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Subject: A1) What is a hurricane, typhoon, or tropical cyclone?
NOAA
Contributed by Chris Landsea
The terms "hurricane" and "typhoon" are regionally
specific names for a strong "tropical cyclone".
A tropical cyclone is the generic term for a non-frontal
synoptic scale low-pressure system over tropical or sub-tropical waters
with organized convection (i.e. thunderstorm activity) and definite
cyclonic surface wind circulation
(Holland 1993).
Tropical cyclones with maximum sustained
surface winds of less than 17 m/s (34 kt, 39 mph) are usually
called "tropical depressions" (This is not
to be confused with the condition mid-latitude people get during
a long, cold and grey winter wishing they could be closer to the
equator ;-)). Once the tropical cyclone reaches winds of at least
17 m/s (34 kt, 39 mph) they are typically called a
"tropical storm" or in Australia a Category 1 cyclone and are
assigned a name. If winds reach 33 m/s (64 kt, 74 mph), then they
are called:
- "hurricane" (the North Atlantic Ocean, the Northeast
Pacific Ocean east of the dateline, or the South Pacific Ocean
east of 160E)
- "typhoon" (the Northwest Pacific Ocean west of the dateline)
- "severe tropical cyclone" or "Category 3 cyclone" and above
(the Southwest Pacific Ocean west of 160°E or Southeast Indian Ocean east
of 90°E)
- "very severe cyclonic storm" (the North Indian Ocean)
- "tropical cyclone" (the Southwest Indian Ocean)
(Neumann 1993).
Last updated : July 15, 2011
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