Hurricanes are massive storms with deadly force. Find out how they form, and what's being done to better predict their impact.
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What Causes Hurricanes?
Transcript
Awesome in force…and deadly in impact.
Hurricanes… also
known as cyclones & typhoons… sweep across the globe each year with violent
resolve. An average hurricane releases as much energy in a day as the explosion
of half a million small atomic bombs.
But what causes them to form and how can we better prepare
ourselves for them?
Hurricanes form in the summer and fall, when the sun heats
vast stretches of tropical ocean water to over 82 degrees. Warm, moist air rises over these hot spots,
creating thunderstorms. Upper level
winds and surface winds then come together, forming a circular pattern of
clouds known as a tropical depression.
While over the ocean, the storm can gather strength measured
by wind speeds. Once a storm gathers sustained wind speeds of above 38 mph, the
World Meteorological Organization gives the tropical storm a name . Once
maximum sustained winds reach 74 miles an hour, we call it a Hurricane and
categorize on a scale of one to five depending on its wind speeds.
While a hurricane’s category is often used to describe its
strength, that doesn’t always measure potential destruction or number of
casualties. Storm surges, rainfall amounts and the size of the storm can make a
low category hurricane more deadly.
Giant storms can reach heights of nearly 9 miles and stretch
over 500 miles in diameter. That’s
nearly the size of Texas . Hurricane
Sandy’s tropical storm winds stretched 1000 miles and is the largest hurricane
on record in the Atlantic.
The huge bands of rain, hundreds of miles long, high speed
winds over 73 miles per hour, and deep storm surges over vast areas make
hurricanes into a potentially lethal force.
Most hurricanes spend their time over the oceans gathering
strength and then disintegrate. Some, however, eventually hit land, leaving
entire cities and communities devastated.
As average global temperatures are on the rise, scientists
believe storms are becoming even more disastrous.
Within seven years of each other, the US endured two of the
worst hurricanes on record: Hurricane
Katrina in 2005 and Hurricane Sandy in 2012.
Scientists are now finding better ways to track the path of
hurricanes by flying into the storm to measure wind, pressure, temperature, and
humidity as well as to provide an accurate location of the center of the
hurricane, also called the eye of the storm.
New data collected is used to help us predict the storm with
more accuracy.
The ultimate goal is to have more time to warn residents
before a deadly storm strikes.