Severe Weather Guided Notes
Severe Weather Guided Notes
Severe Weather Guided Notes
What is a
Tornado and how
are they Formed?
How do Tropical
Cyclones/Hurrica
nes Form?
energy.
Tropical cyclones usually begin as disturbances that originate
either from the ITCZ or as weak, low-pressure systems called
tropical waves. Only a small percentage of these ever develop
into hurricanes because conditions throughout the atmosphere
must allow rising air to be dispersed into the upper
atmosphere. When a disturbance over a tropical ocean
acquires a cyclonic circulation around a center of low pressure,
it is known as a tropical depression. When wind speeds around
the low-pressure center of a tropical depression exceed 65
km/h, the system is called a tropical storm. If air pressure
continues to fall and winds around the center reach at least
120 km/h, the storm is officially classified as a hurricane.
The Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale classifies hurricanes
according to wind speed, air pressure in the center, and
potential for property damage. The Saffir-Simpson hurricane
scale ranges from Category 1 hurricanes to Category 5 storms,
which can have winds in excess of 155 mph. Most of the
deadliest hurricanes that strike the United States were
classified as major hurricanes.
Hurricanes can cause a lot of damage, especially along coastal
areas. Much of this damage is associated with violent winds of
the eyewall, the band about 40 to 80 km wide that surrounds
the calm eye.
Storm Surges a storm surge occurs when hurricane-force
winds drive a mound of ocean water, sometimes as high as
6m above normal sea level, toward coastal areas where it
washes over the land