Ozones and hurricanes
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Forum rules
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecasts and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K. For official information, please refer to products from the National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service.
- Cookiely
- S2K Supporter

- Posts: 3211
- Age: 74
- Joined: Fri Aug 13, 2004 7:31 am
- Location: Tampa, Florida
Ozones and hurricanes
Did anyone read the article dated today concerning the ozone concentration in regards to predicting the development of a hurricane etc? I lost the link (my computer went down) and I haven't been able to find it. Anyway, I would appreciate if someone can explain the rationale. If a depression has smog it has more of a chance of developing into a hurricane????????
0 likes
- LSU2001
- S2K Supporter

- Posts: 1711
- Age: 58
- Joined: Sat Sep 11, 2004 11:01 pm
- Location: Cut Off, Louisiana
From what I gathered from the article scientists will be able to better track storms and get a better fix on the center by tracking the amount of ozone present in the eye and surrounding area. Remember Ozone is only a pollutant at lower levels of the atmosphere. Anyway the scientist say that the eye/center will have a much higher Ozone content than the surrounding area. I will try and find the article.
Tim
here ya go
http://www.livescience.com/forcesofnatu ... ozone.html
urricanes are like giant mixers. The colossal storms suck air and moisture inward at the surface and, when they really get going, pump it out a natural chimney several miles high.
Scientists struggle to see exactly what's going on inside a developing storm, and that imperfect view is partly to blame for less-than-perfect forecasts.
A new study tracked the movement of ozone through a dozen hurricanes, revealing that the chemical can provide better indications of whether a hurricane will form and where it is going.
The research was announced today, one week into what experts expect will be a busy hurricane season.
The mixer
Ozone is a naturally occurring substance at high altitudes. It blocks harmful ultraviolet radiation from the Sun, making life as we know it on Earth possible. Industrial pollution produces ground-level ozone that is harmful when inhaled.
Nature's protective ozone is constantly lost and regenerated by chemical processes at high altitudes. Most ozone exists in a layer in the stratosphere from about 10 to 30 miles (15-50 kilometers) up. Another 10 percent or so of the natural ozone dips into the troposphere, which runs from Earth's surface up to stratosphere.
The boundary between the two air layers is called the tropopause, and that's where ozone varies the most, explains Florida State University researcher Yonghui Wu.
"When the hurricane is formed, the deep convection near the eyewall is very strong, and can reach to the lower stratosphere," Wu said. "It brings the lower troposphere air upward, and replaces the ozone rich atmosphere there, which results in the reduction of total ozone in that region."
Meanwhile, air tends to fall downward in the eye of a hurricane, bringing ozone-rich air into the lower troposphere and increasing the amount of ozone in the hurricane's core.
The result, Wu told LiveScience, is "a local maximum of total ozone in the core of hurricane, and a ring of low level of total ozone surrounding the hurricane."
Here's the upshot: Satellite tracking of ozone reveals the hurricane's eye very distinctly.
Life and death
Wu and colleague Xiaolei Zou analyzed 12 hurricanes. On average, the eye's location was 18 miles different as measured by the ozone data compared to official locations issued by the National Hurricane Center.
Eighteen miles can easily mean the difference between life and death in a powerful storm.
Ozone tracking "greatly improved the predicted track that the hurricane would take," the scientists write. Further, the ozone data provide a clue to storm development earlier than other monitoring methods.
A hurricane starts as a tropical disturbance that spins weakly. Cloud cover often masks the activity, so satellites peering with optical and infrared cameras can't see what's going on. An ozone-monitor sees inside a nascent storm.
The observations were made with NASA's Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) satellite. The study, funded by NASA, is detailed in Journal of Geophysical Research paper.
Related Stories
* 2005 Hurricane Season Guide
Tim
here ya go
http://www.livescience.com/forcesofnatu ... ozone.html
urricanes are like giant mixers. The colossal storms suck air and moisture inward at the surface and, when they really get going, pump it out a natural chimney several miles high.
Scientists struggle to see exactly what's going on inside a developing storm, and that imperfect view is partly to blame for less-than-perfect forecasts.
A new study tracked the movement of ozone through a dozen hurricanes, revealing that the chemical can provide better indications of whether a hurricane will form and where it is going.
The research was announced today, one week into what experts expect will be a busy hurricane season.
The mixer
Ozone is a naturally occurring substance at high altitudes. It blocks harmful ultraviolet radiation from the Sun, making life as we know it on Earth possible. Industrial pollution produces ground-level ozone that is harmful when inhaled.
Nature's protective ozone is constantly lost and regenerated by chemical processes at high altitudes. Most ozone exists in a layer in the stratosphere from about 10 to 30 miles (15-50 kilometers) up. Another 10 percent or so of the natural ozone dips into the troposphere, which runs from Earth's surface up to stratosphere.
The boundary between the two air layers is called the tropopause, and that's where ozone varies the most, explains Florida State University researcher Yonghui Wu.
"When the hurricane is formed, the deep convection near the eyewall is very strong, and can reach to the lower stratosphere," Wu said. "It brings the lower troposphere air upward, and replaces the ozone rich atmosphere there, which results in the reduction of total ozone in that region."
Meanwhile, air tends to fall downward in the eye of a hurricane, bringing ozone-rich air into the lower troposphere and increasing the amount of ozone in the hurricane's core.
The result, Wu told LiveScience, is "a local maximum of total ozone in the core of hurricane, and a ring of low level of total ozone surrounding the hurricane."
Here's the upshot: Satellite tracking of ozone reveals the hurricane's eye very distinctly.
Life and death
Wu and colleague Xiaolei Zou analyzed 12 hurricanes. On average, the eye's location was 18 miles different as measured by the ozone data compared to official locations issued by the National Hurricane Center.
Eighteen miles can easily mean the difference between life and death in a powerful storm.
Ozone tracking "greatly improved the predicted track that the hurricane would take," the scientists write. Further, the ozone data provide a clue to storm development earlier than other monitoring methods.
A hurricane starts as a tropical disturbance that spins weakly. Cloud cover often masks the activity, so satellites peering with optical and infrared cameras can't see what's going on. An ozone-monitor sees inside a nascent storm.
The observations were made with NASA's Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) satellite. The study, funded by NASA, is detailed in Journal of Geophysical Research paper.
Related Stories
* 2005 Hurricane Season Guide
0 likes
Personal Forecast Disclaimer:
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or storm2k.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or storm2k.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 632 guests
