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Article Series: Hurricanes
Hurricane Facts, Tips and Safety Protocols
Mother
Nature: A Hurricane's Fury
Hurricanes are considered to be the most devastating
events to ever occur. They are born over water and driven by
solar energy stored in the ocean. Hurricanes, also called
tropical cyclones, can travel for weeks across the ocean,
blasting islands and coastlines with fierce winds, swollen
seas, and torrential rains. Hurricanes can also remake
land by tearing up barrier islands and dunes while depositing
sand on other beaches. However, as soon as a hurricane
reaches land, it begins to lose its power. Hurricanes
can also remake history. The Galveston, Texas hurricane
of 1900, killed over 9,000 people and practically erased
the city, helping to convert the inland city of Houston
into a petrochemical giant.
Weather
satellites are now able to track hurricanes to their sources. For example, Atlantic hurricanes originate off the
coast of West Africa, where “tropical disturbances” form in
low-pressure zones. A disturbance may intensify into a tropical
depression surrounded by a high-pressure zone that helps to
contain the storm. This storm is centered on a column of rising
air. Winds are moderate between 21 to 35 miles per hour. Once
the winds exceed 35 miles per hour, the systems, called a tropical
storm, gets an alphabetical name. The storm has the circular
structure of a hurricane, although it may not become one. Powered
by solar heat that was stored in the ocean and then transferred
into the warm and moist air, the tropical storm becomes a hurricane
once winds exceed 74 miles per hour.
Hurricanes
feed on themselves to gain strength. In their energy
flow, hurricanes resemble large thunderstorms. Unlike thunderstorms
that can start over land or water, hurricanes only start over
water. Hurricanes also last much longer, carry greater energy,
and cause much greater destruction. Tropical cyclones are powered
by heat engines, which are “machines” that use heat to do their
work. The hurricane sucks in the warm and humid air from the
lower atmosphere. The air then rises and condenses, releasing
water vapor and the amazing amount of heat energy that the
moisture absorbed as it evaporated from the ocean. Finally,
the storm exhausts the expanded air into the upper atmosphere.
The released heat drives hurricane winds and powers the upward
convection in the storm. The rising air creates a low-pressure
area near the ocean that draws in more energy-laden air, which
feeds the continuing storm.
Hurricane winds whirl around the bizarrely calm “eye,” which
is a circular region with little wind, no rain, and a blue
sky. A circular “eye wall” of thunderstorm type clouds and
the fiercest of winds surround the placid eye. When Hurricane
Camille tore up the U.S. Gulf Coast in 1968, winds in the eye
wall reached over 200 miles per hour. High winds combined with
extremely low atmospheric pressure near the eye, causes a catastrophic
rise in sea level called a storm surge. This destructive mound
of water is topped with wind whipped waves, can hoist the surface
20 feed above the average sea level which can cause biblical
scale flooding along coastlines.
Although storm surges are the most dangerous element of these
storms, water causes another grand problem. All of that condensing
moisture eventually falls as torrential rain. Although hurricane
winds slow as they move inland, the rains can still be drenching.
Hurricanes will come and they will go, but the overall trend
is periodic lulls followed by a series of treacherous years.
Hurricanes may not be getting more intense, but the damage
is increasing due to development and torrid population growth
in the prime hurricane country, which in the United States
includes the Carolinas, Florida, and the Gulf Coast.
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by SolveYourProblem.com
: 2007
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