would cause [[supercooled water]] in the outer rainbands to freeze, causing the inner eyewall to collapse and thus reducing the winds. The winds of [[1969 Atlantic hurricane season#Hurricane Debbie|Hurricane Debbie]]—a hurricane seeded in Project Stormfury—dropped as much as 30%, but Debby regained its strength after each of two seeding forays. In an earlier episode in 1947, disaster struck when a hurricane east of [[Jacksonville, Florida]] promptly changed its course after being seeded, and smashed into [[Savannah, Georgia]].<ref name="Whipple 151">Addison Whipple, ''Storm'' (Alexandria, VA: Time Life Books, 1982, ISBN 0809443120).</ref> Because there was so much uncertainty about the behavior of these storms, the federal government would not approve seeding operations unless the hurricane had a less than 10 percent chance of making landfall within 48 hours, greatly reducing the number of possible test storms. The project was dropped after it was discovered that [[eye (cyclone)#eyewall replacement cycles|eyewall replacement cycles]] occur naturally in strong hurricanes, casting doubt on the result of the earlier attempts. Today, it is known that silver iodide seeding is not likely to have an effect because the amount of supercooled water in the rainbands of a tropical cyclone is too low.<ref name=mitigation/>
 
 
Other approaches have been suggested over time, including cooling the water under a tropical cyclone by towing [[iceberg]]s into the tropical oceans; dropping large quantities of ice into the eye at very early stages so that latent heat is absorbed by ice at the entrance (storm cell perimeter bottom) instead of heat energy being converted to kinetic energy at high altitudes vertically above; covering the ocean in a substance that inhibits evaporation; or blasting the cyclone apart with nuclear weapons. These approaches all suffer from the same flaw: tropical cyclones are simply too large for any of them to be practical.<ref name=NHCC5F>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/C5f.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject C5f] accessed April 2, 2006</ref>
 
  
However, it has been suggested by some that we can change the course of a storm during its early stages of formation,{{fact}} <!-- We need an author for this article Controlling Hurricanes, Scientific American, 2005—> such as using satellites to alter the environmental conditions or, more realistically, spreading a degradable film of oil over the ocean, which prevent water vapor from fueling the storm.
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Other approaches have been suggested over time, including cooling the water under a tropical cyclone by towing [[iceberg]]s into the tropical oceans. Other ideas range from covering the ocean in a substance that inhibits evaporation, dropping large quantities of ice into the eye at very early stages of development (so that the [[heat of condensation|latent heat]] is absorbed by the ice, instead of being converted to kinetic energy that would feed the positive feedback loop), or blasting the cyclone apart with nuclear weapons.<ref name=mitigation/> Project Cirrus even involved throwing dry ice on a cyclone.<ref name="Sudden Sea">R. A. Scotti, ''Sudden Sea: the Great Hurricane of 1938'' (Lebanon, IN: Little, Brown, and Company, 2003, ISBN 0316739111).</ref> These approaches all suffer from the same flaw: tropical cyclones are simply too large for any of them to be practical.<ref name=mitigation/>
 
 
==Monitoring, observation and tracking==
 
Intense tropical cyclones pose a particular observation challenge. As they are a dangerous oceanic phenomenon, [[weather station]]s are rarely available on the site of the storm itself. Surface level observations are generally available only if the storm is passing over an island or a coastal area, or it has overtaken an unfortunate ship. Even in these cases, real-time measurement taking is generally possible only in the periphery of the cyclone, where conditions are less catastrophic.
 
 
 
It is however possible to take [[in-situ]] measurements, in real-time, by sending specially equipped reconnaissance flights into the cyclone. In the Atlantic basin, these flights are regularly flown by US government [[hurricane hunters]]. <ref name="Hurricane Hunters">[http://www.hurricanehunters.com Hurricane Hunters homepage] accessed March 30, 2006</ref> The aircraft used are [[WC-130]] Hercules and [[WP-3D]] Orions, both four-engine [[turboprop]] cargo aircraft. These aircraft fly directly into the cyclone and take direct and remote-sensing measurements. The aircraft also launch [[GPS dropsonde]]s inside the cyclone. These sondes measure temperature, humidity, pressure, and especially winds between flight level and the ocean's surface.
 
 
 
A new era in hurricane observation began when a remotely piloted [[Aerosonde]], a small drone aircraft, was flown through Tropical Storm Ophelia as it passed Virginia's Eastern Shore during the 2005 hurricane season. This demonstrated a new way to probe the storms at low altitudes that human pilots seldom dare.<ref name="SunHerald">Bowman, L. "Drones defy heart of storm". [http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/12699210.htm South Mississippi Sun-Herald] accessed March 30, 2006</ref>
 
 
 
Tropical cyclones far from land are tracked by [[weather satellite]]s capturing [[visible light|visible]] and [[infrared]] images from space, usually at half-hour to quarter-hour intervals. As a storm approaches land, it can be observed by land-based [[Doppler radar]]. Radar plays a crucial role around landfall because it shows a storm's location and intensity minute by minute.
 
 
 
Recently, academic researchers have begun to deploy mobile weather stations fortified to withstand hurricane-force winds. The two largest programs are the Florida Coastal Monitoring Program <ref name=FCMP>[http://www.ce.ufl.edu/~fcmp Florida Coastal Monitoring Program project overview] accessed March 30, 2006</ref> and the Wind Engineering Mobile Instrumented Tower Experiment. <ref name=WEMITE>[http://www.atmo.ttu.edu/WEMITE/wemite.html WEMITE homepage] accessed March 30, 2006</ref> During landfall, the NOAA Hurricane Research Division compares and verifies data from reconnaissance aircraft, including wind speed data taken at flight level and from GPS dropwindsondes and stepped-frequency microwave radiometers, to wind speed data transmitted in real time from weather stations erected near or at the coast.  The National Hurricane Center uses the data to evaluate conditions at landfall and to verify forecasts.
 
 
 
==Naming of tropical cyclones==
 
{{hurricane main|Lists of tropical cyclone names}}
 
Storms reaching tropical storm strength are given names, to assist in recording insurance claims, to assist in warning people of the coming storm, and to further indicate that these are important storms that should not be ignored. These names are taken from lists which vary from region to region and are drafted a few years ahead of time. The lists are decided upon, depending on the regions, either by committees of the [[World Meteorological Organization]] (called primarily to discuss many other issues), or by national weather offices involved in the forecasting of the storms.
 
 
 
Each year, the names of particularly destructive storms (if there were any) are "retired" and new names are chosen to take their place.
 
 
 
===Naming schemes===
 
{{further|[[List of notable tropical cyclones]]}}
 
The WMO's Regional Association IV Hurricane Committee selects the names for Atlantic Basin and central and eastern Pacific storms.
 
 
 
In the Atlantic and Eastern North Pacific regions, feminine and masculine names are assigned alternately in alphabetic order during a given season. The "gender" of the season's first storm also alternates year to year: the first storm of an odd-numbered year gets feminine name, while the first storm of an even-numbered year gets a masculine name. Six lists of names are prepared in advance, and each list is used once every six years. Five letters &mdash; "Q," "U," "X," "Y" and "Z" &mdash; are omitted in the Atlantic; only "Q" and "U" are omitted in the Eastern Pacific, so the format accommodates 21 or 24 named storms in a hurricane season. Names of storms may be retired by request of affected countries if they have caused extensive damage. The affected countries then decide on a replacement name of the same gender, and if possible, the same ethnicity, as the name being retired.
 
 
 
If there are more than 21 named storms in an Atlantic season or 24 named storms in an Eastern Pacific season, the rest are named as letters from the [[Greek alphabet]]: the twenty-second storm is called "Alpha," the twenty-third "Beta," and so on. This was first necessary during the [[2005 Atlantic hurricane season|2005 season]] when the list was exhausted. There is no precedent for a storm named with a Greek Letter causing enough damage to justify retirement; how this situation would be handled is unknown.
 
 
 
In the Central North Pacific region, the name lists are maintained by the [[Central Pacific Hurricane Center]] in [[Honolulu, Hawaii]]. Four lists of [[Hawaiian language|Hawaiian]] names are selected and used in sequential order without regard to year.
 
 
 
In the Western North Pacific, name lists are maintained by the WMO Typhoon Committee. Five lists of names are used, with each of the 14 nations on the Typhoon Committee submitting two names to each list. Names are used in the order of the countries' English names, sequentially without regard to year. Since 1981, the numbering system had been the primary system to identify tropical cyclone among Typhoon Committee members and it is still in use. International numbers are assigned by [[Japan Meteorological Agency]] on the order that a tropical storm forms while different internal numbers may be assigned by different NMCs. The Typhoon "Songda" in September 2004 was internally called the typhoon number 18 in Japan but typhoon number 19 in China. Internationally, it is recorded as the TY Sonda (0418) with "04" taken from the year.
 
 
 
The Australian [[Bureau of Meteorology]] maintains three lists of names, one for each of the Western, Northern and Eastern Australian regions. There are also [[Fiji]] region and [[Papua New Guinea]] region names<!-- (''maintained by whom?'')—>.
 
 
 
The [[Seychelles]] Meteorological Service maintains a list for the Southwest Indian Ocean. There, a new list is used each year.
 
 
 
===History of tropical cyclone naming===
 
For several hundred years after Europeans arrived in the [[West Indies]], hurricanes there were named after the [[saint's day]] on which the storm struck.
 
 
 
The practice of giving storms people's names was introduced by [[Clement Lindley Wragge]], an Anglo-Australian [[meteorologist]] at the end of the 19th century.  He used girls' names, the names of politicians who had offended him, and names from history and mythology.<ref name=NHCB1>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/B1.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject B1] accessed March 30, 2006</ref><ref name="BOM Question 13">[http://www.bom.gov.au/weather/wa/cyclone/about/faq/faq_def_13.shtml Bureau of Meteorology FAQ Question 13] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
 
 
 
During [[World War II]], tropical cyclones were given feminine names, mainly for the convenience of the forecasters and in a somewhat [[ad hoc]] manner. In addition, [[George R. Stewart]]'s 1941 novel ''[[Storm (novel)|Storm]]'' help to popularize the concept of giving names to tropical cyclones.<ref name=NHCJ4>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/J4.html NHC Tropical Cyclones FAQ Subject J4] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
 
 
 
From [[1950]] to [[1953]], names from the [[Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet]] were used. The modern naming convention came about in response to the need for unambiguous radio communications with ships and aircraft. As transportation traffic increased and meteorological observations improved in number and quality, several typhoons, hurricanes or cyclones might have to be tracked at any given time. To help in their identification, beginning in [[1953]] the practice of systematically naming tropical storms and hurricanes was initiated by the United States [[NOAA National Hurricane Center|National Hurricane Center]]. Naming is now maintained by the [[World Meteorological Organization]].
 
 
 
In keeping with the common [[English language]] practice of referring to inanimate objects such as boats, trains, etc., using the female pronoun "she," names used were exclusively feminine. The first storm of the year was assigned a name beginning with the letter "A", the second with the letter "B", etc. However, since tropical storms and hurricanes are primarily destructive, some considered this practice [[sexism|sexist]]. The [[World Meteorological Organization]] responded to these concerns in [[1979]] with the introduction of masculine names to the nomenclature. It was also in 1979 that the practice of preparing a list of names before the season began. The names are usually of [[English language|English]], [[French language|French]] or [[Spanish language|Spanish]] origin in the Atlantic basin, since these are the three predominant languages of the region where the storms typically form. In the southern hemisphere, male names were given to cyclones starting in 1975.<ref name="BOM Question 13"/>
 
 
 
===Renaming of tropical cyclones===
 
In most cases, a tropical cyclone retains its name throughout its life. However, a tropical cyclone may be renamed in several occasions.
 
 
 
#'''A tropical storm enters the southwestern Indian Ocean from the east'''
 
#:In the southwestern Indian Ocean, [[Metéo France]] in [[Réunion]] names a tropical storm once it crosses 90&deg;E from the east, even though it has been named. In this case, the [[Joint Typhoon Warning Center]] (JTWC) will put two names together with a hyphen. Examples include [[2004-05 Southern Hemisphere tropical cyclone season|Cyclone Adeline-Juliet]] in early 2005 and [[2005-06 Southern Hemisphere tropical cyclone season|Cyclone Bertie-Alvin]] in late 2005.
 
#'''A tropical storm crosses from the Atlantic into the Pacific, or vice versa, before 2001'''
 
#:It was the policy of [[National Hurricane Center]] (NHC) to rename a tropical storm which crossed from Atlantic into Pacific, or vice versa. Examples include [[Hurricane Cesar-Douglas]] in 1996 and [[Hurricane Joan-Miriam]] in 1988.<ref name=NHCE15>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/E15.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject E15] accessed March 30, 2006</ref>
 
#:In 2001, when Iris moved across Central America, NHC mentioned that Iris would retain its name if it regenerated in the Pacific. However, the Pacific tropical depression developed from the remnants of Iris was called Fifteen-E instead. The depression later became tropical storm Manuel.
 
#:NHC explained that Iris had dissipated as a tropical cyclone prior to entering the eastern North Pacific basin; the new depression was properly named Fifteen-E, rather than Iris.<ref name=NHCManuel>[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2001manuel.html NHC Tropical Storm Manuel Report] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
 
#:In 2003, when Larry was about to move across Mexico, NHC attempted to provide greater clarity:
 
#::"Should Larry remain a tropical cyclone during its passage over Mexico into the Pacific, it would retain its name. However, a new name would be given if the surface circulation dissipates and then regenerates in the Pacific."<ref name=NHCLarry>[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/archive/2003/dis/al172003.discus.016.shtml? NHC Tropical Storm Larry Discussion Number 16] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
 
#:Up to now, there has been no tropical cyclone retaining its name during the passage from Atlantic to Pacific, or vice versa.
 
#'''Uncertainties of the continuation'''
 
#:When the remnants of a tropical cyclone redevelop, the redeveloping system will be treated as a new tropical cyclone if there are uncertainties of the continuation, even though the original system may contribute to the forming of the new system. One example is [[List of 2005 Atlantic hurricane season storms#Tropical Depression Ten|TD 10]]-[[Hurricane Katrina|TD 12]] from 2005.
 
#'''Human errors'''
 
#:Sometimes, there may be human faults leading to the renaming of a tropical cyclone. This is especially true if the system is poorly organized or if it passes from the area of responsibility of one forecaster to another. Examples include [[1989 Pacific typhoon season#Tropical Storm Ken-Lola|Tropical Storm Ken-Lola]] in [[1989 Pacific typhoon season|1989]]<ref name=JTWCKenLola>[http://www.npmoc.navy.mil/jtwc/atcr/1989atcr/pdf/wnp/13w14w.pdf JTWC Ken-Lola Report] accessed March 30, 2006</ref> and [[2000 Pacific hurricane season#Tropical Storm Upana-Chanchu|Tropical Storm Upana Chanchu]] in 2000<ref name=Padgett>Padgett, G. [http://www.typhoon2000.ph/garyp_mgtcs/jul00.txt Monthly Global Tropical Cyclone Summary for July 2000] accessed March 30, 2000</ref>
 
  
 
==Effects==
 
==Effects==
[[Image:cyclone deaths.gif|thumb|200px|right|Pie graph of American tropical cyclone casualties by cause from 1970-1999]]  
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[[Image:Hurricane katrina damage gulfport mississippi.jpg|thumb|250px|right|The aftermath of [[Hurricane Katrina]] in [[Gulfport, Mississippi]]. Katrina was the costliest tropical cyclone in [[United States]] history.]]
A mature tropical cyclone can release heat at a rate upwards of 6x10<sup>14</sup> watts.<ref name="NOAA Question of the Month"/> Tropical cyclones on the open sea cause large waves, heavy rain, and high winds, disrupting international shipping and sometimes sinking ships. However, the most devastating effects of a tropical cyclone occur when they cross coastlines, making landfall. A tropical cyclone moving over land can do direct damage in four ways:
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Tropical cyclones out at sea cause large waves, heavy rain, and high winds, disrupting international shipping and, at times, causing shipwrecks. Tropical cyclones stir up water, leaving a cool wake behind them, which causes the region to be less favorable for subsequent tropical cyclones. On land, strong [[wind]]s can damage or destroy vehicles, buildings, bridges, and other outside objects, turning loose debris into deadly flying projectiles. The [[storm surge]], or the increase in sea level due to the cyclone, is typically the worst effect from landfalling tropical cyclones, historically resulting in 90 percent of tropical cyclone deaths.<ref name="Shultz Epid Reviews 2005">James M. Shultz, Jill Russell, and Zelde Espinel, [https://academic.oup.com/epirev/article/27/1/21/520830 Epidemiology of Tropical Cyclones: The Dynamics of Disaster, Disease, and Development]. ''Epidemiologic Reviews'' 27(1) (July 2005): 21–35. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> The broad rotation of a landfalling tropical cyclone, and vertical wind shear at its periphery, spawns [[tornado]]es. Tornadoes can also be spawned as a result of [[Eye (cyclone)#Eyewall mesovortices|eyewall mesovortices]], which persist until landfall.
  
* High [[wind]]s - Hurricane strength winds can damage or destroy vehicles, buildings, bridges, etc. High winds also turn loose debris into flying projectiles, making the outdoor environment even more dangerous.
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Within the last two centuries, tropical cyclones have been responsible for the deaths of about 1.9&nbsp;million persons worldwide. Large areas of standing water caused by flooding lead to infection, as well as contributing to mosquito-borne illnesses. Crowded evacuees in [[shelter]]s increase the risk of disease propagation. Tropical cyclones significantly interrupt infrastructure, leading to power outages, bridge destruction, and hamper reconstruction efforts.<ref name="Shultz Epid Reviews 2005"/>
* [[Storm surge]] - Tropical cyclones cause an increase in sea level, which can flood coastal communities. This is the worst effect, as historically cyclones claimed 80% of their victims when they first strike shore.
 
* Heavy [[rain]] - The [[thunderstorm]] activity in a tropical cyclone causes intense rainfall. Rivers and streams flood, roads become impassable, and landslides can occur. Inland areas are particularly vulnerable to freshwater [[flooding]], due to residents not preparing adequately.<ref name=NHCFlooding>[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/HAW2/english/inland_flood.shtml National Hurricane Preparedness Week: Inland Flooding] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
 
* [[Tornado]] activity - The broad rotation of a hurricane often spawns tornadoes. While these tornadoes are normally not as strong as their non-tropical counterparts,{{fact}} they can still cause tremendous damage.
 
[[Image:Hurricane katrina damage gulfport mississippi.jpg|thumb|350px|right|The aftermath of [[Hurricane Katrina]] in [[Gulfport, Mississippi]]. Katrina was the costliest tropical cyclone in [[United States]] history.]]
 
  
Often, the secondary effects of a tropical cyclone are equally damaging. These include:
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Although cyclones take an enormous toll in lives and personal property, they may be important factors in the [[precipitation (meteorology)|precipitation]] regimes of places they impact, as they may bring much-needed precipitation to otherwise dry regions.<ref> [https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/Epac_hurr/Epac_hurricane.html Eastern Pacific Hurricane Season Outlook]. ''Climate Prediction Center''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> Tropical cyclones also help maintain the global heat balance by moving warm, moist tropical air to the [[middle latitudes]] and polar regions. The storm surge and winds of hurricanes may be destructive to human-made structures, but they also stir up the waters of coastal [[estuary|estuaries]], which are typically important fish breeding locales. Tropical cyclone destruction spurs redevelopment, greatly increasing local property values.<ref name="Christopherson">Robert W. Christopherson, ''Geosystems: An Introduction to Physical Geography'' (New York, NY: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1992, ISBN 0023224436).</ref>
  
* Disease - The wet environment in the aftermath of a tropical cyclone, combined with the destruction of sanitation facilities and a warm tropical climate, can induce epidemics of disease which claim lives long after the storm passes. One of the most common post-hurricane injuries is stepping on a [[nail (engineering)|nail]] in storm debris, leading to a risk of [[tetanus]] or other infection. Infections of cuts and bruises can be greatly amplified by wading in sewage-[[polluted]] water. Large areas of standing water caused by flooding also contribute to mosquito-borne illnesses.
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==Observation and forecasting==
* Power outages - Tropical cyclones often knock out power to tens or hundreds of thousands of people (or occasionally millions if a large urban area is affected), prohibiting vital communication and hampering rescue efforts.
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===Observation===
* Transportation difficulties - Tropical cyclones often destroy key bridges, overpasses, and roads, complicating efforts to transport food, clean water, and medicine to the areas that need it.
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[[Image:Isidore091902-p3sunset.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Sunset view of [[Hurricane Isidore]]'s rainbands photographed at 7,000&nbsp;feet.]]
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Intense tropical cyclones pose a particular observation challenge. As they are a dangerous oceanic phenomenon and are relatively small, [[weather station]]s are rarely available on the site of the storm itself. Surface observations are generally available only if the storm is passing over an island or a coastal area, or if there is a nearby ship. Usually, real-time measurements are taken in the periphery of the cyclone, where conditions are less catastrophic and its true strength cannot be evaluated. For this reason, there are teams of meteorologists that move into the path of tropical cyclones to help evaluate their strength at the point of landfall.
  
===Beneficial effects of tropical cyclones===
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Tropical cyclones far from land are tracked by [[weather satellite]]s capturing [[visible light|visible]] and [[infrared]] images from space, usually at half-hour to quarter-hour intervals. As a storm approaches land, it can be observed by land-based [[Doppler radar]]. Radar plays a crucial role around landfall because it shows a storm's location and intensity minute by minute.
Although cyclones take an enormous toll in lives and personal property, they may bring much-needed precipitation to otherwise dry regions. [[Hurricane Allen]] ended the Texas drought of 1980. [[Hurricane Camille]] averted drought conditions and ended [[water deficit]]s along much of its path.<ref name=Christopherson>Christopherson, R. (1992) "Geosystems An Introduction to Physical Geography" pp 222-224. Macmillan Publishing Company New York. ISBN 0-02-322443-6</ref>
 
  
In addition, the destruction caused by Camille on the Gulf coast spurred redevelopment as well, greatly increasing local property values.<ref name=Christopherson/> On the other hand, disaster response officials point out that redevelopment encourages more people to live in clearly dangerous areas subject to future deadly storms. [[Hurricane Katrina]] is the most obvious example, as it devastated the region that had been revitalized by Hurricane Camille. Of course, many former residents and businesses do relocate to inland areas away from the threat of future hurricanes as well.
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[[In-situ]] measurements, in real-time, can be taken by sending specially equipped reconnaissance flights into the cyclone. In the Atlantic basin, these flights are regularly flown by United States government [[hurricane hunters]].<ref name="Hurricane Hunters"> [http://www.hurricanehunters.com The Hurricane Hunters]. Hurricane Hunters Association. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> The aircraft used are [[WC-130]] Hercules and [[WP-3D]] Orions, both four-engine [[turboprop]] cargo aircraft. These aircraft fly directly into the cyclone and take direct and remote-sensing measurements. The aircraft also launch [[GPS dropsonde]]s inside the cyclone. These sondes measure temperature, humidity, pressure, and especially winds between flight level and the ocean's surface. A new era in hurricane observation began when a remotely piloted [[Aerosonde]], a small drone aircraft, was flown through Tropical Storm Ophelia as it passed Virginia's Eastern Shore during the 2005 hurricane season. A similar mission was also completed successfully in the western Pacific ocean. This demonstrated a new way to probe the storms at low altitudes that human pilots seldom dare.
  
Hurricanes also help to maintain global heat balance by moving warm, moist tropical air to the mid-latitudes and polar regions. [[James Lovelock]] has also hypothesised that by raising nutrients from the sea floor to surface layers of the ocean, hurricanes also increase [[geophysiology|biological activity]] in areas where life would be difficult through nutrient loss in the deeper reaches of the [[oceanography|ocean]].{{fact}}
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===Forecasting===
 +
[[Image:NHC Atlantic Forecast Error Trends.png|thumb|right|250px|A general decrease in error trends in tropical cyclone path prediction is evident since the 1970s]]
 +
Because of the forces that affect tropical cyclone tracks, accurate track predictions depend on determining the position and strength of high- and low-pressure areas, and predicting how those areas will change during the life of a tropical system. The deep layer mean flow is considered to be the best tool in determining track direction and speed. If storms are significantly sheared, use of wind speed measurements at a lower altitude, such as at the 700&nbsp;[[mbar|hpa]] pressure surface (3000&nbsp;meters or 10000&nbsp;feet above sea level) will produce better predictions. High-speed computers and sophisticated simulation software allow forecasters to produce [[tropical cyclone prediction model|computer models]] that predict tropical cyclone tracks based on the future position and strength of high- and low-pressure systems. Combining forecast models with increased understanding of the forces that act on tropical cyclones, as well as with a wealth of data from Earth-orbiting satellites and other sensors, scientists have increased the accuracy of track forecasts over recent decades. However, scientists say they are less skillful at predicting the intensity of tropical cyclones.<ref>[https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/verification/verify5.shtml? National Hurricane Center Forecast Verification]. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> They attribute the lack of improvement in intensity forecasting to the complexity of tropical systems and an incomplete understanding of factors that affect their development.
  
== Long term trends in cyclone activity ==
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==Classifications, terminology, and naming==
While the number of storms in the Atlantic has increased since 1995, there seems to be no signs of a global trend; the annual global number of tropical cyclones remains about 90&nbsp;&plusmn;&nbsp;10. <ref name=EmanuelHomepage>[http://wind.mit.edu/~emanuel/anthro2.htm Kerry Emanuel's page on Tropical Cyclones] accessed March 30, 2006</ref>.
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===Intensity classifications===
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{{main|Tropical cyclone scales}}
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{{readout||right|250px|Intense tropical cyclones are called "typhoons" in the Northwest Pacific and "hurricanes" in the Northeast Pacific or Atlantic Oceans}}
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Tropical cyclones are classified into three main groups, based on intensity: tropical depressions, tropical storms, and a third group of more intense storms, whose name depends on the region. For example, if a [[#Tropical Storm|tropical storm]] in the Northwest Pacific reaches hurricane-strength winds on the [[Beaufort scale]], it is referred to as a ''typhoon''; if a tropical storm passes the same benchmark in the [[Pacific hurricane|Northeast Pacific Ocean]], or in [[Atlantic hurricane|the Atlantic]], it is called a ''hurricane.'' Neither "hurricane" nor "typhoon" is used in the South Pacific.
  
Atlantic storms are certainly becoming more destructive financially, since five of the ten most expensive storms in [[United States]] history have occurred since [[1990]]. This can to a large extent be attributed to the number of people living in susceptible coastal area, and massive development in the region since the last surge in Atlantic hurricane activity in the 1960s.
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Additionally, as indicated in the table below, each basin uses a separate [[Tropical cyclone scales|system of terminology]], making comparisons between different basins difficult. In the Pacific Ocean, hurricanes from the Central North Pacific sometimes cross the [[International Date Line]] into the Northwest Pacific, becoming typhoons (such as [[Hurricane Ioke|Hurricane/Typhoon Ioke]] in 2006); on rare occasions, the reverse will occur. It should also be noted that typhoons with sustained winds greater than 130&nbsp;[[knot (speed)|knots]] (240&nbsp;[[kilometres per hour|km/h]] or 150&nbsp;[[miles per hour|mph]]) are called ''Super Typhoons'' by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center.<ref> Remy Melina, [https://www.livescience.com/32830-typhoon-megi-philippines-category-5-101018.html What's the Difference Between a Typhoon and a Super-Typhoon?] ''Live Science'', October 18, 2010. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
  
Often in part because of the threat of hurricanes, many coastal regions had sparse population between major ports until the advent of automobile tourism; therefore, the most severe portions of hurricanes striking the coast often went unmeasured. The combined effects of ship destruction and remote landfall severely limit the number of intense hurricanes in the official record before the era of hurricane reconnaissance aircraft and satellite meteorology.  Although the record shows a distinct increase in the number and strength of intense hurricanes, therefore, experts regard the early data as suspect.
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A '''tropical depression''' is an organized system of clouds and thunderstorms with a defined surface circulation and maximum sustained winds of less than 17&nbsp;[[metre per second|m/s]] (33&nbsp;[[knot (speed)|kt]], 38&nbsp;[[miles per hour|mph]], or 62&nbsp;[[kilometres per hour|km/h]]). It has no [[eye (cyclone)|eye]] and does not typically have the organization or the spiral shape of more powerful storms. However, it is already a low-pressure system, hence the name "depression." The practice of the [[Philippines]] is to name tropical depressions from their own naming convention when the depressions are within the Philippines' area of responsibility.
  
The number and strength of Atlantic hurricanes may undergo a 50-70-year cycle.  Although more common since 1995, few above-normal hurricane seasons occurred during 1970-1994.  Destructive hurricanes struck frequently from 1926-60, including many major New England hurricanes. A record 21 Atlantic tropical storms formed in 1933, only recently exceeded in 2005.  Tropical hurricanes occurred infrequently during the seasons of 1900-1925; however, many intense storms formed 1870-1899. During the 1887 season, 19 tropical storms formed, of which a record 4 occurred after [[1 November]] and 11 strengthened into hurricanes.  Few hurricanes occurred in the 1840s to 1860s; however, many struck in the early 1800s, including an [[1821]] storm that made a direct hit on [[New York City]] which some historical weather experts say may have been as high as Category 4 in strength.
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A '''tropical storm''' is an organized system of strong thunderstorms with a defined surface circulation and maximum sustained winds between 17 and 32&nbsp;m/s (34&ndash;63&nbsp;kt, 39&ndash;73&nbsp;mph, or 62&ndash;117&nbsp;km/h). At this point, the distinctive cyclonic shape starts to develop, although an eye is not usually present. Government weather services, other than the Philippines, first assign names to systems that reach this intensity (thus the term ''named storm'').
  
These unusually active hurricane seasons predated satellite coverage of the Atlantic basin that now enables forecasters to see all tropical cyclones.  Before the satellite era began in 1961, tropical storms or hurricanes went undetected unless a ship reported a voyage through the storm. The official record, therefore, probably misses many storms in which no ship experienced gale-force winds, recognized it as a tropical storm (as opposed to a high-latitude extra-tropical cyclone, a tropical wave, or a brief squall), returned to port, and reported the experience.
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A '''hurricane''' or '''typhoon''' (sometimes simply referred to as a tropical cyclone, as opposed to a depression or storm) is a system with sustained winds of at least 33&nbsp;m/s (64&nbsp;kt, 74&nbsp;mph, or 118&nbsp;km/h). A cyclone of this intensity tends to develop an eye, an area of relative calm (and lowest atmospheric pressure) at the center of circulation. The eye is often visible in satellite images as a small, circular, cloud-free spot. Surrounding the eye is the [[eyewall]], an area about 16&ndash;80&nbsp;[[kilometre|km]] (10&ndash;50&nbsp;[[mile|mi]]) wide in which the strongest [[thunderstorm]]s and winds circulate around the storm's center. Maximum sustained winds in the strongest tropical cyclones have been estimated at over 200&nbsp;mph.<ref>Dennis Mersereau, [http://thevane.gawker.com/at-200-mph-hurricane-patricia-is-now-the-strongest-tro-1738224692 At 200 MPH, Hurricane Patricia Is Now the Strongest Tropical Cyclone Ever Recorded] ''The Vane'', October 23, 2015. Retrieved June 18, 2020. </ref>
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{| class=wikitable style="font-size:92%;"
 +
! colspan=9 style="background: #ccf;" | '''Tropical Cyclone Classifications (all winds are 10-minute averages)'''
 +
|-
 +
! [[Beaufort scale]]
 +
! 10-minute sustained winds (knots)
 +
! N Indian Ocean<br />[[Indian Meteorological Department|IMD]]
 +
! SW Indian Ocean<br />[[Météo-France|MF]]
 +
! Australia<br />[[Bureau of Meteorology (Australia)|BOM]]
 +
! SW Pacific<br />[[Fiji Meteorological Service|FMS]]
 +
! NW Pacific<br />[[Japan Meteorological Agency|JMA]]
 +
! NW Pacific<br />[[Joint Typhoon Warning Center|JTWC]]
 +
! NE Pacific &<br />N Atlantic<br />[[National Hurricane Center|NHC]] & [[Central Pacific Hurricane Center|CPHC]]
 +
|-
 +
| 0–6
 +
| <28
 +
| Depression
 +
|  Trop. Disturbance
 +
|rowspan="3" | Tropical Low
 +
|rowspan="3" | Tropical Depression
 +
|rowspan="3" | Tropical Depression
 +
|rowspan="2" | Tropical Depression
 +
|rowspan="2" | Tropical Depression
 +
|-
 +
|rowspan="2" | 7
 +
| 28-29
 +
|rowspan="2" | Deep Depression
 +
|rowspan="2" | Depression
 +
|-
 +
| 30-33
 +
|rowspan="3" | Tropical Storm
 +
|rowspan="3" | Tropical Storm
 +
|-
 +
| 8–9
 +
| 34–47
 +
| Cyclonic Storm
 +
| Moderate Tropical Storm
 +
| Trop. Cyclone (1)
 +
|rowspan="11" | Tropical Cyclone
 +
| Tropical Storm
 +
|-
 +
| 10
 +
| 48–55
 +
|rowspan="2" | Severe Cyclonic Storm
 +
|rowspan="2" | Severe Tropical Storm
 +
|rowspan="2" | Tropical Cyclone (2)
 +
|rowspan="2" | Severe Tropical Storm
 +
|-
 +
| 11
 +
| 56–63
 +
|rowspan="7" | Typhoon
 +
|rowspan="2" | Hurricane (1)
 +
|-
 +
|rowspan="8" | 12
 +
| 64–72
 +
|rowspan="7" | Very Severe Cyclonic Storm
 +
|rowspan="3" | Tropical Cyclone
 +
|rowspan="2" | Severe Tropical Cyclone (3)
 +
|rowspan="8" | Typhoon
 +
|-
 +
| 73–85
 +
| Hurricane (2)
 +
|-
 +
| 86–89
 +
|rowspan="3" | Severe Tropical Cyclone (4)
 +
|rowspan="2" | Major Hurricane (3)
 +
|-
 +
| 90–99
 +
|rowspan="3" | Intense Tropical Cyclone
 +
|-
 +
| 100–106
 +
|rowspan="3" | Major Hurricane (4)
 +
|-
 +
| 107-114
 +
|rowspan="3" | Severe Tropical Cyclone (5)
 +
|-
 +
| 115–119
 +
|rowspan="2" | Very Intense Tropical Cyclone
 +
|rowspan="2" | Super Typhoon
 +
|-
 +
| >120
 +
| Super Cyclonic Storm
 +
| Major Hurricane (5)
 +
|}
  
===Global warming?===
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===Origin of storm terms===
A common question is whether [[global warming]] can or will cause more frequent or more fierce tropical cyclones. So far, virtually all [[climatologist]]s seem to agree that a single storm, or even a single season, cannot clearly be attributed to a single cause such as global warming or natural variation <ref name=realclimate>[http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=181 realclimate.org] accessed March 20, 2006</ref>. The question is thus whether a [[statistic]]al [[trend]] in frequency or strength of cyclones exists. The [[United States|U.S.]] [[National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration]] says in their Hurricane FAQ that "it is highly unlikely that global warming has (or will) contribute to a drastic change in the number or intensity of hurricanes." <ref name="NHCG4">[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/G4.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject G4] accessed March 30, 2006</ref>
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The word ''typhoon'' used today in the Northwest Pacific, has two possible and equally plausible origins. The first is from the [[Chinese Language|Chinese]] 大風 ([[Cantonese language|Cantonese]]: daaih fūng; [[Mandarin language|Mandarin]]: dà fēng) which means "great [[wind]]." (The Chinese term as 颱風 or 台风 táifēng, and 台風 ''taifū'' in Japanese, has an independent origin traceable variously to 風颱, 風篩 or 風癡 ''hongthai,'' going back to Song 宋 (960-1278) and Yuan 元 (1260-1341) dynasties. The first record of the character 颱 appeared in the 1685 edition of ''Summary of Taiwan'' 臺灣記略).<ref>Central Weather Bureau of the Ministry of Communications, [http://photino.cwb.gov.tw/rdcweb/lib/cd/cd01conf/cd_00002.htm 臺灣百年來之颱風.] ''Government of the Republic of China''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
 
 
Regarding strength, a similar conclusion was consensus until recently.  This consensus is now questioned by [[Kerry Emanuel]]. In an article in ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'', <ref name=EmanuelNature>[http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v436/n7051/full/nature03906.html ''Nature'' Vol. 436, pp 686&ndash;688] accessed March 20, 2006</ref> Emanuel states that the potential hurricane destructiveness, a measure which combines strength, duration, and frequency of hurricanes, "is highly correlated with tropical sea surface temperature, reflecting well-documented climate signals, including multidecadal oscillations in the North Atlantic and North Pacific, and global warming."  K. Emanuel further predicts "a substantial increase in hurricane-related losses in the twenty-first century".<ref name=EmmanuelPreprint>[ftp://texmex.mit.edu/pub/emanuel/PAPERS/NATURE03906.pdf Preprint of a paper by Kerry Emanuel] accessed March 20, 2006</ref>
 
 
 
Along similar lines, P.J. Webster and others published an article<ref name=zfacts1>[http://zfacts.com/metaPage/lib/Webster_Science_2005_Hurricanes.pdf Webster Science 2005 Hurricanes] accesed March 20, 2006</ref> in ''[[Science (magazine)|Science]]'' <ref name="ScienceMag">[http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/309/5742/1844 Science. Volume 309, pp 1844-1846]</ref> examining "changes in tropical cyclone number, duration, and intensity" over the last 35 years, a period where satellite data is available. The main finding is that while the number of cyclones "decreased in all basins except the North Atlantic during the past decade" there is a "large increase in the number and proportion of hurricanes reaching categories 4 and 5". That is, while the number of cyclones decreased overall, the number of very strong cyclones increased.
 
 
 
Both Emanuel and Webster et al., consider the sea surface temperature as of key importance in the development of cyclones.  The question then becomes: what caused the observed increase in sea surface temperatures? In the Atlantic, it could be due to the [[Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation]] (AMO), a 50&ndash;70 year pattern of temperature variability. Emanuel, however, found the recent temperature increase was outside the range of previous oscillations. So, both a natural variation (such as the AMO) and global warming could have made contributions to the warming of the tropical Atlantic over the past decades, but an exact attribution is so far impossible to make. <ref name=realclimate/>
 
 
 
While Emanuel analyzes total annual energy dissipation, Webster et al. analyze the slightly less relevant percentage of hurricanes in the combined categories 4 and 5, and find that this percentage has increased in each of six distinct hurricane basins: North Atlantic, North East and North West Pacific, South Pacific, and North and South Indian. Because each individual basin may be subject to intra-basin oscillations similar to the AMO, any single-basin statistic remains open to question. But if the local oscillations are not synchronized by some as-yet-unidentified global oscillation, the independence of the basins allows joint statistical tests that are more powerful than any set of individual basin tests. Unfortunately Webster et al. do not undertake any such test.
 
 
 
Under the assumption that the six basins are statistically independent except for the effect of global warming, <ref name=zfacts2>[http://zfacts.com/p/49.html Stoft] accessed March 20, 2006</ref> has carried out the obvious paired [[t-test]] and found that the null-hypothesis of no impact of global warming on the percentage of Category 4 and 5 hurricanes can be rejected at the 0.1% level. Thus, there is only a 1 in 1000 chance of simultaneously finding the observed six increases in the percentages of Category 4 or 5 hurricanes. This statistic needs refining because the variables being tested are not normally distributed with equal variances, but it may provide the best evidence yet that the impact of global warming on hurricane intensity has been detected.
 
 
 
==Notable cyclones==
 
{{hurricane main|List of notable tropical cyclones}}
 
Tropical cyclones that cause massive destruction are fortunately rare, but when they happen, they can cause damage in the range billions of [[United States dollar|dollars]] and disrupt or end thousands of lives.
 
  
The [[1970 Bhola cyclone|deadliest tropical cyclone]] on record hit the densely populated [[Ganges Delta]] region of [[East Pakistan]] (now [[Bangladesh]]) on [[November 13]], [[1970]], likely as a [[Category 3]] tropical cyclone. It killed an estimated 500,000 people. The North Indian basin has historically been the deadliest, with several storms since 1900 killing over 100,000 people<!-- In addition to the 1970 and April 1991 storms, the Encarta reference claims a June 10 1991 storm did so, but the June storm may be in error as no other sources seem to support this. —>, each in Bangladesh.<ref name=Encarta1>[http://encarta.msn.com/media_701500587_761565992_-1_1/Major_Hurricanes_Typhoons_Cyclones_and_other_Storms_since_1900.html Encarta Online] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
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Alternatively, the word may be derived from [[Urdu language|Urdu]], [[Persian language|Persian]] and [[Arabic language|Arabic]] ''ţūfān'' (طوفان), which in turn originates from [[Greek language|Greek]] ''[[Typhon|tuphōn]]'' (Τυφών), a monster in [[Greek mythology]] responsible for hot winds. The related [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] word ''tufão,'' used in Portuguese for any tropical cyclone, is also derived from Greek ''tuphōn.''<ref>Douglas Harper, [https://www.etymonline.com/word/typhoon Typhoon]. ''Online Etymology Dictionary''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>  
  
In the [[Atlantic basin]], at least three storms have killed more than 10,000 people. [[Hurricane Mitch]] during the [[1998 Atlantic hurricane season]] caused severe flooding and mudslides in [[Honduras]], killing about 18,000 people and changing the landscape enough that entirely new maps of the country were needed.<ref name=NHCMitch>[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/1998mitch.html NHC Mitch Report] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> The [[Galveston Hurricane of 1900]], which made landfall at [[Galveston, Texas]] as an estimated Category 4 storm, killed 8,000 to 12,000 people, and remains the deadliest natural disaster in the history of the [[United States]].<ref name=NHCPastDeadly>[[National Hurricane Center]] [http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/pastdeadlyapp1.shtml? The Deadliest Atlantic Tropical Cyclones, 1492-1996] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> The deadliest Atlantic storm on record was the [[Great Hurricane of 1780]], which killed about 22,000 people in the [[Antilles]].<ref name=NHCPastDeadly/>
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The word ''hurricane,'' used in the North Atlantic and Northeast Pacific, is derived from the [[Taino]] name for the [[Carib]] [[Amerindian]] [[god]] of evil, [[Huricán]], which was derived from the [[Mayan]] god of wind, storm, and fire, "Huracán." This became the [[Spanish language|Spanish]] ''huracán'', which became "hurricane" in English.<ref> Rachelle Oblack, [https://www.thoughtco.com/where-does-the-word-hurricane-come-from-3443911 Where Does the Word 'Hurricane' Come From?] ''Thoughtco.'', October 17, 2019. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
  
[[Image:Typhoonsizes.jpg|right|frame|The relative sizes of [[Typhoon Tip]], [[Tropical Cyclone Tracy]], and the United States.]]
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===Naming===
The most intense storm on record was [[Typhoon Tip]] in the northwestern Pacific Ocean in [[1979]], which had a minimum pressure of only 870 [[millibar|mbar]] and maximum sustained wind speeds of 190 mph (305 km/h). It weakened before striking [[Japan]]. Tip does not hold the record for fastest sustained winds in a cyclone alone; [[Typhoon Keith]] in the Pacific, and [[Hurricane Camille]] and [[Hurricane Allen]] in the North Atlantic currently share this record as well <ref name="Weatherwatchers Mitch">Weatherwatchers[http://www.weatherwatchers.org/tropical/1998/13/mitch.html Weatherwatchers page on Hurricane Mitch] accessed March 30, 2006</ref>, although recorded wind speeds that fast are suspect since most monitoring equipment is likely to be destroyed by such conditions. Camille was the only storm to actually strike land while at that intensity, making it, with 190 mph (305 km/h) sustained winds and 210 mph (335 km/h) gusts, the strongest tropical cyclone on record at landfall. For comparison, these speeds are encountered at the center of a strong [[tornado]], but Camille, like all tropical cyclones, was much larger and long-lived than any tornado.  
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Storms reaching tropical storm strength were initially given names to eliminate confusion when there are multiple systems in any individual basin at the same time which assists in warning people of the coming storm.<ref> [https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/aboutnames.shtml Worldwide Tropical Cyclone Names] National Hurricane Center. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> In most cases, a tropical cyclone retains its name throughout its life; however, under [[Tropical cyclone naming#Renaming of tropical cyclones|special circumstances]], tropical cyclones may be renamed while active. These names are taken from lists which vary from region to region and are drafted a few years ahead of time. The lists are decided upon, depending on the regions, either by committees of the [[World Meteorological Organization]] (called primarily to discuss many other issues), or by national weather offices involved in the forecasting of the storms. Each year, the names of particularly destructive storms (if there are any) are "retired" and new names are chosen to take their place.
  
[[Typhoon Nancy (1961)|Typhoon Nancy]] in [[1961]] had recorded wind speeds of 215 mph (345 km/h), but recent research indicates that wind speeds from the 1940s to the 1960s were gauged too high, and this is no longer considered the fastest storm on record. <ref name=NHCE1>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/E1.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject E1] accessed March 30, 2006</ref> Similarly, a surface-level gust caused by [[Typhoon Paka]] on [[Guam]] was recorded at 236 mph (380 km/h); had it been confirmed, this would be the strongest non-[[tornado|tornadic]] wind ever recorded at the [[Earth]]'s surface, but the reading had to be discarded since the [[anemometer]] was damaged by the storm.<ref name=NWSPaka>[[National Weather Service]] [http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/project98/sh_proj1.html Super Typhoon Paka's (1997) Surface Winds Over Guam] accessed March 30, 2006</ref>
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==Notable tropical cyclones==
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Tropical cyclones that cause extreme destruction are rare, though when they occur, they can cause great amounts of damage or thousands of fatalities.
  
Tip was also the largest cyclone on record, with a circulation of tropical storm-force winds 1,350 miles (2,170 km) wide. The average tropical cyclone is only 300 miles (480 km) wide. The smallest storm on record, [[1974]]'s [[Cyclone Tracy]], which devastated [[Darwin, Northern Territory|Darwin]], [[Australia]], was roughly 30 miles (50 km) wide. <ref name=NHCE5>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/E5.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject E5] accessed March 30, 2006</ref>
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The [[1970 Bhola cyclone]] is the deadliest tropical cyclone on record, killing over 300,000 people after striking the densely populated [[Ganges Delta]] region of [[Bangladesh]] on November 13, 1970.<ref name=deadliest>[https://www.dw.com/en/the-worlds-deadliest-hurricanes-typhoons-and-cyclones/a-45460388 The world's deadliest hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones] ''Deutsche Welle (DW)''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> Its powerful storm surge was responsible for the high death toll. The Hugli River Cyclone (the Hooghly River or Calcutta Cyclone) has been described as "one of the deadliest natural disasters of all time." Making landfall on October 11, 1737 in the Ganges River Delta, the storm tracked approximately 330 km inland before dissipating. Due to storm surge and floods, between 300,000 and 350,000 people died.<ref name=deadliest/> The [[North Indian cyclone basin]] has historically been the deadliest basin, with several cyclones since 1900 killing over 100,000 people, all in Bangladesh.<ref name="Shultz Epid Reviews 2005" /> The [[Great Hurricane of 1780]] is the deadliest [[Atlantic hurricane]] on record, killing about 22,000 people in the [[Lesser Antilles]].<ref>[https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/pastdeadlyapp1.shtml? The Deadliest Atlantic Tropical Cyclones, 1492-1996.] ''National Hurricane Center''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>  
  
[[Hurricane Iniki]] in [[1992]] was the most powerful storm to strike [[Hawaii]] in recorded history, hitting [[Kauai]] as a Category 4 hurricane, killing six and causing $3 billion in damage.<ref name=CPHCIniki>[http://www.prh.noaa.gov/cphc/summaries/1992.php#Iniki Central Pacific Hurricane Center Iniki report] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> Other destructive Pacific hurricanes include [[Hurricane Pauline|Pauline]]<ref name=NHCPauline>[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/1997pauline.html NHC Pauline Report] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> and [[Hurricane Kenna|Kenna]].<ref name=NHCKenna>[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2002kenna.shtml NHC Kenna Report] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
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A tropical cyclone does need not be particularly strong to cause memorable damage, especially if the deaths are from rainfall or mudslides. For example, [[Tropical Storm Thelma]] in November 1991 killed thousands in the [[Philippines]], where it was known as Uring. <ref> [http://www.typhoon2000.ph/stormstats/WorstPhilippineTyphoons.htm Worst Typhoons in the Philippines (1947 - 2009)] ''Typhoon2000''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>  
  
[[Image:Brazil hurricane.jpg|thumbnail|The first recorded South Atlantic hurricane]]
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[[Hurricane Katrina]] is estimated as the costliest tropical cyclone worldwide, as it struck the Bahamas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama in 2005, causing $81.2 billion in property damage (2005 USD) with overall damage estimates exceeding $100 billion (2005 USD).<ref name=deadliest/> Katrina killed at least 1,836 people after striking [[Louisiana]] and [[Mississippi]] as a [[tropical cyclone scales|major hurricane]] in August 2005. [[Hurricane Iniki]] in 1992 was the most powerful storm to strike [[Hawaii]] in recorded history, hitting [[Kauai]] as a Category 4 hurricane, killing six people, and causing U.S. $3 billion in damage.
On [[March 26]], [[2004]], [[Cyclone Catarina]] became the first recorded [[South Atlantic tropical cyclone|South Atlantic hurricane]]. Previous South Atlantic cyclones in [[1991]] and [[2004]] reached only tropical storm strength. Tropical cyclones may have formed there prior to [[1960]] but were not observed until [[weather satellite]]s began monitoring the Earth's oceans in that year.
 
  
A tropical cyclone need not be particularly strong to cause memorable damage; [[Tropical Storm Thelma]], in November [[1991]] killed thousands in the Philippines even though it never became a typhoon; the damage from Thelma was mostly due to flooding, not winds or [[storm surge]].<ref name=JTWCThelma>[http://www.npmoc.navy.mil/jtwc/atcr/1991atcr/pdf/wnp/27w.pdf Joint Typhoon Center Thelma report] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> In 1982, the unnamed tropical depression that eventually became [[Hurricane Paul (1982)|Hurricane Paul]] caused the deaths of around 1,000 people in Central America due to the effects of its rainfall.<ref name=MWRPaul>[[American Meteorological Society]] "Eastern North Pacific Tropical Cyclones of 1982" [[http://ams.allenpress.com/pdfserv/10.1175%2F1520-0493(1983)111%3C1080:ENPTCO%3E2.0.CO%3B2 May 1983 Monthly Weather Review] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
+
[[Image:Typhoonsizes.jpg|right|frame|The relative sizes of [[Typhoon Tip]], [[Cyclone Tracy]], and the United States.]]
  
On [[August 29]] [[2005]], [[Hurricane Katrina]] made landfall in [[Louisiana]] and [[Mississippi]]. The U.S. National Hurricane Center, in its August review of the tropical storm season stated that Katrina was probably the worst natural disaster in U.S. history.<ref name="NHC Atlantic Monthly Report for August 2005">[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/archive/2005/tws/MIATWSAT_aug.shtml? August 2005 Atlantic Tropical Weather Summary] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> Currently, its death toll is at least 1,604, mainly from flooding and the aftermath in [[New Orleans]], [[Louisiana]]. It is also estimated to have caused an estimated $75 billion in damages. Before Katrina, the costliest system in monetary terms had been [[1992]]'s [[Hurricane Andrew]], which caused an estimated $39 billion (2005 [[USD]]) in damage in [[Florida]].<ref name=NHCKatrina>[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/pdf/TCR-AL122005_Katrina.pdf NHC Katrina Report] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
+
In the most recent and reliable records, most tropical cyclones which attained a pressure of 900&nbsp;[[pascal (unit)|hPa]] ([[bar (unit)|mbar]]) (26.56&nbsp;[[inch of mercury|inHg]]) or less occurred in the Western North [[Pacific Ocean]]. The strongest [[tropical cyclone]] recorded worldwide, as measured by minimum central [[pressure]], was [[Typhoon Tip]], which reached a pressure of 870&nbsp;hPa (25.69&nbsp;inHg) on October 12, 1979. On October 23, 2015, [[Hurricane Patricia]] attained the strongest 1-minute sustained winds on record at 215&nbsp;mph (345&nbsp;km/h).<ref>Ray Sanchez and Greg Botelho, [http://www.cnn.com/2015/10/23/americas/hurricane-patricia/  Hurricane Patricia weakens, but still 'extremely dangerous'] ''CNN'', October 23, 2015. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
  
==Regional storm terminology==
+
Miniature [[Cyclone Tracy]] was roughly 100&nbsp;km (60&nbsp;miles) wide before striking [[Darwin, Northern Territory|Darwin]], [[Australia]] in 1974, holding the record for the smallest tropical cyclone until 2008 when it was unseated by tropical cyclone Marco. Marco had gale force winds that extended just 19 kilometers (12 miles).<ref>[https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/81692/tiny-typhoon Tiny Typhoon?] ''NASA Earth Observatory''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
[[Image:Typhoon.jpg|thumb|Eye of [[Typhoon Odessa]], Pacific Ocean, August [[1985]].]]
 
  
Terms used in weather reports for tropical cyclones that have surface winds over 64 [[knot (speed)|knot]]s (73.6 [[Miles per hour|mph]]) or 32 [[meters per second|m/s]] vary by region:
+
[[Hurricane John (1994)|Hurricane John]] is the longest-lasting tropical cyclone on record, lasting 30 days in [[1994 Pacific hurricane season|1994]], and traveling 8,188 statute miles. The deadliest hurricane on record in [[Puerto Rico]] was also the longest-lasting Atlantic tropical cyclone: 1899 San Ciriaco Hurricane was a tropical cyclone for 27.75 days.<ref>Jonathan Erdman, [https://weather.com/storms/hurricane/news/2018-08-09-longest-hurricane-tracks The Longest-Lasting, Farthest-Tracking Hurricanes on Record] ''The Weather Channel'', August 9, 2018. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
  
* ''Hurricane:'' [[Atlantic basin]] and North [[Pacific Ocean]] east of the [[International date line]]
+
== Long term activity trends ==
* ''Typhoon:'' Northwest Pacific west of the dateline
+
While the number of storms in the Atlantic has increased since 1995, there is no obvious global trend; the annual number of tropical cyclones worldwide remains about 87&nbsp;±&nbsp;10. However, the ability of climatologists to make long-term data analysis in certain basins is limited by the lack of reliable historical data in some basins, primarily in the Southern Hemisphere.<ref>Christopher W. Landsea, Bruce A. Harper, Karl Hoarau, John A. Knaff, [https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/landseaetal-science06.pdf Can We Detect Trends in Extreme Tropical Cyclones?] ''Science'' 313 (July, 2006):452-454. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> In spite of that, there is some evidence that the intensity of hurricanes is increasing: <blockquote>Records of hurricane activity worldwide show an upswing of both the maximum wind speed in and the duration of hurricanes. The energy released by the average hurricane (again considering all hurricanes worldwide) seems to have increased by around 70 percent in the past 30 years or so, corresponding to about a 15 percent increase in the maximum wind speed and a 60 percent increase in storm lifetime.<ref name="EmanuelHomepage">Kerry Emanuel, [http://wind.mit.edu/~emanuel/anthro2.htm Anthropogenic Effects on Tropical Cyclone Activity], July 2006. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref></blockquote>
* ''Severe tropical cyclone:'' Southwest Pacific west of 160&deg;E and the southeast Indian Ocean east of 90&deg;E
 
* ''Severe cyclonic storm:'' North [[Indian Ocean]]
 
* ''Tropical cyclone:'' Southwest Indian Ocean and the South Pacific east of 160&deg;E.
 
* ''Cyclone'' (unofficially): South Atlantic Ocean
 
  
There are many regional names for tropical cyclones, including ''Bagyo'' in the [[Philippines]] and ''Taino'' in [[Haiti]].
+
Atlantic storms are becoming more destructive financially, since five of the ten most expensive storms in [[United States]] history have occurred since 1990. This can be attributed to the increased intensity and duration of hurricanes striking North America,<ref name="EmanuelHomepage"/> and to a greater degree, the number of people living in susceptible coastal areas, following increased development in the region since the last surge in Atlantic hurricane activity in the 1960s. Often in part because of the threat of hurricanes, many coastal regions had sparse population between major ports until the advent of automobile [[tourism]]; therefore, the most severe portions of hurricanes striking the coast may have gone unmeasured in some instances. The combined effects of ship destruction and remote landfall severely limit the number of intense hurricanes in the official record before the era of hurricane reconnaissance aircraft and [[satellite]] [[meteorology]].  
  
===Origin of storm terms===
+
The number and strength of Atlantic hurricanes may undergo a 50-70 year cycle, also known as the [[Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation]].<ref>Kevin Trenberth, Rong Zhang, and National Center for Atmospheric Research Staff, [https://climatedataguide.ucar.edu/climate-data/atlantic-multi-decadal-oscillation-amo Atlantic Multi-Decal Oscillation (AMO)] ''Climate Data Guide'', January, 2019. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> Although more common since 1995, few above-normal hurricane seasons occurred during 1970-1994. Destructive hurricanes struck frequently from 1926-1960, including many major New England hurricanes. A record 21 Atlantic tropical storms formed in [[1933 Atlantic hurricane season|1933]], a record only recently exceeded in [[2005 Atlantic hurricane season|2005]], which saw 28 storms. Tropical hurricanes occurred infrequently during the seasons of 1900-1925; however, many intense storms formed 1870-1899. During the 1887 season, 19 tropical storms formed, of which a record 4 occurred after 1 November and 11 strengthened into hurricanes. Few hurricanes occurred in the 1840s to 1860s; however, many struck in the early 1800s, including an 1821 storm that made a direct hit on [[New York City]].  
The word ''typhoon'' has two possible origins:
 
* From the [[Chinese Language|Chinese]] 大風 (daaih fūng ([[Cantonese language|Cantonese]]); dà fēng ([[Mandarin language|Mandarin]])) which means "great [[wind]]". (The Chinese term as 颱風 táifēng, and 台風 ''taifu'' in Japanese, has an independent origin traceable variously to 風颱, 風篩 or 風癡 ''hongthai'', going back to Song 宋 (960-1278) and Yuan 元(1260-1341) dynasties. The first record of the character 颱 appeared in 1685's edition of ''Summary of Taiwan'' 臺灣記略).
 
* From [[Urdu language|Urdu]], [[Persian language|Persian]] or [[Arabic language|Arabic]] ''ţūfān'' (&#1591;&#1608;&#1601;&#1575;&#1606;) < [[Greek language|Greek]] ''[[Typhon|tuphōn]]'' (Τυφών).
 
  
[[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] ''tufão'' is also related to typhoon.  See [[Typhon|tuphōn]] for more information.
+
These active hurricane seasons predated satellite coverage of the Atlantic basin. Before the satellite era began in 1960, tropical storms or hurricanes went undetected unless a ship reported a voyage through the storm or a storm hit land in a populated area. The official record, therefore, could miss storms in which no ship experienced gale-force winds, recognized it as a tropical storm (as opposed to a high-latitude extra-tropical cyclone, a tropical wave, or a brief squall), returned to port, and reported the experience.
  
The word ''hurricane'' is derived from the name of a native [[Caribbean]] [[Amerindian]] storm [[god]], [[Huracan]], via [[Spanish language|Spanish]] ''huracán''.
+
==Global warming==
 +
In an article in ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'', [[Kerry Emanuel]] stated that potential hurricane destructiveness, a measure combining hurricane strength, duration, and frequency, "is highly correlated with tropical sea surface temperature, reflecting well-documented climate signals, including multidecadal oscillations in the North Atlantic and North Pacific, and global warming." Emanuel predicted "a substantial increase in hurricane-related losses in the twenty-first century.<ref>Kerry Emanuel, [https://www.nature.com/articles/nature03906 Increasing destructiveness of tropical cyclones over the past 30 years] ''Nature'' 436(7051) (August 2005):686–688. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> Similarly, P.J. Webster and others published an article in ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'' examining the "changes in tropical cyclone number, duration, and intensity" over the last 35 years, the period when satellite data has been available. Their main finding was although the number of cyclones decreased throughout the planet excluding the north [[Atlantic Ocean]], there was a great increase in the number and proportion of very strong cyclones.<ref>P.J. Webster, G.J. Holland, J.A. Curry, and H.-R. Chang, [https://science.sciencemag.org/content/sci/309/5742/1844.full.pdf Changes in Tropical Cyclone Number, Duration, and Intensity in a Warming Environment] ''Science'' 309(5742) (2005):1844-1846. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> [[Sea surface temperature]] is vital in the development of cyclones. Though neither study can directly link hurricanes with global warming, the increase in sea surface temperatures is believed to be due to both global warming and nature variability, such as the hypothesized [[Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation]] (AMO), though an exact attribution has not been defined.<ref name="realclimate">Stefan Rahmstorf, Michael Mann, Rasmus Benestad, Gavin Schmidt, and William Connolley. [http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2005/09/hurricanes-and-global-warming/ Hurricanes and Global Warming - Is There a Connection?] ''RealClimate'', 2005. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
  
The word ''cyclone'' is from the Greek "κύκλος", meaning "circle." An Egyptian word ''Cykline'' meaning to "to spin" has been cited as a possible origin. {{fact}}
+
The [[United States|U.S.]] [[National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration]] [[Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory]] performed a simulation to determine if there is a [[statistics|statistical]] [[trend]] in the frequency or strength of cyclones over time. They were unable to draw definite conclusions:
 +
<blockquote>In summary, neither our model projections for the 21st century nor our analyses of trends in Atlantic hurricane and tropical storm activity support the notion that greenhouse gas-induced warming leads to large increases in either tropical storm or overall hurricane numbers in the Atlantic. ...Therefore, we conclude that it is premature to conclude with high confidence that human activity–and particularly greenhouse warming–has already caused a detectable change in Atlantic hurricane activity. ... We also conclude that it is likely that climate warming will cause Atlantic hurricanes in the coming century have higher rainfall rates than present-day hurricanes, and medium confidence that they will be more intense (higher peak winds and lower central pressures) on average.<ref name="GFDL warming">Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. [https://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/global-warming-and-hurricanes/ Global Warming and Hurricanes]. ''GFDL'', June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> </blockquote>
  
==Other storm systems==
+
There is no universal agreement about the magnitude of the effects anthropogenic global warming has on tropical cyclone formation, track, and intensity. For example, critics such as [[Chris Landsea]] assert that:
{{seealso|Cyclone}}
+
<blockquote>While it is possible that the recorded increase in short-duration TCs [tropical cyclones]represents a real climate signal, ... it is more plausible that the increase arises primarily from improvements in the quantity and quality of observations, along with enhanced interpretation techniques.<ref>Christopher W. Landsea, Gabriel A. Vecchi, Lennart Bengtsson, and Thomas R. Knutson, [https://journals.ametsoc.org/jcli/article/23/10/2508/31985/Impact-of-Duration-Thresholds-on-Atlantic-Tropical Impact of Duration Thresholds on Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Counts] ''J. Climate'' 23(10) (2010): 2508–2519. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref></blockquote>
Many other forms of cyclone can form in natureSeveral of these relate to the formation or dissipation of tropical cyclones.
+
Albeit many aspects of a link between tropical cyclones and global warming have continued to be hotly debated. One point of agreement is that no individual tropical cyclone or season can be attributed to global warming.<ref name="realclimate" />
  
===Extratropical cyclone===
+
==Related cyclone types==
{{hurricane main|Extratropical cyclone}}
+
[[Image:Gustav 09 sep 2002 1805Z.jpg|thumb|225px|right|[[Hurricane Gustav (2002)|Subtropical Storm Gustav]] in [[2002 Atlantic hurricane season|2002]]]]
An ''extratropical cyclone'' is a storm that derives energy from horizontal temperature differences, which are typical in higher latitudes. A tropical cyclone can become extratropical as it moves toward higher latitudes if its energy source changes from heat released by condensation to differences in temperature between air masses;<ref name=NHCA7>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/A7.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject A7] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> Infrequently, an extratropical cyclone can transform into a subtropical storm, and from there into a tropical cyclone. From space, extratropical storms have a characteristic "[[comma (punctuation)|comma]]-shaped" cloud pattern. Extratropical cyclones can also be dangerous because their low-pressure centers cause powerful winds.
 
  
===Subtropical storm===
+
In addition to tropical cyclones, there are two other classes of cyclones within the spectrum of cyclone types. These kinds of cyclones, known as [[extratropical cyclone]]s and [[subtropical cyclone]]s, can be stages a tropical cyclone passes through during its [[tropical cyclogenesis|formation]] or dissipation.<ref>Mark A. Lander, N. Davidson, H. Rosendal, J. Knaff, and R. Edson, J. Evans, R. Hart. [https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/iwtc/Lander4-1.html Fifth International Workshop on Tropical Cyclones] ''NOAA'', Mangilao, Guam. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
{{hurricane main|Subtropical cyclone}}
 
A subtropical cyclone is a [[weather]] system that has some characteristics of a tropical cyclone and some characteristics of an extratropical cyclone. They can form in a wide band of [[latitude]], from the [[equator]] to 50&deg;. Although subtropical storms rarely attain hurricane-force winds, they may become tropical in nature as their core warms.<ref name=NHCA6>[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/A6.html NHC Tropical Cyclone FAQ Subject A6] accessed March 31, 2006</ref> From an operational standpoint, a tropical cyclone is usually not considered to become subtropical during its extratropical transition.<ref name=PadgetDecember2000>Padgett, G. [http://australiasevereweather.com/cyclones/2001/summ0012.txt Monthly Global Tropical Cyclone Summary for December 2000] accessed March 31, 2006</ref>
 
  
===European windstorms===
+
An ''extratropical cyclone'' is a storm that derives energy from horizontal temperature differences, which are typical in higher latitudes. A tropical cyclone can become extratropical as it moves toward higher latitudes if its energy source changes from heat released by condensation to differences in temperature between air masses;<ref name = whatis>[https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd-faq/#1589395208493-2c554211-7f85 Types of Storms] ''NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> additionally, although not as frequently, an extratropical cyclone can transform into a subtropical storm, and from there into a tropical cyclone. From space, extratropical storms have a characteristic "[[comma (punctuation)|comma]]-shaped" cloud pattern. Extratropical cyclones can also be dangerous when their low-pressure centers cause powerful winds and very high seas.
{{hurricane main|European windstorm}}
 
In the [[United Kingdom]] and [[Europe]], some severe northeast Atlantic cyclonic depressions are referred to as "hurricanes," even though they rarely originate in the tropics. These [[European windstorm]]s can generate hurricane-force winds but are not given individual names. However, two powerful extratropical cyclones that ravaged [[France]], [[Germany]], and the [[United Kingdom]] in [[December 1999]], "Lothar" and "Martin", were named due to their unexpected power (equivalent to a category 1 or 2 hurricane). In British [[Shipping Forecast]]s, winds of force 12 on the [[Beaufort scale]] are described as "hurricane force."
 
  
==See also==
+
A ''subtropical cyclone'' is a [[weather]] system that has some characteristics of a tropical cyclone and some characteristics of an extratropical cyclone. They can form in a wide band of [[latitude]]s, from the [[equator]] to 50°. Although subtropical storms rarely have hurricane-force winds, they may become tropical in nature as their cores warm.<ref name = whatis/> From an operational standpoint, a tropical cyclone is usually not considered to become subtropical during its extratropical transition.
{{wiktionary}}
 
{{commons2}}
 
{{tcportal}}
 
===Meteorology===
 
* [[Cyclone]]
 
* [[Hot tower]]
 
* [[Eyewall]]
 
* [[Subtropical cyclone]]
 
* [[Anticyclone]]
 
  
===Forecasting and preparation===
+
==In popular culture==
* [[Catastrophe modeling]]
+
In [[popular culture]], tropical cyclones have made appearances in different types of media, including [[film]]s, [[book]]s, [[television]], [[music]], and [[electronic game]]s. The media can have tropical cyclones that are entirely [[fiction]]al, or can be based on real events. For example, [[George Rippey Stewart]]'s ''[[Storm (novel)|Storm]],'' a [[best-seller]] published in 1941, is thought to have influenced meteorologists into giving female names to Pacific tropical cyclones.<ref>National Hurricane Center, [https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/aboutnames_history.shtml Tropical Cyclone Naming History and Retired Names] ''NOAA''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref> Another example is the hurricane in ''[[The Perfect Storm (film)|The Perfect Storm]]'', which describes the sinking of the ''Andrea Gail'' by the [[1991 Halloween Nor'easter]].<ref>Mark Leberfinger and Ashley Williams, [https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/1991-perfect-storm-how-the-deadly-system-that-inspired-a-blockbuster-hit-took-shape/342238 1991 'Perfect Storm': How the deadly system that inspired a blockbuster hit took shape]. ''AccuWeather''. Retrieved June 18, 2020.</ref>
* [[Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale]]
 
* [[Hurricane proof building]]
 
* [[Hurricane preparedness]]
 
  
===Categories===
+
In the 2004 film ''[[The Day After Tomorrow]]'' the most severe of the weather anomalies are three hurricane-like super storms that cover nearly the entire northern hemisphere. As a reaction to the global warming that has occurred, the the Atlantic Ocean reaches a critical [[desalinization]] point and extreme weather begins across the globe. The three massive cyclonic storms amass over Canada, Europe and Siberia, wreaking havoc over whatever crosses their path.  The scientists tracking the weather discover that the deadliest part, the eye of the storm, pulls super cooled air from the upper [[troposphere]] down to ground level too fast for it to warm up, subsequently freezing anything and everything. Thus the eyes of these storm systems are responsible for the highest death tolls out of all the natural disasters occurring around the world. It should be noted that is in fact not possible for super-storms like these to actually retrieve air from the upper layers of the atmosphere and pull it down to ground level in a manner that would allow to remain super-cool.
* [[:Category:Lists of tropical cyclones]]
 
* [[:Category:Tropical cyclones by basin]]
 
* [[:Category:Tropical cyclones by season]]
 
* [[:Category:Tropical cyclones by strength]]
 
* [[:Category:Tropical cyclones by region]]
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
  
==External links==
+
== References ==
{{Commons|Tropical cyclone}}
 
===Tracking and Warning===
 
*[http://www.npmoc.navy.mil/jtwc.html Joint Typhoon warning Center] - Western Pacific
 
*[http://www.metservice.co.nz/ MetService, New Zealand] - Tasman Sea, South Pacific south of 25&deg S
 
*[http://www.bom.gov.au/weather/ Australian Bureau of Meteorology] - Southern hemisphere from 90&deg; E to 160&deg; E
 
*[http://www.atl.ec.gc.ca/weather/hurricane/index_e.html Canadian Hurricane Centre] - Northwest Atlantic (overlaps US NHC)
 
*[http://hurricane.terrapin.com/ Hurricane & Storm Tracking for the Atlantic & Pacific Oceans ] - Shows all current hurricanes and their tracks
 
  
=== Regional Specialized Meteorological Centers ===
+
* Ahrens, C. D. ''Meteorology: An Introduction to Weather, Climate, and the Environment.'' St. Paul, MN: West Publishing Company, 1994. ISBN 0534397751.
*[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/ US National Hurricane Center] - North Atlantic, Eastern Pacific
+
* Chang, Chih-Pei. ''East Asian Monsoon.'' Singapore: World Scientific, 2004. ISBN 9812387692.
*[http://www.prh.noaa.gov/hnl/cphc/ Central Pacific Hurricane Center] - Central Pacific
+
* Christopherson, Robert W. ''Geosystems: An Introduction to Physical Geography.'' New York, NY: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1992. ISBN 0023224436.
*[http://www.jma.go.jp/en/typh/ Japan Meteorological Agency] - Western Pacific
+
* Hurricane Research Division. [http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/tcfaqHED.html Hurricane Research Division: Frequently Asked Questions.] ''Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, NOAA''. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
*[http://www.imd.gov.in/ India Meteorological Department] - [[Bay of Bengal]] and the [[Arabian Sea]]
+
* Kochel, R. Craig, Victor R. Baker, and Peter C. Patton. ''Flood Geomorphology.'' Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Interscience, 1988. ISBN 0471625582.
*[http://www.meteo.fr/temps/domtom/La_Reunion/ Météo-France - La Reunion] - South Indian Ocean from Africa to 90&deg; E
+
* Lutgens, F. K., and E. J. Tarbuck. ''The Atmosphere: An Introduction to Meteorology.'' Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1998. ISBN 0131015672.
*[http://www.met.gov.fj/advisories.html Fiji Meteorological Service] - South Pacific east of 160&deg;, north of 25&deg; S
+
* Mann, M. E., and K. Emanuel. Atlantic Hurricane Trends Linked to Climate Change. ''EOS'' 87(24) (2006):233.
 +
* Moran, J. M., and M. D. Morgan. ''Meteorology: The Atmosphere and the Science of Weather.'' Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. 1997. {{ASIN|B000O8WUGK}}
 +
* Rahmstorf, Stefan, Michael Mann, Rasmus Benestad, Gavin Schmidt, and William Connolley. [http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=181 Hurricanes and Global Warming—Is There a Connection?] ''RealClimate'', September 2, 2005. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
 +
* Whipple, Addison. ''Storm.'' Alexandria, VA: Time Life Books, 1982. ISBN 0809443120.
  
=== Past storms ===
+
==External links==
*[http://www.solar.ifa.hawaii.edu/Tropical/summary.html Yearly World Tropical Storm Summary] - About 10 years of origins and tracks, in color, up to present. Broken up by year and region; for example "Atlantic, 2005"
+
All links retrieved May 2, 2023.
*[http://hurricanehut.tripod.com The Hurricane Hut] - Information on all past storms to 1950, along with images and individual storm summaries.
 
*[http://weather.unisys.com/hurricane/ Unisys historical and contemporary hurricane track data] e.g. [http://weather.unisys.com/hurricane/atlantic/1968/index.html Atlantic 1968]
 
*[http://www.hpc.ncep.noaa.gov/tropical/rain/tcrainfall.html United States Tropical Cyclone Rainfall Climatology] - About 20 years of tropical cyclone histories with an emphasis on storm total rainfall, in color, up to present. Broken up by year and region
 
*[http://www.super70s.com/Super70s/Tech/Nature/Disasters/Hurricanes/ Hurricanes of the 1970s, including survivor stories] and [http://www.awesome80s.com/Awesome80s/Tech/Nature/Disasters/Hurricanes/ 1980s]
 
*[http://www.bom.gov.au/bmrc/pubs/tcguide/ch1/figures_ch1/figure1.9.htm Worldwide tropical cyclone tracks, 1979-1988]
 
*[http://www.em-dat.net the EM-DAT International Disaster Database]
 
*[http://www.hurricanearchive.org Hurricane Digital Memory Bank] Preserving the Stories and Digital Record of Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma
 
  
===Learning Resources===
+
*[https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd-faq/ Frequently Asked Questions About Hurricanes] ''NOAA''.
*[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/HAW2/pdf/canelab.htm Create-a-Cane] Interactive fun site from NOAA, allows to specify conditions and see how they impact storm formation
+
*[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/teachers/viewing/3204_02_nsn.html NOVA scienceNOW: Hurricanes].
*[http://www.nasa.gov/hurricane NASA Hurricane Web Page] - Data, research, science & multimedia resources from NASA
+
*{{PDF|[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/marinersguide.pdf Mariner's Guide for Hurricane Awareness]. |1.23&nbsp;MiB}}.
*[http://www.bom.gov.au/bmrc/pubs/tcguide/ch1/ch1_3.htm WMO guide on cyclone terminology]
+
*[http://severe.worldweather.org/ World Meteorological Organization Severe Weather Information Center] - Shows all current tropical systems worldwide and their tracks.  
*[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/teachers/viewing/3204_02_nsn.html NOVA scienceNOW: Hurricanes]
+
*[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/ US National Hurricane Center] - North Atlantic, Eastern Pacific.
*[http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/marinersguide.pdf Mariner's Guide for Hurricane Awareness (pdf)]
+
*[http://www.jma.go.jp/en/typh/ Japan Meteorological Agency] - NW Pacific.
*[http://hurricanehut.tripod.com/id3.html The Hurricane Hut] - Information on tropical cyclones, as well as information on hurricane naming, and all Atlantic storms 1950-2005
+
*[http://www.meteofrance.re/cyclone/activite-cyclonique-en-cours Météo-France - La Reunion] - South Indian Ocean from Africa to 90° E.
  
=== Miscellaneous ===
 
*[http://www.webcamplaza.net/cams/hurricane1.html WebCamPlaza] Big collection of hurricane webcams.
 
*[http://www.worldhurricanes.com/ www.worldhurricanes.com]- Lates news from the WN network.
 
*[http://www.irbs.com/bowditch/pdf/chapt36.pdf Tropical Cyclones] - Chapter from the online edition of [[Nathaniel Bowditch]]'s ''American Practical Navigator''
 
*[http://www.hurricanealley.net Hurricane Alley - tracking]
 
*[http://www.hurricanetalk.com Live Hurricane Talk and Information Archive]
 
*[http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/tcfaqHED.html NOAA's Tropical Cyclone FAQ]
 
*[http://www.euronet.nl/users/e_wesker/atlhur.html Hurricanes & climate change]
 
*[http://www.bom.gov.au/bmrc/pubs/tcguide/ch1/ch1_3.htm Global climatology of tropical cyclones]
 
*[http://www.stormcarib.com Caribbean Hurricane Network]
 
*[http://www.mindspring.com/~jbeven/intr0008.htm 1995 Mediterranean "Hurricane"]
 
*[http://html.wesh.com/sh/idi/weather/hurricanes/hurricanetracker.html Atlantic hurricanes track animations]
 
*[http://www.metoffice.com/weather/tropicalcyclone/images.html Tropical cyclone pictures and movies, from the United Kingdom Met Office]
 
*[http://zfacts.com/p/49.html Global Warming & Hurricanes] - Review based on latest articles in ''Science'' and ''Nature''. Graph of trends in 6 hurricane basins.
 
*[https://www.cnmoc.navy.mil/nmosw/tr8203nc/0start.htm Hurricane Havens Handbook for the North Atlantic Ocean]
 
*[https://www.cnmoc.navy.mil/nmosw/thh_nc/0start.htm Typhoon Havens Handbook for the Western Pacific and Indian Oceans]
 
* [http://tsr.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/ Tropical Storm Risk]
 
* [http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization-climate_change_debate/links_2870.jsp Hurricanes, global warming, and global politics]
 
*[http://www.wunderground.com/blog/SteveGregory/show.html Steve Gregory's Blog at Weather Underground]
 
*[http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/show.html Dr. Jeff Masters Blog at Weather Underground]
 
*[http://hurricane.expert-dictionary.com/ Hurricane Dictionary] Hurricane and Tropical Storms
 
*[http://www.projectshum.org/NaturalDisasters/hurricanes.html Natural Disasters - Hurricanes] Great research site for kids.
 
*[http://www.hurricanearchive.org Hurricane Digital Memory Bank] Preserving the Stories and Digital Record of Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma
 
  
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Latest revision as of 18:20, 2 May 2023


Cyclone Catarina, a rare South Atlantic tropical cyclone viewed from the International Space Station on March 26, 2004.

A tropical cyclone is a meteorological term for a storm system characterized by a low pressure center and thunderstorms that produces strong wind and flooding rain. A tropical cyclone feeds on the heat released when moist air rises and the water vapor it contains condenses. They are fueled by a different heat mechanism than other cyclonic windstorms such as nor'easters, European windstorms, and polar lows, leading to their classification as "warm core" storm systems.

The adjective "tropical" refers to both the geographic origin of these systems, which form almost exclusively in tropical regions of the globe, and their formation in Maritime Tropical air masses. The noun "cyclone" refers to such storms' cyclonic nature, with counterclockwise rotation in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise rotation in the Southern Hemisphere. Depending on their location and strength, tropical cyclones are referred to by various other names, such as hurricane, typhoon, tropical storm, cyclonic storm, and tropical depression.

While tropical cyclones can produce extremely powerful winds and torrential rain, they are also able to produce high waves and damaging storm surge. They develop over large bodies of warm water, and lose their strength if they move over land. This is the reason coastal regions can receive significant damage from a tropical cyclone, while inland regions are relatively safe from receiving strong winds. Heavy rains, however, can produce significant flooding inland, and storm surges can produce extensive coastal flooding up to 25 mi (40 km) from the coastline. Although their effects on human populations can be devastating, tropical cyclones can also relieve drought conditions. They also carry heat and energy away from the tropics and transport it towards temperate latitudes, which makes them an important part of the global atmospheric circulation mechanism. As a result, tropical cyclones help to maintain equilibrium in the Earth's troposphere, and to maintain a relatively stable and warm temperature worldwide.

Eye of hurricane Wilma.

Many tropical cyclones develop when the atmospheric conditions around a weak disturbance in the atmosphere are favorable. Others form when other types of cyclones acquire tropical characteristics. Tropical systems are then moved by steering winds in the troposphere; if the conditions remain favorable, the tropical disturbance intensifies, and can even develop an eye. On the other end of the spectrum, if the conditions around the system deteriorate or the tropical cyclone makes landfall, the system weakens and eventually dissipates.

Physical structure

Structure of a tropical cyclone.

All tropical cyclones are areas of low atmospheric pressure near the Earth's surface. The pressures recorded at the centers of tropical cyclones are among the lowest that occur on Earth's surface at sea level.[1] Tropical cyclones are characterized and driven by the release of large amounts of latent heat of condensation, which occurs when moist air is carried upwards and its water vapor condenses. This heat is distributed vertically around the center of the storm. Thus, at any given altitude (except close to the surface, where water temperature dictates air temperature) the environment inside the cyclone is warmer than its outer surroundings.[2]

Banding

Rainbands are bands of showers and thunderstorms that spiral cyclonically toward the storm center. High wind gusts and heavy downpours often occur in individual rainbands, with relatively calm weather between bands. Tornadoes often form in the rainbands of landfalling tropical cyclones.[3] Intense annular tropical cyclones are distinctive for their lack of rainbands; instead, they possess a thick circular area of disturbed weather around their low pressure center.[4] While all surface low pressure areas require divergence aloft to continue deepening, the divergence over tropical cyclones is in all directions away from the center. The upper levels of a tropical cyclone feature winds directed away from the center of the storm with an anticyclonic rotation, due to the Coriolis effect. Winds at the surface are strongly cyclonic, weaken with height, and eventually reverse themselves. Tropical cyclones owe this unique characteristic to requiring a relative lack of vertical wind shear to maintain the warm core at the center of the storm.[5]

Eye and inner core

A strong tropical cyclone will harbor an area of sinking air at the center of circulation. If this area is strong enough, it can develop into an eye. Weather in the eye is normally calm and free of clouds, though the sea may be extremely violent.[3] The eye is normally circular in shape, and may range in size from 3 to 370 km (2–230 miles) in diameter. Intense, mature hurricanes can sometimes exhibit an inward curving of the eyewall's top, making it resemble a football stadium; this phenomenon is thus sometimes referred to as the stadium effect.[6]

There are other features that either surround the eye, or cover it. The central dense overcast is the concentrated area of strong thunderstorm activity near the center of a tropical cyclone.[7] The eyewall is a circle of strong thunderstorms that surrounds the eye; here is where the greatest wind speeds are found, where clouds reach the highest, and precipitation is the heaviest. The heaviest wind damage occurs where a hurricane's eyewall passes over land.[3] Associated with eyewalls are eyewall replacement cycles, which occur naturally in intense tropical cyclones. When cyclones reach peak intensity they usually—but not always—have an eyewall and radius of maximum winds that contract to a very small size, around 10–25 km (5 to 15 miles). At this point, some of the outer rainbands may organize into an outer ring of thunderstorms that slowly moves inward and robs the inner eyewall of its needed moisture and angular momentum. During this phase, the tropical cyclone weakens (i.e., the maximum winds die off somewhat and the central pressure goes up), but eventually the outer eyewall replaces the inner one completely. The storm can be of the same intensity as it was previously or, in some cases, it can be even stronger after the eyewall replacement cycle. Even if the cyclone is weaker at the end of the cycle, the storm may strengthen again as it builds a new outer ring for the next eyewall replacement.[8]

Size

The size of a tropical cyclone is determined by measuring the distance from their center of circulation to their outermost closed isobar. If the radius is less than two degrees of latitude (120 nm, 222 km), then the cyclone is "very small" or a "midget." Radii of 2–3 degrees (120–180 nm, 222–333 km) are considered "small." Radii between 3 and 6 latitude degrees (180–360 nm, 333–666 km) are considered "average sized." Tropical cyclones are considered "large" when the closed isobar radius is 6–8 degrees of latitude (360–480 nm, 666–888 km), while "very large" tropical cyclones have a radius of greater than 8 degrees (480 nm, 888 km). Other methods of determining a tropical cyclone's size include measuring the radius of gale force winds and measuring the radius of the central dense overcast.

Mechanics

Tropical cyclones form when the energy released by the condensation of moisture in rising air causes a positive feedback loop over warm ocean waters.

A tropical cyclone's primary energy source is the release of the heat of condensation from water vapor condensing at high altitudes, with solar heating being the initial source for evaporation. Therefore, a tropical cyclone can be visualized as a giant vertical heat engine supported by mechanics driven by physical forces such as the rotation and gravity of the Earth. In another way, tropical cyclones could be viewed as a special type of mesoscale convective complex, which continues to develop over a vast source of relative warmth and moisture. Condensation leads to higher wind speeds, as a tiny fraction of the released energy is converted into mechanical energy;[9] the faster winds and lower pressure associated with them in turn cause increased surface evaporation and thus even more condensation. Much of the released energy drives updrafts that increase the height of the storm clouds, speeding up condensation. This gives rise to factors that provide the system with enough energy to be self-sufficient, and cause a positive feedback loop that continues as long as the tropical cyclone can draw energy from a thermal reservoir. In this case, the heat source is the warm water at the surface of the ocean. Factors such as a continued lack of equilibrium in air mass distribution would also give supporting energy to the cyclone. The rotation of the Earth causes the system to spin, an effect known as the Coriolis effect, giving it a cyclonic characteristic and affecting the trajectory of the storm.

What primarily distinguishes tropical cyclones from other meteorological phenomena is the energy source. The tropical cyclone gains energy from the warm waters of the tropics through the latent heat of condensation.[10] Because convection is strongest in a tropical climate, it defines the initial domain of the tropical cyclone. By contrast, mid-latitude cyclones draw their energy mostly from pre-existing horizontal temperature gradients in the atmosphere. To continue to drive its heat engine, a tropical cyclone must remain over warm water, which provides the needed atmospheric moisture to maintain the positive feedback loop running. As a result, when a tropical cyclone passes over land, it is cut off from its heat source and its strength diminishes rapidly.[11]

Chart displaying the drop in surface temperature in the Gulf of Mexico as Hurricanes Katrina and Rita passed over

The passage of a tropical cyclone over the ocean can cause the upper layers of the ocean to cool substantially, which can influence subsequent cyclone development. Cooling is primarily caused by upwelling of cold water from deeper in the ocean due to the wind stresses the storm itself induces upon the sea surface. Additional cooling may come in the form of cold water from falling raindrops. Cloud cover may also play a role in cooling the ocean, by shielding the ocean surface from direct sunlight before and slightly after the storm passage. All these effects can combine to produce a dramatic drop in sea surface temperature over a large area in just a few days.[12]

While the most obvious motion of clouds is toward the center, tropical cyclones also develop an upper-level (high-altitude) outward flow of clouds. These originate from air that has released its moisture and is expelled at high altitude through the "chimney" of the storm engine. This outflow produces high, thin cirrus clouds that spiral away from the center. These high cirrus clouds may be the first signs of an approaching tropical cyclone when seen from dry land.[12]

Major basins and related warning centers

Basins and WMO Monitoring Institutions
Basin Responsible RSMCs and TCWCs
Northern Atlantic National Hurricane Center
Northeastern Pacific National Hurricane Center
North Central Pacific Central Pacific Hurricane Center
Northwestern Pacific Japan Meteorological Agency
Northern Indian Ocean Indian Meteorological Department
Southwestern Indian Ocean Météo-France
South and
Southwestern Pacific
Fiji Meteorological Service
Meteorological Service of New Zealand
Papua New Guinea National Weather Service
Bureau of Meteorology (Australia)
Southeastern Indian Ocean Bureau of Meteorology (Australia)
Meteorological and Geophysical Agency (Indonesia)
: Indicates a Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre
Map of the cumulative tracks of all tropical cyclones during the 1985–2005 time period. The Pacific Ocean west of the International Date Line sees more tropical cyclones than any other basin, while there is almost no activity in the Atlantic Ocean south of the Equator.

There are six Regional Specialized Meteorological Centres (RSMCs) worldwide. These organizations are designated by the World Meteorological Organization and are responsible for tracking and issuing bulletins, warnings, and advisories about tropical cyclones in their designated areas of responsibility. Additionally, there are six Tropical Cyclone Warning Centres (TCWCs) that provide information to smaller regions. The RSMCs and TCWCs, however, are not the only organizations that provide information about tropical cyclones to the public. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) issues informal advisories in all basins except the Northern Atlantic and Northeastern Pacific. The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) issues informal advisories and names for tropical cyclones that approach the Philippines in the Northwestern Pacific. The Canadian Hurricane Centre (CHC) issues advisories on hurricanes and their remnants when they affect Canada.

Formation

Times

Worldwide, tropical cyclone activity peaks in late summer, when the difference between temperatures aloft and sea surface temperatures is the greatest. However, each particular basin has its own seasonal patterns. On a worldwide scale, May is the least active month, while September is the most active.[13]

In the North Atlantic, a distinct hurricane season occurs from June 1 to November 30, sharply peaking from late August through September.[13] The statistical peak of the North Atlantic hurricane season is September 10. The Northeast Pacific has a broader period of activity, but in a similar time frame to the Atlantic.[14] The Northwest Pacific sees tropical cyclones year-round, with a minimum in February and a peak in early September. In the North Indian basin, storms are most common from April to December, with peaks in May and November.[13]

In the Southern Hemisphere, tropical cyclone activity begins in late October and ends in May. Southern Hemisphere activity peaks in mid-February to early March.[13]

Season lengths and seasonal averages[13]
Basin Season start Season end Tropical Storms
(>34 knots)
Tropical Cyclones
(>63 knots)
Category 3+ TCs
(>95 knots)
Northwest Pacific April January 26.7 16.9 8.5
South Indian October May 20.6 10.3 4.3
Northeast Pacific May November 16.3 9.0 4.1
North Atlantic June November 10.6 5.9 2.0
Australia Southwest Pacific October May 10.6 4.8 1.9
North Indian April December 5.4 2.2 0.4

Factors

Waves in the trade winds in the Atlantic Ocean—areas of converging winds that move along the same track as the prevailing wind—create instabilities in the atmosphere that may lead to the formation of hurricanes.

The formation of tropical cyclones is the topic of extensive ongoing research and is still not fully understood. While six factors appear to be generally necessary, tropical cyclones may occasionally form without meeting all of the following conditions. In most situations, water temperatures of at least 26.5 °C (80 °F) are needed down to a depth of at least 50 m (150 feet). Waters of this temperature cause the overlying atmosphere to be unstable enough to sustain convection and thunderstorms. Another factor is rapid cooling with height. This allows the release of latent heat, which is the source of energy in a tropical cyclone. High humidity is needed, especially in the lower-to-mid troposphere; when there is a great deal of moisture in the atmosphere, conditions are more favorable for disturbances to develop. Low amounts of wind shear are needed, as when shear is high, the convection in a cyclone or disturbance will be disrupted, preventing formation of the feedback loop. Tropical cyclones generally need to form more than 500 km (310 miles) or 5 degrees of latitude away from the equator. This allows the Coriolis effect to deflect winds blowing towards the low pressure center, causing a circulation. Lastly, a formative tropical cyclone needs a pre-existing system of disturbed weather. The system must have some sort of circulation as well as a low pressure center.[15]

Locations

Most tropical cyclones form in a worldwide band of thunderstorm activity called by several names: the Intertropical Discontinuity (ITD), the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), or the monsoon trough. Another important source of atmospheric instability is found in tropical waves, which cause about 85 percent of intense tropical cyclones in the Atlantic Ocean and become most of the tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific basin.[16]

Tropical cyclones originate on the eastern side of oceans, but move west, intensifying as they move. Most of these systems form between 10 and 30 degrees away of the equator, and 87 percent form no farther away than 20 degrees of latitude, north or south. Because the Coriolis effect initiates and maintains tropical cyclone rotation, tropical cyclones rarely form or move within about 5 degrees of the equator, where the Coriolis effect is weakest. However, it is possible for tropical cyclones to form within this boundary as Tropical Storm Vamei did in 2001 and Cyclone Agni in 2004.

Movement and track

Steering winds

Although tropical cyclones are large systems generating enormous energy, their movements over the Earth's surface are controlled by large-scale winds—the streams in the Earth's atmosphere. The path of motion is referred to as a tropical cyclone's track.

Tropical systems, while generally located equatorward of the 20th parallel, are steered primarily westward by the east-to-west winds on the equatorward side of the subtropical ridge—a persistent high pressure area over the world's oceans. In the tropical North Atlantic and Northeast Pacific oceans, trade winds—another name for the westward-moving wind currents—steer tropical waves westward from the African coast and towards the Caribbean Sea, North America, and ultimately into the central Pacific Ocean before the waves dampen out. These waves are the precursors to many tropical cyclones within this region. In the Indian Ocean and Western Pacific (both north and south of the equator), tropical cyclogenesis is strongly influenced by the seasonal movement of the Intertropical Convergence Zone and the monsoon trough, rather than by easterly waves.

Coriolis effect

Infrared image of Cyclone Monica near peak intensity, showing clockwise rotation due to the Coriolis effect.

The Earth's rotation imparts an acceleration known as the Coriolis Effect, Coriolis Acceleration, or colloquially, Coriolis Force. This acceleration causes cyclonic systems to turn towards the poles in the absence of strong steering currents. The poleward portion of a tropical cyclone contains easterly winds, and the Coriolis effect pulls them slightly more poleward. The westerly winds on the equatorward portion of the cyclone pull slightly towards the equator, but, because the Coriolis effect weakens toward the equator, the net drag on the cyclone is poleward. Thus, tropical cyclones in the Northern Hemisphere usually turn north (before being blown east), and tropical cyclones in the Southern Hemisphere usually turn south (before being blown east) when no other effects counteract the Coriolis effect.

The Coriolis effect also initiates cyclonic rotation, but it is not the driving force that brings this rotation to high speeds. These speeds instead result from conservation of angular momentum. This means that air is drawn in from an area much larger than the cyclone such that the tiny rotational speed (originally imparted by the Coriolis effect) is magnified greatly as the air is drawn into the low pressure center.

Interaction with the mid-latitude westerlies

Storm track of Typhoon Ioke, showing recurvature off the Japanese coast in 2006

When a tropical cyclone crosses the subtropical ridge axis, its general track around the high-pressure area is deflected significantly by winds moving towards the general low-pressure area to its north. When the cyclone track becomes strongly poleward with an easterly component, the cyclone has begun recurvature.[17] A typhoon moving through the Pacific Ocean towards Asia, for example, will recurve offshore of Japan to the north, and then to the northeast, if the typhoon encounters winds blowing northeastward toward a low-pressure system passing over China or Siberia. Many tropical cyclones are eventually forced toward the northeast by extratropical cyclones, which move from west to east to the north of the subtropical ridge.

Landfall

Officially, landfall is when a storm's center (the center of its circulation, not its edge) crosses the coastline. Storm conditions may be experienced on the coast and inland hours before landfall; in fact, a tropical cyclone can launch its strongest winds over land, yet not make landfall; if this occurs, then it is said that the storm made a direct hit on the coast. Due to this definition, the landfall area experiences half of a land-bound storm by the time the actual landfall occurs. For emergency preparedness, actions should be timed from when a certain wind speed or intensity of rainfall will reach land, not from when landfall will occur.[18]

Dissipation

Factors

A tropical cyclone can cease to have tropical characteristics through several different ways. One such way is if it moves over land, thus depriving it of the warm water it needs to power itself, quickly losing strength. Most strong storms lose their strength very rapidly after landfall and become disorganized areas of low pressure within a day or two, or evolve into extratropical cyclones. While there is a chance a tropical cyclone could regenerate it managed to get back over open warm water, if it remains over mountains for even a short time, it can rapidly lose its structure. Many storm fatalities occur in mountainous terrain, as the dying storm unleashes torrential rainfall, leading to deadly floods and mudslides, similar to those that happened with Hurricane Mitch in 1998. Additionally, dissipation can occur if a storm remains in the same area of ocean for too long, mixing the upper 30 meters (100 feet) of water. This occurs because the cyclone draws up colder water from deeper in the sea through upwelling, and causes the water surface to become too cool to support the storm. Without warm surface water, the storm cannot survive.

A tropical cyclone can dissipate when it moves over waters significantly below 26.5 °C. This will cause the storm to lose its tropical characteristics (i.e., thunderstorms near the center and warm core) and become a remnant low pressure area, which can persist for several days. This is the main dissipation mechanism in the Northeast Pacific ocean. Weakening or dissipation can occur if it experiences vertical wind shear, causing the convection and heat engine to move away from the center; this normally ceases development of a tropical cyclone.[19] Additionally, its interaction with the main belt of the Westerlies, by means of merging with a nearby frontal zone, can cause tropical cyclones to evolve into extratropical cyclones. Even after a tropical cyclone is said to be extratropical or dissipated, it can still have tropical storm force (or occasionally hurricane force) winds and drop several inches of rainfall. In the Pacific ocean and Atlantic ocean, such tropical-derived cyclones of higher latitudes can be violent and may occasionally remain at hurricane-force wind speeds when they reach the west coast of North America. These phenomena can also affect Europe, where they are known as European windstorms; Hurricane Iris's extratropical remnants became one in 1995.[20] Additionally, a cyclone can merge with another area of low pressure, becoming a larger area of low pressure. This can strengthen the resultant system, although it may no longer be a tropical cyclone.[19]

Artificial dissipation

In the 1960s and 1970s, the United States government attempted to weaken hurricanes through Project Stormfury by seeding selected storms with silver iodide. It was thought that the seeding would cause supercooled water in the outer rainbands to freeze, causing the inner eyewall to collapse and thus reducing the winds. The winds of Hurricane Debbie—a hurricane seeded in Project Stormfury—dropped as much as 30%, but Debby regained its strength after each of two seeding forays. In an earlier episode in 1947, disaster struck when a hurricane east of Jacksonville, Florida promptly changed its course after being seeded, and smashed into Savannah, Georgia.[21] Because there was so much uncertainty about the behavior of these storms, the federal government would not approve seeding operations unless the hurricane had a less than 10 percent chance of making landfall within 48 hours, greatly reducing the number of possible test storms. The project was dropped after it was discovered that eyewall replacement cycles occur naturally in strong hurricanes, casting doubt on the result of the earlier attempts. Today, it is known that silver iodide seeding is not likely to have an effect because the amount of supercooled water in the rainbands of a tropical cyclone is too low.[9]

Other approaches have been suggested over time, including cooling the water under a tropical cyclone by towing icebergs into the tropical oceans. Other ideas range from covering the ocean in a substance that inhibits evaporation, dropping large quantities of ice into the eye at very early stages of development (so that the latent heat is absorbed by the ice, instead of being converted to kinetic energy that would feed the positive feedback loop), or blasting the cyclone apart with nuclear weapons.[9] Project Cirrus even involved throwing dry ice on a cyclone.[22] These approaches all suffer from the same flaw: tropical cyclones are simply too large for any of them to be practical.[9]

Effects

The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in Gulfport, Mississippi. Katrina was the costliest tropical cyclone in United States history.

Tropical cyclones out at sea cause large waves, heavy rain, and high winds, disrupting international shipping and, at times, causing shipwrecks. Tropical cyclones stir up water, leaving a cool wake behind them, which causes the region to be less favorable for subsequent tropical cyclones. On land, strong winds can damage or destroy vehicles, buildings, bridges, and other outside objects, turning loose debris into deadly flying projectiles. The storm surge, or the increase in sea level due to the cyclone, is typically the worst effect from landfalling tropical cyclones, historically resulting in 90 percent of tropical cyclone deaths.[23] The broad rotation of a landfalling tropical cyclone, and vertical wind shear at its periphery, spawns tornadoes. Tornadoes can also be spawned as a result of eyewall mesovortices, which persist until landfall.

Within the last two centuries, tropical cyclones have been responsible for the deaths of about 1.9 million persons worldwide. Large areas of standing water caused by flooding lead to infection, as well as contributing to mosquito-borne illnesses. Crowded evacuees in shelters increase the risk of disease propagation. Tropical cyclones significantly interrupt infrastructure, leading to power outages, bridge destruction, and hamper reconstruction efforts.[23]

Although cyclones take an enormous toll in lives and personal property, they may be important factors in the precipitation regimes of places they impact, as they may bring much-needed precipitation to otherwise dry regions.[24] Tropical cyclones also help maintain the global heat balance by moving warm, moist tropical air to the middle latitudes and polar regions. The storm surge and winds of hurricanes may be destructive to human-made structures, but they also stir up the waters of coastal estuaries, which are typically important fish breeding locales. Tropical cyclone destruction spurs redevelopment, greatly increasing local property values.[25]

Observation and forecasting

Observation

Sunset view of Hurricane Isidore's rainbands photographed at 7,000 feet.

Intense tropical cyclones pose a particular observation challenge. As they are a dangerous oceanic phenomenon and are relatively small, weather stations are rarely available on the site of the storm itself. Surface observations are generally available only if the storm is passing over an island or a coastal area, or if there is a nearby ship. Usually, real-time measurements are taken in the periphery of the cyclone, where conditions are less catastrophic and its true strength cannot be evaluated. For this reason, there are teams of meteorologists that move into the path of tropical cyclones to help evaluate their strength at the point of landfall.

Tropical cyclones far from land are tracked by weather satellites capturing visible and infrared images from space, usually at half-hour to quarter-hour intervals. As a storm approaches land, it can be observed by land-based Doppler radar. Radar plays a crucial role around landfall because it shows a storm's location and intensity minute by minute.

In-situ measurements, in real-time, can be taken by sending specially equipped reconnaissance flights into the cyclone. In the Atlantic basin, these flights are regularly flown by United States government hurricane hunters.[26] The aircraft used are WC-130 Hercules and WP-3D Orions, both four-engine turboprop cargo aircraft. These aircraft fly directly into the cyclone and take direct and remote-sensing measurements. The aircraft also launch GPS dropsondes inside the cyclone. These sondes measure temperature, humidity, pressure, and especially winds between flight level and the ocean's surface. A new era in hurricane observation began when a remotely piloted Aerosonde, a small drone aircraft, was flown through Tropical Storm Ophelia as it passed Virginia's Eastern Shore during the 2005 hurricane season. A similar mission was also completed successfully in the western Pacific ocean. This demonstrated a new way to probe the storms at low altitudes that human pilots seldom dare.

Forecasting

A general decrease in error trends in tropical cyclone path prediction is evident since the 1970s

Because of the forces that affect tropical cyclone tracks, accurate track predictions depend on determining the position and strength of high- and low-pressure areas, and predicting how those areas will change during the life of a tropical system. The deep layer mean flow is considered to be the best tool in determining track direction and speed. If storms are significantly sheared, use of wind speed measurements at a lower altitude, such as at the 700 hpa pressure surface (3000 meters or 10000 feet above sea level) will produce better predictions. High-speed computers and sophisticated simulation software allow forecasters to produce computer models that predict tropical cyclone tracks based on the future position and strength of high- and low-pressure systems. Combining forecast models with increased understanding of the forces that act on tropical cyclones, as well as with a wealth of data from Earth-orbiting satellites and other sensors, scientists have increased the accuracy of track forecasts over recent decades. However, scientists say they are less skillful at predicting the intensity of tropical cyclones.[27] They attribute the lack of improvement in intensity forecasting to the complexity of tropical systems and an incomplete understanding of factors that affect their development.

Classifications, terminology, and naming

Intensity classifications

Did you know?
Intense tropical cyclones are called "typhoons" in the Northwest Pacific and "hurricanes" in the Northeast Pacific or Atlantic Oceans

Tropical cyclones are classified into three main groups, based on intensity: tropical depressions, tropical storms, and a third group of more intense storms, whose name depends on the region. For example, if a tropical storm in the Northwest Pacific reaches hurricane-strength winds on the Beaufort scale, it is referred to as a typhoon; if a tropical storm passes the same benchmark in the Northeast Pacific Ocean, or in the Atlantic, it is called a hurricane. Neither "hurricane" nor "typhoon" is used in the South Pacific.

Additionally, as indicated in the table below, each basin uses a separate system of terminology, making comparisons between different basins difficult. In the Pacific Ocean, hurricanes from the Central North Pacific sometimes cross the International Date Line into the Northwest Pacific, becoming typhoons (such as Hurricane/Typhoon Ioke in 2006); on rare occasions, the reverse will occur. It should also be noted that typhoons with sustained winds greater than 130 knots (240 km/h or 150 mph) are called Super Typhoons by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center.[28]

A tropical depression is an organized system of clouds and thunderstorms with a defined surface circulation and maximum sustained winds of less than 17 m/s (33 kt, 38 mph, or 62 km/h). It has no eye and does not typically have the organization or the spiral shape of more powerful storms. However, it is already a low-pressure system, hence the name "depression." The practice of the Philippines is to name tropical depressions from their own naming convention when the depressions are within the Philippines' area of responsibility.

A tropical storm is an organized system of strong thunderstorms with a defined surface circulation and maximum sustained winds between 17 and 32 m/s (34–63 kt, 39–73 mph, or 62–117 km/h). At this point, the distinctive cyclonic shape starts to develop, although an eye is not usually present. Government weather services, other than the Philippines, first assign names to systems that reach this intensity (thus the term named storm).

A hurricane or typhoon (sometimes simply referred to as a tropical cyclone, as opposed to a depression or storm) is a system with sustained winds of at least 33 m/s (64 kt, 74 mph, or 118 km/h). A cyclone of this intensity tends to develop an eye, an area of relative calm (and lowest atmospheric pressure) at the center of circulation. The eye is often visible in satellite images as a small, circular, cloud-free spot. Surrounding the eye is the eyewall, an area about 16–80 km (10–50 mi) wide in which the strongest thunderstorms and winds circulate around the storm's center. Maximum sustained winds in the strongest tropical cyclones have been estimated at over 200 mph.[29]

Tropical Cyclone Classifications (all winds are 10-minute averages)
Beaufort scale 10-minute sustained winds (knots) N Indian Ocean
IMD
SW Indian Ocean
MF
Australia
BOM
SW Pacific
FMS
NW Pacific
JMA
NW Pacific
JTWC
NE Pacific &
N Atlantic
NHC & CPHC
0–6 <28 Depression Trop. Disturbance Tropical Low Tropical Depression Tropical Depression Tropical Depression Tropical Depression
7 28-29 Deep Depression Depression
30-33 Tropical Storm Tropical Storm
8–9 34–47 Cyclonic Storm Moderate Tropical Storm Trop. Cyclone (1) Tropical Cyclone Tropical Storm
10 48–55 Severe Cyclonic Storm Severe Tropical Storm Tropical Cyclone (2) Severe Tropical Storm
11 56–63 Typhoon Hurricane (1)
12 64–72 Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Tropical Cyclone Severe Tropical Cyclone (3) Typhoon
73–85 Hurricane (2)
86–89 Severe Tropical Cyclone (4) Major Hurricane (3)
90–99 Intense Tropical Cyclone
100–106 Major Hurricane (4)
107-114 Severe Tropical Cyclone (5)
115–119 Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Super Typhoon
>120 Super Cyclonic Storm Major Hurricane (5)

Origin of storm terms

The word typhoon used today in the Northwest Pacific, has two possible and equally plausible origins. The first is from the Chinese 大風 (Cantonese: daaih fūng; Mandarin: dà fēng) which means "great wind." (The Chinese term as 颱風 or 台风 táifēng, and 台風 taifū in Japanese, has an independent origin traceable variously to 風颱, 風篩 or 風癡 hongthai, going back to Song 宋 (960-1278) and Yuan 元 (1260-1341) dynasties. The first record of the character 颱 appeared in the 1685 edition of Summary of Taiwan 臺灣記略).[30]

Alternatively, the word may be derived from Urdu, Persian and Arabic ţūfān (طوفان), which in turn originates from Greek tuphōn (Τυφών), a monster in Greek mythology responsible for hot winds. The related Portuguese word tufão, used in Portuguese for any tropical cyclone, is also derived from Greek tuphōn.[31]

The word hurricane, used in the North Atlantic and Northeast Pacific, is derived from the Taino name for the Carib Amerindian god of evil, Huricán, which was derived from the Mayan god of wind, storm, and fire, "Huracán." This became the Spanish huracán, which became "hurricane" in English.[32]

Naming

Storms reaching tropical storm strength were initially given names to eliminate confusion when there are multiple systems in any individual basin at the same time which assists in warning people of the coming storm.[33] In most cases, a tropical cyclone retains its name throughout its life; however, under special circumstances, tropical cyclones may be renamed while active. These names are taken from lists which vary from region to region and are drafted a few years ahead of time. The lists are decided upon, depending on the regions, either by committees of the World Meteorological Organization (called primarily to discuss many other issues), or by national weather offices involved in the forecasting of the storms. Each year, the names of particularly destructive storms (if there are any) are "retired" and new names are chosen to take their place.

Notable tropical cyclones

Tropical cyclones that cause extreme destruction are rare, though when they occur, they can cause great amounts of damage or thousands of fatalities.

The 1970 Bhola cyclone is the deadliest tropical cyclone on record, killing over 300,000 people after striking the densely populated Ganges Delta region of Bangladesh on November 13, 1970.[34] Its powerful storm surge was responsible for the high death toll. The Hugli River Cyclone (the Hooghly River or Calcutta Cyclone) has been described as "one of the deadliest natural disasters of all time." Making landfall on October 11, 1737 in the Ganges River Delta, the storm tracked approximately 330 km inland before dissipating. Due to storm surge and floods, between 300,000 and 350,000 people died.[34] The North Indian cyclone basin has historically been the deadliest basin, with several cyclones since 1900 killing over 100,000 people, all in Bangladesh.[23] The Great Hurricane of 1780 is the deadliest Atlantic hurricane on record, killing about 22,000 people in the Lesser Antilles.[35]

A tropical cyclone does need not be particularly strong to cause memorable damage, especially if the deaths are from rainfall or mudslides. For example, Tropical Storm Thelma in November 1991 killed thousands in the Philippines, where it was known as Uring. [36]

Hurricane Katrina is estimated as the costliest tropical cyclone worldwide, as it struck the Bahamas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama in 2005, causing $81.2 billion in property damage (2005 USD) with overall damage estimates exceeding $100 billion (2005 USD).[34] Katrina killed at least 1,836 people after striking Louisiana and Mississippi as a major hurricane in August 2005. Hurricane Iniki in 1992 was the most powerful storm to strike Hawaii in recorded history, hitting Kauai as a Category 4 hurricane, killing six people, and causing U.S. $3 billion in damage.

The relative sizes of Typhoon Tip, Cyclone Tracy, and the United States.

In the most recent and reliable records, most tropical cyclones which attained a pressure of 900 hPa (mbar) (26.56 inHg) or less occurred in the Western North Pacific Ocean. The strongest tropical cyclone recorded worldwide, as measured by minimum central pressure, was Typhoon Tip, which reached a pressure of 870 hPa (25.69 inHg) on October 12, 1979. On October 23, 2015, Hurricane Patricia attained the strongest 1-minute sustained winds on record at 215 mph (345 km/h).[37]

Miniature Cyclone Tracy was roughly 100 km (60 miles) wide before striking Darwin, Australia in 1974, holding the record for the smallest tropical cyclone until 2008 when it was unseated by tropical cyclone Marco. Marco had gale force winds that extended just 19 kilometers (12 miles).[38]

Hurricane John is the longest-lasting tropical cyclone on record, lasting 30 days in 1994, and traveling 8,188 statute miles. The deadliest hurricane on record in Puerto Rico was also the longest-lasting Atlantic tropical cyclone: 1899 San Ciriaco Hurricane was a tropical cyclone for 27.75 days.[39]

Long term activity trends

While the number of storms in the Atlantic has increased since 1995, there is no obvious global trend; the annual number of tropical cyclones worldwide remains about 87 ± 10. However, the ability of climatologists to make long-term data analysis in certain basins is limited by the lack of reliable historical data in some basins, primarily in the Southern Hemisphere.[40] In spite of that, there is some evidence that the intensity of hurricanes is increasing:

Records of hurricane activity worldwide show an upswing of both the maximum wind speed in and the duration of hurricanes. The energy released by the average hurricane (again considering all hurricanes worldwide) seems to have increased by around 70 percent in the past 30 years or so, corresponding to about a 15 percent increase in the maximum wind speed and a 60 percent increase in storm lifetime.[41]

Atlantic storms are becoming more destructive financially, since five of the ten most expensive storms in United States history have occurred since 1990. This can be attributed to the increased intensity and duration of hurricanes striking North America,[41] and to a greater degree, the number of people living in susceptible coastal areas, following increased development in the region since the last surge in Atlantic hurricane activity in the 1960s. Often in part because of the threat of hurricanes, many coastal regions had sparse population between major ports until the advent of automobile tourism; therefore, the most severe portions of hurricanes striking the coast may have gone unmeasured in some instances. The combined effects of ship destruction and remote landfall severely limit the number of intense hurricanes in the official record before the era of hurricane reconnaissance aircraft and satellite meteorology.

The number and strength of Atlantic hurricanes may undergo a 50-70 year cycle, also known as the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation.[42] Although more common since 1995, few above-normal hurricane seasons occurred during 1970-1994. Destructive hurricanes struck frequently from 1926-1960, including many major New England hurricanes. A record 21 Atlantic tropical storms formed in 1933, a record only recently exceeded in 2005, which saw 28 storms. Tropical hurricanes occurred infrequently during the seasons of 1900-1925; however, many intense storms formed 1870-1899. During the 1887 season, 19 tropical storms formed, of which a record 4 occurred after 1 November and 11 strengthened into hurricanes. Few hurricanes occurred in the 1840s to 1860s; however, many struck in the early 1800s, including an 1821 storm that made a direct hit on New York City.

These active hurricane seasons predated satellite coverage of the Atlantic basin. Before the satellite era began in 1960, tropical storms or hurricanes went undetected unless a ship reported a voyage through the storm or a storm hit land in a populated area. The official record, therefore, could miss storms in which no ship experienced gale-force winds, recognized it as a tropical storm (as opposed to a high-latitude extra-tropical cyclone, a tropical wave, or a brief squall), returned to port, and reported the experience.

Global warming

In an article in Nature, Kerry Emanuel stated that potential hurricane destructiveness, a measure combining hurricane strength, duration, and frequency, "is highly correlated with tropical sea surface temperature, reflecting well-documented climate signals, including multidecadal oscillations in the North Atlantic and North Pacific, and global warming." Emanuel predicted "a substantial increase in hurricane-related losses in the twenty-first century.[43] Similarly, P.J. Webster and others published an article in Science examining the "changes in tropical cyclone number, duration, and intensity" over the last 35 years, the period when satellite data has been available. Their main finding was although the number of cyclones decreased throughout the planet excluding the north Atlantic Ocean, there was a great increase in the number and proportion of very strong cyclones.[44] Sea surface temperature is vital in the development of cyclones. Though neither study can directly link hurricanes with global warming, the increase in sea surface temperatures is believed to be due to both global warming and nature variability, such as the hypothesized Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO), though an exact attribution has not been defined.[45]

The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory performed a simulation to determine if there is a statistical trend in the frequency or strength of cyclones over time. They were unable to draw definite conclusions:

In summary, neither our model projections for the 21st century nor our analyses of trends in Atlantic hurricane and tropical storm activity support the notion that greenhouse gas-induced warming leads to large increases in either tropical storm or overall hurricane numbers in the Atlantic. ...Therefore, we conclude that it is premature to conclude with high confidence that human activity–and particularly greenhouse warming–has already caused a detectable change in Atlantic hurricane activity. ... We also conclude that it is likely that climate warming will cause Atlantic hurricanes in the coming century have higher rainfall rates than present-day hurricanes, and medium confidence that they will be more intense (higher peak winds and lower central pressures) on average.[46]

There is no universal agreement about the magnitude of the effects anthropogenic global warming has on tropical cyclone formation, track, and intensity. For example, critics such as Chris Landsea assert that:

While it is possible that the recorded increase in short-duration TCs [tropical cyclones]represents a real climate signal, ... it is more plausible that the increase arises primarily from improvements in the quantity and quality of observations, along with enhanced interpretation techniques.[47]

Albeit many aspects of a link between tropical cyclones and global warming have continued to be hotly debated. One point of agreement is that no individual tropical cyclone or season can be attributed to global warming.[45]

Related cyclone types

Subtropical Storm Gustav in 2002

In addition to tropical cyclones, there are two other classes of cyclones within the spectrum of cyclone types. These kinds of cyclones, known as extratropical cyclones and subtropical cyclones, can be stages a tropical cyclone passes through during its formation or dissipation.[48]

An extratropical cyclone is a storm that derives energy from horizontal temperature differences, which are typical in higher latitudes. A tropical cyclone can become extratropical as it moves toward higher latitudes if its energy source changes from heat released by condensation to differences in temperature between air masses;[2] additionally, although not as frequently, an extratropical cyclone can transform into a subtropical storm, and from there into a tropical cyclone. From space, extratropical storms have a characteristic "comma-shaped" cloud pattern. Extratropical cyclones can also be dangerous when their low-pressure centers cause powerful winds and very high seas.

A subtropical cyclone is a weather system that has some characteristics of a tropical cyclone and some characteristics of an extratropical cyclone. They can form in a wide band of latitudes, from the equator to 50°. Although subtropical storms rarely have hurricane-force winds, they may become tropical in nature as their cores warm.[2] From an operational standpoint, a tropical cyclone is usually not considered to become subtropical during its extratropical transition.

In popular culture

In popular culture, tropical cyclones have made appearances in different types of media, including films, books, television, music, and electronic games. The media can have tropical cyclones that are entirely fictional, or can be based on real events. For example, George Rippey Stewart's Storm, a best-seller published in 1941, is thought to have influenced meteorologists into giving female names to Pacific tropical cyclones.[49] Another example is the hurricane in The Perfect Storm, which describes the sinking of the Andrea Gail by the 1991 Halloween Nor'easter.[50]

In the 2004 film The Day After Tomorrow the most severe of the weather anomalies are three hurricane-like super storms that cover nearly the entire northern hemisphere. As a reaction to the global warming that has occurred, the the Atlantic Ocean reaches a critical desalinization point and extreme weather begins across the globe. The three massive cyclonic storms amass over Canada, Europe and Siberia, wreaking havoc over whatever crosses their path. The scientists tracking the weather discover that the deadliest part, the eye of the storm, pulls super cooled air from the upper troposphere down to ground level too fast for it to warm up, subsequently freezing anything and everything. Thus the eyes of these storm systems are responsible for the highest death tolls out of all the natural disasters occurring around the world. It should be noted that is in fact not possible for super-storms like these to actually retrieve air from the upper layers of the atmosphere and pull it down to ground level in a manner that would allow to remain super-cool.

Notes

  1. Steve Symonds, Highs and Lows Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2003. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Types of Storms NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 National Weather Service, Tropical Cyclone Structure. National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  4. John A. Knaff, James P. Kossin, and Mark DeMaria, Annular Hurricanes. Weather and Forecasting. 18(2) (2003):204-223. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  5. R. Craig Kochel, Victor R. Baker, and Peter C. Patton, Flood Geomorphology (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Interscience, 1988, ISBN 0471625582).
  6. Judson Jones, Hurricane categories and other terminology explained CNN, September 5, 2018. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  7. American Meteorological Society, central dense overcast. Meteorology Glossary. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  8. Jeff Haby, Eyewall Replacement Cycle TheWeatherPrediction.com. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Other Common Misconceptions About Hurricane Mitigation: Nuclear Weapons NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  10. Megan Mulford, What is the Difference Between Hurricanes and Mid-Latitude Cyclones? Weatherology, February 22, 2018.
  11. Anatomy and Lifecycle of a Storn NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Joe Cione, How does the ocean respond to a hurricane and how does this feedback to the storm itself? Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, Hurricane Research Division. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 Hurricane Season Information NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  14. Tropical Cyclone Climatology. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  15. How do hurricanes form? National Weather Service. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  16. Tropical Definitions National Weather Service. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  17. Recurvature American Metereological Society. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  18. Glossary of NHC Terms. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Chih-Pei Chang, East Asian Monsoon (Singapore: World Scientific, 2004, ISBN 9812387692).
  20. Hurricane Iris. Weather Underground. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  21. Addison Whipple, Storm (Alexandria, VA: Time Life Books, 1982, ISBN 0809443120).
  22. R. A. Scotti, Sudden Sea: the Great Hurricane of 1938 (Lebanon, IN: Little, Brown, and Company, 2003, ISBN 0316739111).
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 James M. Shultz, Jill Russell, and Zelde Espinel, Epidemiology of Tropical Cyclones: The Dynamics of Disaster, Disease, and Development. Epidemiologic Reviews 27(1) (July 2005): 21–35. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  24. Eastern Pacific Hurricane Season Outlook. Climate Prediction Center. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  25. Robert W. Christopherson, Geosystems: An Introduction to Physical Geography (New York, NY: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1992, ISBN 0023224436).
  26. The Hurricane Hunters. Hurricane Hunters Association. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  27. National Hurricane Center Forecast Verification. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  28. Remy Melina, What's the Difference Between a Typhoon and a Super-Typhoon? Live Science, October 18, 2010. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  29. Dennis Mersereau, At 200 MPH, Hurricane Patricia Is Now the Strongest Tropical Cyclone Ever Recorded The Vane, October 23, 2015. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  30. Central Weather Bureau of the Ministry of Communications, 臺灣百年來之颱風. Government of the Republic of China. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  31. Douglas Harper, Typhoon. Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  32. Rachelle Oblack, Where Does the Word 'Hurricane' Come From? Thoughtco., October 17, 2019. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  33. Worldwide Tropical Cyclone Names National Hurricane Center. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  34. 34.0 34.1 34.2 The world's deadliest hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones Deutsche Welle (DW). Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  35. The Deadliest Atlantic Tropical Cyclones, 1492-1996. National Hurricane Center. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  36. Worst Typhoons in the Philippines (1947 - 2009) Typhoon2000. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  37. Ray Sanchez and Greg Botelho, Hurricane Patricia weakens, but still 'extremely dangerous' CNN, October 23, 2015. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  38. Tiny Typhoon? NASA Earth Observatory. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  39. Jonathan Erdman, The Longest-Lasting, Farthest-Tracking Hurricanes on Record The Weather Channel, August 9, 2018. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  40. Christopher W. Landsea, Bruce A. Harper, Karl Hoarau, John A. Knaff, Can We Detect Trends in Extreme Tropical Cyclones? Science 313 (July, 2006):452-454. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  41. 41.0 41.1 Kerry Emanuel, Anthropogenic Effects on Tropical Cyclone Activity, July 2006. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  42. Kevin Trenberth, Rong Zhang, and National Center for Atmospheric Research Staff, Atlantic Multi-Decal Oscillation (AMO) Climate Data Guide, January, 2019. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  43. Kerry Emanuel, Increasing destructiveness of tropical cyclones over the past 30 years Nature 436(7051) (August 2005):686–688. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  44. P.J. Webster, G.J. Holland, J.A. Curry, and H.-R. Chang, Changes in Tropical Cyclone Number, Duration, and Intensity in a Warming Environment Science 309(5742) (2005):1844-1846. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  45. 45.0 45.1 Stefan Rahmstorf, Michael Mann, Rasmus Benestad, Gavin Schmidt, and William Connolley. Hurricanes and Global Warming - Is There a Connection? RealClimate, 2005. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  46. Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. Global Warming and Hurricanes. GFDL, June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  47. Christopher W. Landsea, Gabriel A. Vecchi, Lennart Bengtsson, and Thomas R. Knutson, Impact of Duration Thresholds on Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Counts J. Climate 23(10) (2010): 2508–2519. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  48. Mark A. Lander, N. Davidson, H. Rosendal, J. Knaff, and R. Edson, J. Evans, R. Hart. Fifth International Workshop on Tropical Cyclones NOAA, Mangilao, Guam. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  49. National Hurricane Center, Tropical Cyclone Naming History and Retired Names NOAA. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  50. Mark Leberfinger and Ashley Williams, 1991 'Perfect Storm': How the deadly system that inspired a blockbuster hit took shape. AccuWeather. Retrieved June 18, 2020.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ahrens, C. D. Meteorology: An Introduction to Weather, Climate, and the Environment. St. Paul, MN: West Publishing Company, 1994. ISBN 0534397751.
  • Chang, Chih-Pei. East Asian Monsoon. Singapore: World Scientific, 2004. ISBN 9812387692.
  • Christopherson, Robert W. Geosystems: An Introduction to Physical Geography. New York, NY: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1992. ISBN 0023224436.
  • Hurricane Research Division. Hurricane Research Division: Frequently Asked Questions. Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, NOAA. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  • Kochel, R. Craig, Victor R. Baker, and Peter C. Patton. Flood Geomorphology. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Interscience, 1988. ISBN 0471625582.
  • Lutgens, F. K., and E. J. Tarbuck. The Atmosphere: An Introduction to Meteorology. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1998. ISBN 0131015672.
  • Mann, M. E., and K. Emanuel. Atlantic Hurricane Trends Linked to Climate Change. EOS 87(24) (2006):233.
  • Moran, J. M., and M. D. Morgan. Meteorology: The Atmosphere and the Science of Weather. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. 1997. ASIN B000O8WUGK
  • Rahmstorf, Stefan, Michael Mann, Rasmus Benestad, Gavin Schmidt, and William Connolley. Hurricanes and Global Warming—Is There a Connection? RealClimate, September 2, 2005. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  • Whipple, Addison. Storm. Alexandria, VA: Time Life Books, 1982. ISBN 0809443120.

External links

All links retrieved May 2, 2023.

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