Weather
Welcome Back, GotterHurricane FactsBy Brian GotterSince it has been busy in the tropics lately, here is some hurricane information. First, there is a hurricane season. It runs from June 1st to November 30th of each year…why then? These are the months that the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean and the
Atlantic hurricanes become more frequent in August and September. In fact, September 8th is the peak of hurricane season where there is a 95% probability of having at least one hurricane in the
Hurricanes also need the perfect atmospheric conditions to develop and that is why not every storm develops into a category 5 storm.
Hurricanes hate wind shear. Wind shear is wind moving in different directions at different heights. If a hurricane is moving west and the upper level winds are moving east, this is wind shear and it rips a storm apart. Some seasons have a stronger wind shear than others and that is why we have varying numbers of storms each year. The water always hits at least 80, but the atmosphere is not always perfect for storms.
Many Atlantic hurricanes start as a typical thunderstorm over
Upper level winds in the atmosphere steer hurricanes. If there is no wind, they just sit there and rain themselves out as the rain cools the ocean water to less than 80 degrees.
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