2005 Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Reports Discussion Thread
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what i was saying was Katrina and Rita reached maximum intensity over the same spot with simliar pressure.they also disrupted oil for a time they also were a threat to major cities katrina almost wiped NO off the map then comes Houston with Rita a little jog to the west would of flatten galveston also downtown houston would of had feet of glass on the streets sidewalk
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- Dr. Jonah Rainwater
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Some interesting Category 5 facts from last year:
Wilma and Emily are the only 2 catgeory 5 hurricanes to have reach such category in the Caribbean Sea during the same season.
All category 5 hurricanes have female names. It's like beauty is compared to Venus, and the reallity is that Venus is more like hell than anything else imaginable.
Katrina and Rita are the only 2 catgeory 5 hurricanes to have reach such category in the Gulf of Mexico during the same season.
Emily, Katrina, Rita, Wilma and Ivan from 2004, make the pair of years 2004 - 2005, the most active with 5 category 5 hurricanes. The record before was 4 between 1960 - 1961 (Donna, Ethel, Carla, and Hattie).
Wilma and Emily are the only 2 catgeory 5 hurricanes to have reach such category in the Caribbean Sea during the same season.
All category 5 hurricanes have female names. It's like beauty is compared to Venus, and the reallity is that Venus is more like hell than anything else imaginable.
Katrina and Rita are the only 2 catgeory 5 hurricanes to have reach such category in the Gulf of Mexico during the same season.
Emily, Katrina, Rita, Wilma and Ivan from 2004, make the pair of years 2004 - 2005, the most active with 5 category 5 hurricanes. The record before was 4 between 1960 - 1961 (Donna, Ethel, Carla, and Hattie).
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- AussieMark
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- wxman57
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CapeVerdeWave wrote:Actually, they didn't exactly. Katrina was annular, while Rita was not.
I don't think that Rita or Katrina was annular. Both had spiral bands streaming into the center, as quite evident of this shot of Katrina near her strongest.
http://goes.gsfc.nasa.gov/pub/goes/050828.katrina.gif
You can read about annular hurricanes here:
http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/~kossin/articl ... arhurr.pdf
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- wxmann_91
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wxman57 wrote:CapeVerdeWave wrote:Actually, they didn't exactly. Katrina was annular, while Rita was not.
I don't think that Rita or Katrina was annular. Both had spiral bands streaming into the center, as quite evident of this shot of Katrina near her strongest.
http://goes.gsfc.nasa.gov/pub/goes/050828.katrina.gif
You can read about annular hurricanes here:
http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/~kossin/articl ... arhurr.pdf
I agree that Rita was not annular, however, Katrina could've briefly become annular or at least come very close to it during the early morning hours.

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- Hurricanehink
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- cycloneye
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32 pages has the Rita report so go ahead and discuss about it at this thread.
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