Title: Tropical Cyclones
1Tropical Cyclones aka Hurricanes
Art Institute of Seattle, 22 May 2009
2Where do tropical cyclones occur?
3Sea Surface Temperature
Equator
TCs form over warm water
4Locations of Tropical Cyclone Formation
TCs form near but not on the equator
5Typical Tropical Cyclone Tracks
Note that hurricane, typhoon, and cyclone
are local names for the same thing
6Many hurricanes form over eastern Atlantic when
easterly waves move off Africa and help
convection in the ITCZ turn into hurricanes
7Tropical Cyclone Structure
8Hurricane Katrina
9Definition of a Hurricane
10More Definitions
11Flying in Hurricanes
12To see whats going on under the upper-level
cloud, need radar observations NOAA WP-3D
Hurricane Hunter Aircraft
13Hurricane aircraft instruments
14Preparing a dropsonde for launch
15Ready to launch a dropsonde
16Hurricane Katrina
Where should the plane go exactly?
17Communications during a hurricane aircraft mission
Boulder
Tampa
Miami
18In Miami
19Hurricane Katrina--seen from space
How does this look from an airplane flying in the
eye of the storm? Note the slope of the eyewall
20Inside the eye of Hurricane Rita (2005)
21Inside the eye of Hurricane Katrina (2005)
Note the slope of the eyewall
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23Hurricane Katrina
What does it look like under all those
clouds?
24To see whats going on under the upper-level
cloud, need radar observations NOAA WP-3D
Hurricane Hunter Aircraft
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26Hurricane Andrew approaching and moving over
Miami --movie loop of Miami radar observations
27Idealized radar view of a hurricane
rainband
28Sketch of Mature Hurricane Structure Vertical
cross section along AB in previous slide
Note that the storm is a high aloft and a low at
low levels Note the slope of the eyewall
A
B
29Top of a Tropical Cyclone Upper-level cloud,
wind, pressure
cirrus cloud
eye
30Satellite photo of the top of a tropical cyclone
High clouds swirling outward
31High level clouds spiral anticyclonically
outwardLow-level clouds spiral cyclonically
inward
32Tropical Cyclone Damage
33Types of Hurricane Damage
Wind
Heavy Rain/Floods
Storm surge
Tornadoes
34Saffir-Simpson Scale for Hurricane Strength
Category Max sustained wind speed Max sustained wind speed Max sustained wind speed
Category mph knots damage
1 74-95 64-82 Tree damage, small boats torn from moorings, roads flooded
2 96-110 83-95 Roofing, windows, doors boats, piers, mobile homes
3 111-130 96-113 Some structural damage to buildings, flooding, wave damage
4 131-155 114-135 Lots of structural damage, major flooding, storm surge
5 156 136 Catastrophic, building failures
35Category 1 Miami 2005
36The Great Galveston Hurricane
Cat 4
Cat 3
Cat 0
37Category 4 Damage Galveston 1900
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39Note Category 5 is rare
40Storm Surge
41Types of Hurricane Damage
Storm surge
42Types of Hurricane Damage
Storm surge
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44Hurricane Forecasting
45Important factors that make ahurricane develop
Warm ocean--hurricanes get their energy from the
ocean Humid atmosphere--need high humidity to
get clouds to develop Weak wind shear --if
wind is stronger at upper levels than lower
levels, storm top separates from lower part of
storm
46Forecasting Hurricane Rita (2005)
47Map of ocean heat content
48Satellite view of humidity
Clouds
Moist air
Dry air
Dry
49Map of wind shear
Very low wind shear
50Map of steering winds
51Model forecasts of Ritas storm track
52Numerical Model Simulation of Rita
53End