Tropical cyclones: Difference between revisions

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== tropical cyclone ==
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<div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">The general term for a [[cyclone]] that originates over the tropical oceans.</div><br/> <div class="paragraph">This term encompasses tropical depressions, tropical storms, hurricanes, and typhoons. At maturity,  the tropical cyclone is one of the most intense and feared storms of the world; winds  exceeding 90 m s<sup>-1</sup>(175 knots) have been measured, and its rains are torrential. Tropical cyclones  are initiated by a large variety of disturbances, including [[easterly waves]] and [[monsoon troughs]].  Once formed, they are maintained by the extraction of [[latent heat]] from the ocean at high temperature  and [[heat]] export at the low temperatures of the tropical upper [[troposphere]]. After formation,  tropical cyclones usually move to the west and generally slightly poleward, then may  "recurve," that is, move into the midlatitude [[westerlies]] and back toward the east. Not all tropical  cyclones recurve. Many dissipate after entering a continent in the [[Tropics]], and a smaller number  die over the tropical oceans. Tropical cyclones are more nearly circularly symmetric than are [[frontal  cyclones]]. Fully mature tropical cyclones range in diameter from 100 to well over 1000 km. The  surface winds spiral inward cyclonically, becoming more nearly circular near the center. The [[wind  field]] pattern is that of a circularly symmetric spiral added to a straight current in the direction of  propagation of the cyclone. The winds do not converge toward a point but rather become, ultimately,  roughly tangent to a circle bounding the [[eye]] of the storm. Pressure gradients, and resulting winds,  are nearly always much stronger than those of [[extratropical storms]]. The [[cloud]] and [[rain]] patterns  vary from storm to storm, but in general there are spiral bands in the [[outer vortex]], while the  most intense rain and winds occur in the [[eyewall]]. Occasionally, multiple eyewalls occur and evolve  through a [[concentric eyewall cycle]]. Tropical cyclones are experienced in several areas of the world.  In general, they form over the tropical oceans (except the South Atlantic and the eastern South  Pacific) and affect the eastern and equatorward portions of the continents. They occur in the  tropical North Atlantic (including the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico), the North Pacific off  the west coast of Mexico and occasionally as far west as Hawaii, the western North Pacific (including  the Philippine Islands and the China Sea), the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea, the southern  Indian Ocean off the coasts of Madagascar and the northwest coast of Australia, and the South  Pacific Ocean from the east coast of Australia to about 140&#x000b0;W. By international agreement, tropical  cyclones have been classified according to their [[intensity]] as follows: 1) [[tropical depression]], with  winds up to 17 m s<sup>-1</sup>(34 knots); 2) tropical storm, with winds of 18&ndash;32 m s<sup>-1</sup>(35&ndash;64 knots); and  3) severe tropical cyclone, [[hurricane]] or [[typhoon]], with winds of 33 m s<sup>-1</sup>(65 knots) or higher. It  should be noted that the [[wind speeds]] referred to above are 10-min average wind speeds at [[standard]]  anemometer level (10 m), except that in the United States, 1-min average wind speeds are used.</div><br/> </div>
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Revision as of 12:41, 10 March 2024

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