Dennis becomes STRONGEST June/July hurricane on record...
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- Hyperstorm
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Dennis becomes STRONGEST June/July hurricane on record...
If Dennis strengthens to winds in excess of 115 mph, it will become the STRONGEST tropical cyclone in Atlantic hurricane records since 1950 during the month of JULY. Isn't that interesting?
If it becomes a very strong Category 4 hurricane (not expected) it will be the strongest tropical cyclone in Atlantic hurricane records for so early in the season.
The 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season is just beginning...
[EDIT: TO CHANGE TITLE OF THREAD AND ADD THE FOLLOWING]
Aside from what was posted above, Dennis has become the 2nd Strongest hurricane on record (dating back to 1851) during the month of July in the Atlantic Basin. The strongest July hurricane occured in 1926 and it reached winds of 140 mph!
If Dennis strengthens past 140 mph it will become the STRONGEST July hurricane since hurricane records have been kept in the Atlantic Basin.
[EDIT: TO CHANGE TITLE OF THREAD AND ADD THE FOLLOWING]
With winds of 150 mph and a pressure of 938 mb, Dennis has now become the STRONGEST Atlantic Hurricane on record for SO early in the season! What a season....
If it becomes a very strong Category 4 hurricane (not expected) it will be the strongest tropical cyclone in Atlantic hurricane records for so early in the season.
The 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season is just beginning...
[EDIT: TO CHANGE TITLE OF THREAD AND ADD THE FOLLOWING]
Aside from what was posted above, Dennis has become the 2nd Strongest hurricane on record (dating back to 1851) during the month of July in the Atlantic Basin. The strongest July hurricane occured in 1926 and it reached winds of 140 mph!
If Dennis strengthens past 140 mph it will become the STRONGEST July hurricane since hurricane records have been kept in the Atlantic Basin.
[EDIT: TO CHANGE TITLE OF THREAD AND ADD THE FOLLOWING]
With winds of 150 mph and a pressure of 938 mb, Dennis has now become the STRONGEST Atlantic Hurricane on record for SO early in the season! What a season....
Last edited by Hyperstorm on Fri Jul 08, 2005 9:51 am, edited 3 times in total.
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- Hyperstorm
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- Hyperstorm
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>>Let's all analyze how historical this season is already...
I was watching point-counterpoint on Yahoo today (don't usually watch that one). Bastardi said his dad asked him a question he didn't even think of, that is, what happens later in the season if all the energy is out of the tropical Atlantic. The rhetorical idea given is that the WPAC and EPAC are essentially dead right now so maybe the energy (for whatever reason) lies in the Atlantic basin. So Reeves asked what about all the energy and warm water potential in the Gulf since the first 4 storms have gone through there, and will that sap the Gulf. He didn't say anything other than there was a increasing chances of East Coast activity later in the season and that his mid-July update would reflect that.
It was kind of interesting in the sense that yeah, if we've got 4 Gulf storms before July 10th, what's left for the Gulf this year? My thinking is that maybe we'd see some late season hybrid stuff, but how many storms really can get into the Gulf with this kind of start? Unless the proverbial stars are lined up in a way that gives us a remote possibility season, it can't possibly be a whole lot more than 4.
Steve
I was watching point-counterpoint on Yahoo today (don't usually watch that one). Bastardi said his dad asked him a question he didn't even think of, that is, what happens later in the season if all the energy is out of the tropical Atlantic. The rhetorical idea given is that the WPAC and EPAC are essentially dead right now so maybe the energy (for whatever reason) lies in the Atlantic basin. So Reeves asked what about all the energy and warm water potential in the Gulf since the first 4 storms have gone through there, and will that sap the Gulf. He didn't say anything other than there was a increasing chances of East Coast activity later in the season and that his mid-July update would reflect that.
It was kind of interesting in the sense that yeah, if we've got 4 Gulf storms before July 10th, what's left for the Gulf this year? My thinking is that maybe we'd see some late season hybrid stuff, but how many storms really can get into the Gulf with this kind of start? Unless the proverbial stars are lined up in a way that gives us a remote possibility season, it can't possibly be a whole lot more than 4.
Steve
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Aside from what was posted above, Dennis has become the 2nd Strongest hurricane on record (dating back to 1851) during the month of July in the Atlantic Basin. The strongest July hurricane occured in 1926 and it reached winds of 140 mph!
If Dennis strengthens past 140 mph it will become the STRONGEST July hurricane since hurricane records have been kept in the Atlantic Basin.
If Dennis strengthens past 140 mph it will become the STRONGEST July hurricane since hurricane records have been kept in the Atlantic Basin.
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arcticfire wrote:I think comparing hurricane seasons to the past when the current and future variables are no where resembling it is kinda like driving a car foward while looking in the rear view mirror.
If you don't occasionally look behind you when you are driving, you might wind up in bad trouble.
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The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast 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.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 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.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
what happens later in the season if all the energy is out of the tropical Atlantic
Hurricanes derive their energy from the warm surface waters via surface fluxes (evaporation). The heat taken from the ocean then drives convection/thunderstorms redistributing the heat up to the cold tropopause.
As you probably know, hurricanes leave a wake of cold water mainly to the right of the track as mixing draws up colder water from beneath the mixed layer. It takes about 1-2 weeks for the SSTs to fully recover to their pre-storm temperatures.
So, as for this rash of early season activity exhausting the energy out of the Atlantic, SSTs throughout the majority of the Atlantic are still well above normal and any lull in activity will bring the SSTs near our recent TSs and Hurricane back to normal levels. So, these tropical cyclones have only taken cents out of the large reservoir of potential energy in the Atlantic right now.
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