Hurricanes, Typhoons & Cyclones, oh my!

Once a weakened hurricane gets into the warm water of the Gulf of Mexico it picks up lots of energy fast.
Here two vids with all hurricanes of a season.
One with the historical hurricane season of 2017 for Atlantic with Harvey and Irma, etc
One vid of a hypothetical season of the Eastern North Pacific including some hurricanes that cross Mexico into the Gulf (IDK how good the model of that source is, but the energy picking up looks similar at a glance)
2017:

Hypothetical Eastern North Pacific:

And here the actual tracks of Eastern North Pacific up to Sep 29 2018:

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It is not that amazing if you think on it. Such islands are nothing but a bunch of sand over a reef of rocks or coral, so a "dune". I have seen dunes as big as that island moved a hundred meters or totally destroyed by strong gales, add hurrican level winds and huge waves and the poor island had not a chance.
 
Once a weakened hurricane gets into the warm water of the Gulf of Mexico it picks up lots of energy fast.

Tracks seem to have trended northward overnight; it doesn't look like the storm will get to go over the Gulf at all. And according to the Wunderground forecast the circulation is gone.
 
From the National Hurricane Center:

...WILLA DISSIPATES OVER NORTHEASTERN MEXICO...
...THIS IS THE LAST ADVISORY...

:whew::w00t::salute::beer::bounce::high5:
 
Super Typhoon Yutu is being called the strongest storm of 2018. I found a news report indicating that its central pressure was under 900mb but according to the Japanese meteorological service the central pressure is currently 905mb.

According to the National Weather Service, Yutu destroyed its instruments on Saipan. I expect the devastation on Tinian is even worse as the eye passed directly over that island.

@Zkribbler i would keep an eye on this one as there seems to be a chance it could impact the Philippines.
 
@Zkribbler i would keep an eye on this one as there seems to be a chance it could impact the Philippines.

Thanks for the heads up. :hatsoff:I should be okay. SOP in this area is for typhoon to form east of me, head for my house but to then be turned by the Coriolis effect and go up and whack Manila.:splat:

Later: I just checked with Pagasa, our local weather authority. Yutu is currently east of Manila and is projected to miss the Phils entirely BUT our northeast monsoon or amihan can start any day. Those winds could blow Yutu south into Manila--but still far away from me.
 
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Current Storm Status and Projected Path
(The red-shaded area denotes the potential path of the center of the tropical cyclone. Note that impacts (particularly heavy rain, high surf, coastal flooding) with any tropical cyclone may spread beyond its forecast path.)
 
Yeah, coolest thing to happen in Spain in a long time. Would have sucked to be in that balcony just at that moment though.

OTOH we are having floodings through all Spain, mostly in Catalonia and Valencia, excepting Cadiz in the Atlantic coast of Andalusia. Here it rained a bit this morning. Never happens such funny things here. :sleep:

(Until the day a tsunami will eat us for breakfast as in 1755)
 
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Yeah, coolest thing to happen in Spain in a long time. Would have sucked to be in that balcony just at that moment though.

OTOH we are having floodings through all Spain, mostly in Catalonia and Valencia, excepting Cadiz in the Atlantic coast of Andalusia. Here it rained a bit this morning. Never happens such funny things here. :sleep:

(Until the day a tsunami will eat us for breakfast as in 1755)

That 1755 tsunami was big one !
TIL that the Portugese army surrounded Lisbon after the devastation to prevent healthy people fleeing the city and to force the population to clean up the mess and most importantly to burry and burn the dead to prevent massive diseases.
 
That 1755 tsunami was big one !
TIL that the Portugese army surrounded Lisbon after the devastation to prevent healthy people fleeing the city and to force the population to clean up the mess and most importantly to burry and burn the dead to prevent massive diseases.
Yep. It leveled most of the city of Cadiz and a new city was built over the ruins. So it is said that there is a pre-1755 Cadiz under the current one, and in fact some remains as old docks, stairs and cellars can be seen at some places when tides are extremely low.

(Well, there are many cities under the current one indeed, going back to Phoenician times 3000 years ago, but 1755 defines a clear line between the old city and the new one, at least in the collective imagination of its inhabitants).
 
Hurricane Laura to cause an enormous storm surge along the coast of Louisiana

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Laura went from Cat 1 to Cat 4 in 15 hours. :eek: Now, sustained wind of 150 m.p.h. It's expected to pick up even more speed. :wow:
7 more mph, and it's a Cat 5. No Cat-5 has ever hit Louisiana. :scared:
 
Laura went from Cat 1 to Cat 4 in 15 hours. :eek: Now, sustained wind of 150 m.p.h. It's expected to pick up even more speed. :wow:
7 more mph, and it's a Cat 5. No Cat-5 has ever hit Louisiana. :scared:

Fingers cross for Texas and Louisiana, if not Laura then there's always the next Hurricane

Two hurricanes forecast to hit US Gulf at same time in unprecedented weather event
Tropical Storm Laura and a separate tropical depression brewing near Honduras may make landfall as hurricanes in an area stretching from Texas to the Florida Panhandle, the National Hurricane Centre says.

https://news.sky.com/story/two-hurr...-time-in-unprecedented-weather-event-12054135
 
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Fingers cross for Texas and Louisiana, if not Laura then there's always the next Hurricane
That's a slightly dated article, the second tropical storm (Marco) already spooled up and hit the Texas/Louisiana Gulf Coast. While not too heavily damaging, there was minor flooding and it will exacerbate any flooding that Laura causes, albeit with up to 20ft (6m) of storm surge predicted at Laura's landfall, it probably won't matter much.
 
TIL that MS Flight Simulator offers virtual storm chasing in RL storms

Microsoft Flight Simulator players are flying into Hurricane Laura
Virtual storm chasing

Microsoft Flight Simulator players have turned into virtual stormchasers this week, hunting down Hurricane Laura as it approached the US Gulf Coast. While Texas and Louisiana brace for what is being described as an “unsurvivable storm surge,” the real-time weather inside Microsoft Flight Simulator is providing a surreal spectacle for players.

Virtual strormchasers have gathered in the skies above the Gulf of Mexico to fly directly into Hurricane Laura. The results demonstrate the incredible realism in Microsoft Flight Simulator, just as Hurricane Laura threatens catastrophic damage in the real world. Players have been flying directly through the eye of the storm, around the outer edges, and even so far up that planes have frozen over and needed to be de-iced.

The virtual views have allowed players to track Hurricane Laura during the moments before it made landfall as a category 4 hurricane with 150mph winds. A YouTube user also captured the virtual experience of flying through Hurricane Laura, showing just how well the storm cloud formations are depicted in the game.

Flight Simulator uses real-time weather data to map out conditions around the world to make this possible. Microsoft partnered with Swiss company Meteoblue to map the world’s weather patterns. Meteoblue splits the world into 250 million boxes, which each measure wind speed, temperature, pressure, and a lot more. While the weather data was originally only going to be limited to airports for virtual pilots, Flight Simulator is now replicating real world weather events with incredible accuracy.

“Yesterday’s hurricane was very beautiful to look at and was accurately predicted by our models even days ahead,” explains Mathias Müller, Meteoblue co-founder, in an email to The Verge. “We are very happy that real-time weather is now part of Flight Simulator. It was a long journey as integrating these massive amounts of data required the solution of many problems. From our end, we would like to have even more details and weather parameters we already compute for our customers and the meteoblue.com website inside the game, but the development on the game side is extremely complex and takes time.”

How Microsoft Flight Simulator returned to the skies[/paste:font]
Microsoft Flight Simulator has been wowing players since its release on PC earlier this month. The game uses Bing Maps data to map out the world, combined with Azure-powered procedural generation technology to bring things like buildings and trees to life. Most major landmarks are well represented (in the US at least). You can also get up close to elephants and giraffes in a safari flight over Ethiopia if hurricane chasing isn’t your thing.

https://www.theverge.com/2020/8/27/21403769/hurricane-laura-microsoft-flight-simulator
 
TIL that MS Flight Simulator offers virtual storm chasing in RL storms

TIL that MS Flight Simulator is still a thing.

Goes to look up the latest version...
 
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