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Hurricanes Past, Present and Future

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What causes tropical storms and hurricanes to form? These storms form over warm water 80 degrees F or warmer. ... hurricane variability than do SST. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hurricanes Past, Present and Future


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HurricanesPast, Present and Future
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Tropical Definitions
Tropical Depression - A closed area of low
pressure formed in the tropics with wind speeds
38mph or less. Tropical Storm A closed area of
low pressure formed in the tropics with wind
speeds between 39mph and 73mph. Hurricane An
intense area of low pressure formed in the
tropics with wind speeds 74mph or higher.
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Saffir/Simpson Scale
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What causes tropical storms and hurricanes to
form?
  • These storms form over warm water 80 degrees F
    or warmer. The depth of the warm water layer
    should not be shallow. Hurricanes stir up with
    ocean water and any colder water that may be just
    below the surface will be mixed with the surface
    layer, making the oceans surface temperature too
    cool to sustain development.
  • They require light winds at the middle and upper
    layers of the atmosphere so that the growing
    circulation is not interrupted.
  • Anticyclonic outflow of air at the top of their
    circulation will aid development.
  • Anything that can interrupt any of these three
    will weaken and may eventually dissipate the
    tropical cyclone.
  • They usually form between 10 and 35 degrees North
    latitude, or between Trinidad and Cape Hatteras,
    NC and as far east of the Cape Verde Islands.
    Any closer to the equator and they are unable to
    acquire the cyclonic spin and any farther north
    and upper level wind and/or sea surface
    temperatures can be unfavorable.

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Tropical Cyclone tracks Non El Niño year 2005
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Tropical Atlantic Activity Relatively Quiet June
August 2006
  • 1 TC (Alberto) formed June 10 and made landfall
    in Floridas Big Bend area.
  • 1 TC (Beryl) formed July 10 near the Southeast
    Coast and remained offshore.
  • TCs Chris and Debbie, and lead Hurricane Ernesto
    almost evenly spaced at early, mid and late
    August.

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Early Summer 2006 Tropical Atlantic SST Near
Normal
  • Strong Bermuda High in 2006 due to very different
    large scale pattern in place across North America
    driven by the strongest North American Monsoon
    Circulation in over 10 years.
  • Strong Bermuda High enhances trade wind
    circulation generating greater evaporative
    cooling of ocean.
  • 2005 record high Tropical Atlantic SST were 2
    degrees C above average.

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Increasing Risk of El Niño
  • Several months of mixed atmospheric indicator
    signals have converged to a more consistent
    pattern in August.
  • Continued SST warming over much of the tropical
    Pacific.
  • Continued decrease in the Southern Oscillation
    Index (SOI).
  • Marked decrease in Trade Wind strength.

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Short term Impact of increased Equatorial Pacific
SST
  • Positive SST anomalies still weak and not yet at
    El Niño levels.
  • Increased SST warming implies a shift in tropical
    convection towards the dateline.
  • Such eastward-shifted convection often increases
    vertical wind shear over the tropical Atlantic.

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Tropical Cyclone Heat Potential
  • SST of 80 degrees F (26.5 C) necessary for TC
    development, but hurricanes generally need warm
    conditions to extend to a depth of several
    hundred feet.
  • 2005 TCHP capable of rapid hurricane
    intensification were much more extensive than
    early summer 2006.

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Climate Change and Hurricane Intensity
  • Perceived linkage receiving increased scientific
    and media attention due to spike in major
    hurricane frequency and intensity observed in
    recent years.
  • Major scientific debate concerning quality and
    interpretation of data used in recent studies
    attempting to quantify any correlation.

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Webster Data Considered Unreliable
  • Hurricane intensity is measured by maximum
    sustained winds at ten meters above the surface.
  • Hurricane intensity estimates throughout the 70s
    and part of the 80s based on satellite estimates
    only.
  • Only 2 GOES satellites during this interval makes
    intensity estimates highly uncertain.

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Atlantic Multi-Decadal Oscillation (AMO)
  • The Atlantic has seen a very large increase in
    major hurricanes during the last 11-year period
    of 1995-2005 (average 4.0 per year) in comparison
    to the prior 25-year period of 1970-1994 (average
    1.5 per year).
  • Similar increases have occurred during peaks in
    the AMO which is defined as an increase in
    strength in the Atlantic Ocean thermohaline
    circulation (THC) and is not directly related to
    global temperature increase.

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Dr Grays linkage position
  • Seasonal and monthly variations of sea surface
    temperature (SST) within individual storm basins
    show only very low correlations with monthly,
    seasonal, and yearly variations of hurricane
    activity.
  • Other factors such as multi-decadal oscillations
    tropospheric vertical wind shear, surface
    pressure, low level vorticity, mid-level
    moisture, etc. play more dominant roles in
    explaining hurricane variability than do SST.

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