Hurricanes are giant, spiraling tropical storms that can
pack wind speeds of over 160 miles (257 kilometers) an hour and unleash
more than 2.4 trillion gallons (9 trillion liters) of rain a day. These
same tropical storms are known as cyclones in the northern Indian Ocean
and Bay of Bengal, and as typhoons in the western Pacific Ocean.
The Atlantic Ocean’s hurricane season peaks from mid-August to late October and averages five to six hurricanes per year.
Hurricanes
begin as tropical disturbances in warm ocean waters with surface
temperatures of at least 80 degrees Fahrenheit (26.5 degrees Celsius).
These low pressure systems are fed by energy from the warm seas. If a
storm achieves wind speeds of 38 miles (61 kilometers) an hour, it
becomes known as a tropical depression. A tropical depression becomes a
tropical storm, and is given a name, when its sustained wind speeds top
39 miles (63 kilometers) an hour. When a storm’s sustained wind speeds
reach 74 miles (119 kilometers) an hour it becomes a hurricane and earns
a category rating of 1 to 5 on the Saffir-Simpson scale.
Hurricanes
are enormous heat engines that generate energy on a staggering scale.
They draw heat from warm, moist ocean air and release it through
condensation of water vapor in thunderstorms.
Hurricanes spin
around a low-pressure center known as the “eye.” Sinking air makes this
20- to 30-mile-wide (32- to 48-kilometer-wide) area notoriously calm.
But the eye is surrounded by a circular “eye wall” that hosts the
storm’s strongest winds and rain.
These storms bring destruction
ashore in many different ways. When a hurricane makes landfall it often
produces a devastating storm surge that can reach 20 feet (6 meters)
high and extend nearly 100 miles (161 kilometers). Ninety percent of all
hurricane deaths result from storm surges.
A hurricane’s high
winds are also destructive and may spawn to rnadoes. Torrential rains
cause further damage by spawning floods and landslides, which may occur
many miles inland.
The best defense against a hurricane is an
accurate forecast that gives people time to get out of its way. The
National Hurricane Center issues hurricane watches for storms that may
endanger communities, and hurricane warnings for storms that will make
landfall within 24 hours.
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