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#1
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In 2005, early in the season, some of the hurricanes were rated high,
category 4 or 5 if I recall correctly, but small in area, lesser diameter than ones later in the season. What physical conditions determine the size of the storm, why are some big, some small? thanks |
#2
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 04:17:52 GMT, Charles
sayd the following: In 2005, early in the season, some of the hurricanes were rated high, category 4 or 5 if I recall correctly, but small in area, lesser diameter than ones later in the season. What physical conditions determine the size of the storm, why are some big, some small? thanks BP |
#3
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 01:14:40 -0400, Crackles McFarly
sayd the following: On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 04:17:52 GMT, Charles sayd the following: In 2005, early in the season, some of the hurricanes were rated high, category 4 or 5 if I recall correctly, but small in area, lesser diameter than ones later in the season. What physical conditions determine the size of the storm, why are some big, some small? thanks BP Well BP or MB |
#4
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Charles wrote in
: In 2005, early in the season, some of the hurricanes were rated high, category 4 or 5 if I recall correctly, but small in area, lesser diameter than ones later in the season. What physical conditions determine the size of the storm, why are some big, some small? A lot of it has to do with the size and temperature of the warm pool of water that fuels he storm. Local meteorological conditions such as vertical shear and interaction with pressure ridges and troughs also play a role. There are lots of sites out there that describe cyclogenesis and how conditions relate to storm size. http://www.nhc.noaa.gov has a nice faq section and links to other sites of interest. http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/ is also good. -- Bill Asher |
#5
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On 21 Aug 2007 11:30:48 GMT, William Asher sayd the
following: Charles wrote in : In 2005, early in the season, some of the hurricanes were rated high, category 4 or 5 if I recall correctly, but small in area, lesser diameter than ones later in the season. What physical conditions determine the size of the storm, why are some big, some small? A lot of it has to do with the size and temperature of the warm pool of water that fuels he storm. Local meteorological conditions such as vertical shear and interaction with pressure ridges and troughs also play a role. There are lots of sites out there that describe cyclogenesis and how conditions relate to storm size. http://www.nhc.noaa.gov has a nice faq section and links to other sites of interest. http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/ is also good. BP & MB is 99%, also NOT influenced by GW Yours Truly, Crackles R. McFarly It's a silly website but aren't they all? http://cracklesmcfarly.blogspot.com/ |
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