Phenomena

Feeding Hurricanes

Map of ocean surface temperatures during the intensification of Hurricane Helene.

With the strong hurricane season pummeling the southern U.S. this year, you may have heard comments about how warm oceans are intensifying hurricanes. Let’s take a look at how this works. Above is a map of ocean surface temperatures in late September, as Helene was developing and intensifying. For hurricanes, the critical ocean surface temperature is about 27 degrees Celsius — above this temperature, the warm waters add enough energy and moisture to the storm to intensify it. In this image, the waters colored from medium red to black are at or above this temperature. In fact Helene’s path — shown in a dotted white line — took it across particularly warm (and therefore dark) eddies with temperatures up to 31 degrees Celsius.

Many factors affect a hurricane’s formation and intensification; understanding and predicting storms, their path, and their strength remains an active area of research. But warmer ocean temperatures are better at sustaining the hurricane’s warm core, and their moisture is easier to evaporate, thereby fueling the storm. Unfortunately, as the climate warms, we have to expect that warmer oceans will help rapidly intensify tropical storms and hurricanes. (Image credit: W. Liang; via NASA Earth Observatory)

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