Tag: hurricanes

  • Typhoon Neoguri

    Typhoon Neoguri

    Astronaut Reid Wiseman has been posting photos of Typhoon Neoguri in his Twitter feed this week. From our perspective on the ground, it’s easy to forget how three-dimensional the typhoons and hurricanes in our atmosphere are. But Wiseman’s photos capture the depth in the storm, especially the depression of the eye. From the top, the typhoon looks much like a vortex in a bathtub, or what’s more formally known as a free surface vortex. To understand why a vortex dips in the middle, imagine a container of water on a rotating plate. As the water is spun, its interface with the air takes on a paraboloid shape. Two external forces are acting on the fluid: gravity in the downward direction and a centrifugal force in the radial direction. The free surface of the fluid adopts a shape that is always perpendicular to the combination of these two forces. This ensures that the pressure along the free surface is a constant. (Photo credits: R. Wiseman 1,2,3)

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    Fluids Round-up – 13 October 2013

    There were so many good fluids links this week that I decided for an off-week fluids round-up. Here we go!

    (Video credit: #5facts/Sesame Street)

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    10 Years of Weather

    This timelapse video captures the past 10 years’ worth of weather as seen by the GEOS-12 satellite during its service. It’s a mesmerizing look at the large-scale convective flow of Earth’s atmosphere. The prevailing winds for each region are clear from the motion of the clouds, but short-term effects are visible as well. June through November marks the Atlantic hurricane season, and you can see as storm after storm gets generated near western Africa and shoots westward toward North and Central America. You can also see the pattern tracks of these storms in these maps, which show 170 years’ worth of worldwide hurricane tracks.  (Video credit: NOAA; via Scientific American)

  • Hurricane Irene

    Hurricane Irene

    This August 25th satellite image shows Hurricane Irene over the Bahamas and Florida. Hurricanes are fueled largely by the release of heat as warm water vapor in the rising air condenses. The hurricane requires a body of warm water to sustain the process, which is why hurricanes weaken drastically after they make landfall. Over open water, the heat released by condensation fuels higher winds, which lowers the pressure at the center of the system and helps increase the rate of evaporation near the ocean surface, providing additional warm vapor for future condensation. See more photos of Irene from space, along with video from the ISS#