When
cyclonic winds reach speeds of more than 64kmh, they are officially
"tropical storms" and are assigned a name.
If
the winds reach 118kmh then they are redefined as hurricanes
or typhoons, depending on location.
The
storm is a "hurricane" if it is in the North Atlantic Ocean,
the Northeast Pacific Ocean east of the dateline, or the South
Pacific Ocean east of 160E. Air circulation is counterclockwise
in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern hemisphere.
"Typhoons"
occur in the Northwest Pacific Ocean west of the dateline.
Tropical
storms are the only natural disasters with their own names.
Until
1978, they were given women's names, but then US weather forecasters
bowed to political correctness and agreed to alternate them
with men's names.
How
do they start?
Tropical cyclones need a warm layer of ocean water and an unstable
atmosphere to develop.
Cool
ocean winds at low pressure force hot, humid air high into
the atmosphere forming a column. Moisture is forced up the
column which condenses and releases latent heat energy, the
primary source of fuel for tropical cyclones.
At
the centre is a calm sunlit eye, measuring tens of kilometres
across.
In
simple terms, hurricanes are giant machines that convert heat
energy from tropical ocean water into wind.
How
much harm can they do?
Violent
winds, rain, waves, and storm tides make hurricanes one of the
most dangerous natural disasters, accounting for an eighth of
weather-related deaths.
They
have the potential to devastate the world's insurance markets.
A
large hurricane can stir up more than a million cubic miles
of the atmosphere every second, typically dumping 15-30cm
of rain on landfall.
Some
hurricanes bring lots more rainfall and cause major flooding
with storm surges and high surf. As they can move rapidly
and erratically, the path the winds will take is hard to predict
precisely.
Hurricanes
also affect the depths of the ocean. In 1975, instruments
dropped from research planes in the Gulf of Mexico showed
that Hurricane Eloise disturbed the ocean hundreds of feet
below the ocean's surface and created underwater waves that
persisted for weeks.
Can
nature's weapon be stopped?
In
1962 the US government began to look at ways of how to weaken
hurricanes, but the project ended without results in 1983.
However,
one of the world's leading hurricane scientists, Hugh Willoughby,
still believes there just might be a way of disrupting hurricanes.
One
idea which scientists are looking at is to put black soot
into the air by burning petroleum on ships near a hurricane.
Black
absorbs heat from the sun which would then create updrafts
to break up the hurricane's normal wind patterns.
Mr
Willoughby has even considered a big tin foil mirror in space
to reflect sunlight to heat the ocean in just the right spot
to divert a hurricane.
Scientists
are taking these ideas seriously because they think if they
could cut hurricane winds by 10% or 15 % it could prevent
many billions of dollars of damage.
Hurricane
ratings
The Saffir-Simpson hurricane intensity scale is most commonly
used for Atlantic and Pacific storms to estimate of the potential
flooding and damage to property.