Thread: Eye of a storm
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Old September 18th 04, 08:55 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Alan LeHun Alan LeHun is offline
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2003
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Default Eye of a storm

In article , johndotwhitby12
@ntlworld.com says...
Strange..I get the impression of a series of 'still' frames mixed with some
'video' sections.


Right click. Select plug-insoptions performance tab and set the network
buffering to something like 120 seconds.




The eye of a hurricane, which can be around 40 to 80 miles in diameter, is
an area of subsiding and warming air.


40 miles? I seem to remember an eye of 8 miles somewhere and 20 miles is
quite common. Ivan had a 20 mile eyewall several times.


I understand that the strongest winds
are associated with the eye-wall of massive CB clouds which surround the
eye. I would think the transition between the relative light winds of the
eye and the surrounding maelstrom occurs over a period of several minutes,
depending on the speed the hurricane is moving. I stand to be corrected by
experts.

Pity the video cut from the actual destruction to the eyewall although I
suspect that the time difference between the two was quite large,and
thus, it was a video of the destruction of a garage rather than a video
of an eyewall.

--
Alan LeHun