A hurricane by any other name is still a hurricane
Hurricanes are called by many different names, though the storm is the same. Depending on where you are in the world, a hurricane may be called a hurricane, severe-tropical cyclone, severe cyclonic storm, tropical cyclone or typhoon. All of these names signify storms with winds of 74 miles per hour or greater.
Being in the eye of a hurricane is not as nice as it seems
One of the most interesting facts we know about hurricanes is that the very center of these powerful storms can be as calm as a clear day. They eye of a hurricane may measure anywhere between 5 and 120 miles across. Inside of this eye, there may be very weak winds. However, there are sometimes strong winds within the eye. There is also significantly less rain, if there is any rain at all. Seems nice, right? Well, lurking right outside of the eye is the eyewall, which is the strongest part of a hurricane. If you find yourself in the eye, you have already seen the worst of the storm, are about to see the worst of it or both.
The NOAA has actually tried to weaken hurricanes
As science fiction as it seems, the NOAA, with the help of the U.S. government, actually took what we know about hurricanes and tried to use it to create hurricane-altering technology. The project was known as PROJECT STORMFURY. The method they concocted involved dumping silver iodide into hurricanes, what they called "seeding clouds." For all intents and purposes, PROJECT STORMFURY was a failure. Since then, the NOAA has reverted to learning more about hurricanes, instead of trying to change them.
Hurricanes can come in packs
In both August of 1893 and September of 1998, there were four hurricanes in the Atlantic at one time. That is the most ever in recorded history. In 1893, the hurricanes remained unnamed, but we know at least one was responsible for the deaths of at least 1,000 people in the United States. As for the 1998 pack of hurricanes, they were Karl, Ivan, George and Jeanne. Georges killed roughly 400 people when it made landfall in Haiti.
Hurricanes can be monstrously strong
One of the hardest things to learn about hurricanes is their maximum wind speed potential. That is because the winds can be so strong that they destroy measuring devices. Wind speeds in a hurricane are known to get up to more than 160 mph. How much more is not certain.
The wind of hurricane is enough of a destructive force to be deadly. However, one of the most terrifying hurricane facts has nothing to do with wind. It has to do with rain. A powerful hurricane can dump more than 2.4 trillion gallons of rain in one day.
Since these storms have been studied, we have come to know quite a bit about hurricanes, though there are surely many more hurricane facts yet to be learned. Whether or not any new hurricane facts will prevent human deaths is another matter altogether.
Sources
Landsea, Charles, What was the largest number of hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean at the same time?, retrieved 3/1/11, aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/E18.html
Hurricane, retrieved 3/1/11, environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/natural-disasters/hurricane-profile
Facts about the Eye of a Hurricane, retrieved 3/1/11, gohsep.la.gov/factsheets/FactsAboutHurricaneEye.htm
Landsea, Chris, What is a hurricane, typhoon or tropical cyclone?, retrieved 3/1/11, aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/A1.html
Landsea, Chris, Has there ever been an attempt or experiment to reduce the strength of a hurricane?, retrieved 3/1/11, aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/C4.html
Published by Shelly Barclay
Shelly Barclay writes on a variety of topics from animal facts to mysteries in history. Her main focus is military and political history. She is the Boston History Examiner, Military History Examiner and the... View profile
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3 Comments
Post a CommentGreat facts. I have only been on the edge of a hurricane, not felt the full force of one.
Nice work...very interesting!
I had to evacuate for a hurricane at the Jersey shore when I was a kid and the experience was scary to say the least. The damage to a "3" hurricane was amazing. I can't comprehend what a "5" would have done.