Tropical tidbits india

  1. Cyclone Freddy teeters on brink of Category 5 strength in Indian Ocean
  2. Hurricane & Tropical Cyclones
  3. GFS Model
  4. 2023 Hurricane Season
  5. VIDEO SERIES: Tropical Tidbits Educates, Informs People About Hurricanes
  6. Cyclone Freddy teeters on brink of Category 5 strength in Indian Ocean
  7. Hurricane & Tropical Cyclones
  8. VIDEO SERIES: Tropical Tidbits Educates, Informs People About Hurricanes
  9. 2023 Hurricane Season
  10. GFS Model


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Cyclone Freddy teeters on brink of Category 5 strength in Indian Ocean

In the days ahead, it’s expected to swirl just south of the Mascarene Islands, its core dodging Mauritius and Réunion Island. Both islands could face heavy rainfall, but the bulk of the wind should truck on toward Madagascar. The risk is increasing for dangerous coastal surge, flooding inland rains and strong, damaging winds, with interests in Mozambique also closely monitoring the storm. As of Thursday morning Eastern time, winds in Freddy’s eyewall — a ring of intense thunderstorms and extreme winds surrounding a tropical cyclone’s center — were pegged at 155 mph, with gusts in the 190 mph range. The violent winds were present only over the open ocean, but concern is growing over Freddy’s future. On satellite, Freddy resembled a meteorological buzz saw. A hollowed-out eye can be spotted with little effort, representing where hot, dry air was punching downward from aloft, carving a void in the middle of the storm. That marked an oasis of calm, around which the tightly coiled eyewall was wrapped. Microwave satellite data, which is able to penetrate through cloud cover and garner an “under the hood” perspective of the storm, noted one solid ring of convection — or shower and thunderstorm activity — about the center. Beyond that “central dense overcast” region, or regime of thick cloud cover and rain, there was little in the way of spiral rain band activity. Freddy is expected to maintain intensity over the next 12 to 24 hours as it continues westward. It’s nestled beneath a...

Hurricane & Tropical Cyclones

• Large Satellite Animations from NOAA/NESDIS and Others • • • • • Real-time Tropical Imagery • • • • • • • • • • Computer model forecasts • • • • • • • • • • • Rain information • • • Forecast Centers • • • • • • • • • Long range and seasonal forecasts • • • • • • Sea Surface Temperature Data • • • • • • • Aircraft Reconnaissance Sites • • Hurricane FAQs, Names, and Other Links • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

GFS Model

Shortcuts and Gestures • ← → Move forward and backward through forecast times • SPACE Play or pause animation • + − Speed up or slow down the animation • ↓ ↑ Show previous and future model runs at the same valid time • click View point sounding • click + drag View area-averaged sounding • CTRL + click + drag View vertical cross section • CMD + click + drag View vertical cross section (Mac) • R Open/close region selection menu • ESC Close open popup windows, like this one • SHIFT+drag Show ruler on map • UNITED STATES • This page supplies graphical forecasts from numerical weather models. Global models with imagery for the entire world include the ECMWF, GFS, ICON, CMC, NAVGEM, and their associated ensemble prediction systems. Mesoscale models for the United States include the NAM in various forms, the HRRR, several other WRF variants, and the Canadian RGEM and HRDPS. The mesoscale hurricane models HAFS, HWRF, and GFDL are run on tropical disturbances and storms. Climate models like the CFSv2, CanSIPS, and NMME provide monthly to seasonal forecasts. Products include map displays, model-derived soundings, and vertical cross sections. These products are generated using data from the Terms of Use • Social media: All images are free to share. If this content becomes a frequent centerpiece of your feed, please consider citing • Blogs, articles, and websites: Graphics may be used if not embed real-time updating content from this page as a persistent fixture unless you obtain spec...

2023 Hurricane Season

Track The Tropics has been the #1 source to track the tropics 24/7 since 2013! The main goal of the site is to bring all of the important links and graphics to ONE PLACE so you can keep up to date on any threats to land during the Atlantic Hurricane Season! Hurricane Season 2023 in the Atlantic starts on June 1st and ends on November 30th. Love Remember when you're preparing for a storm: Run from the water; hide from the wind! Category Wind Speed Storm Surge mph ft 5 ≥157 >18 4 130–156 13–18 3 111–129 9–12 2 96–110 6–8 1 74–95 4–5 Additional Classifications Tropical Storm 39–73 0–3 Tropical Depression 0–38 0 The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale is a classification used for most Western Hemisphere tropical cyclones that exceed the intensities of "tropical depressions" and "tropical storms", and thereby become hurricanes. Source: Hurricane Season 101 The official Atlantic Basin Hurricane Season runs from June 1st to November 30th. A tropical cyclone is a warm-core, low pressure system without any “front” attached. It develops over tropical or subtropical waters, and has an organized circulation. Depending upon location, tropical cyclones have different names around the world. The Tropical Cyclones we track in the Atlantic basin are called Tropical Depressions, Tropical Storms and Hurricanes! Atlantic Basin Tropical Cyclones are classified as follows: Tropical Depression: Organized system of clouds and thunderstorms with defined surface circulation and max sustained winds of 38...

VIDEO SERIES: Tropical Tidbits Educates, Informs People About Hurricanes

• [ June 16, 2023 ] Arrests In Brevard County: June 16, 2023 – Suspects Presumed Innocent Until Proven Guilty Brevard Crime News • [ June 16, 2023 ] Sinkhole in Titusville Swallows Truck Friday Morning at Cleveland St. and Abbott Ave. Brevard News • [ June 16, 2023 ] NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope Focuses on Galaxy 44 Million Light-Years from Earth Brevard News • [ June 16, 2023 ] Brevard County Sheriff’s Office Urges Drivers Put the Phone Down ‘Don’t Text and Drive’ Brevard Crime News • [ June 16, 2023 ] Squid Lips Cocoa Beach Offers Stunning Sunset View, Considered a Hidden Gem on the Space Coast Brevard Business News ABOVE VIDEO: Levi Cowan gives the lowdown on the three tropical systems currently occupying the Atlantic. Levi creates videos and blogs pertaining to tropical cyclones, primarily hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean. Posts occasionally concern other, non-tropical weather events around the world. Levi is currently working on his masters degree in tropical meteorology at Florida State University If you read part one about The next site that will tickle the feathers of the hurricane enthusiasts is Levi Cownan’s Levi and his site are unique in that he is an educator of hurricanes. Levi is rarely wrong and he loves to hear himself talk. While that may be annoying to most people, (it is to me) the funny thing is, I love hearing Levi talk and you will too. He keeps you glued to his videos with his monotone but clear and precise voice. Levi uses the terminology and expl...

Cyclone Freddy teeters on brink of Category 5 strength in Indian Ocean

In the days ahead, it’s expected to swirl just south of the Mascarene Islands, its core dodging Mauritius and Réunion Island. Both islands could face heavy rainfall, but the bulk of the wind should truck on toward Madagascar. The risk is increasing for dangerous coastal surge, flooding inland rains and strong, damaging winds, with interests in Mozambique also closely monitoring the storm. As of Thursday morning Eastern time, winds in Freddy’s eyewall — a ring of intense thunderstorms and extreme winds surrounding a tropical cyclone’s center — were pegged at 155 mph, with gusts in the 190 mph range. The violent winds were present only over the open ocean, but concern is growing over Freddy’s future. On satellite, Freddy resembled a meteorological buzz saw. A hollowed-out eye can be spotted with little effort, representing where hot, dry air was punching downward from aloft, carving a void in the middle of the storm. That marked an oasis of calm, around which the tightly coiled eyewall was wrapped. Microwave satellite data, which is able to penetrate through cloud cover and garner an “under the hood” perspective of the storm, noted one solid ring of convection — or shower and thunderstorm activity — about the center. Beyond that “central dense overcast” region, or regime of thick cloud cover and rain, there was little in the way of spiral rain band activity. Freddy is expected to maintain intensity over the next 12 to 24 hours as it continues westward. It’s nestled beneath a...

Hurricane & Tropical Cyclones

• Large Satellite Animations from NOAA/NESDIS and Others • • • • • Real-time Tropical Imagery • • • • • • • • • • Computer model forecasts • • • • • • • • • • • Rain information • • • Forecast Centers • • • • • • • • • Long range and seasonal forecasts • • • • • • Sea Surface Temperature Data • • • • • • • Aircraft Reconnaissance Sites • • Hurricane FAQs, Names, and Other Links • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

VIDEO SERIES: Tropical Tidbits Educates, Informs People About Hurricanes

• [ June 16, 2023 ] DOJ Files Motion to Prevent Former President Trump from Viewing Classified Docs in Federal Indictment Without Lawyers Present Brevard News • [ June 16, 2023 ] Arrests In Brevard County: June 16, 2023 – Suspects Presumed Innocent Until Proven Guilty Brevard Crime News • [ June 16, 2023 ] Sinkhole in Titusville Swallows Truck Friday Morning at Cleveland St. and Abbott Ave. Brevard News • [ June 16, 2023 ] NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope Focuses on Galaxy 44 Million Light-Years from Earth Brevard News • [ June 16, 2023 ] Brevard County Sheriff’s Office Urges Drivers Put the Phone Down ‘Don’t Text and Drive’ Brevard Crime News ABOVE VIDEO: Levi Cowan gives the lowdown on the three tropical systems currently occupying the Atlantic. Levi creates videos and blogs pertaining to tropical cyclones, primarily hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean. Posts occasionally concern other, non-tropical weather events around the world. Levi is currently working on his masters degree in tropical meteorology at Florida State University If you read part one about The next site that will tickle the feathers of the hurricane enthusiasts is Levi Cownan’s Levi and his site are unique in that he is an educator of hurricanes. Levi is rarely wrong and he loves to hear himself talk. While that may be annoying to most people, (it is to me) the funny thing is, I love hearing Levi talk and you will too. He keeps you glued to his videos with his monotone but clear and precise voice. Levi uses th...

2023 Hurricane Season

Track The Tropics has been the #1 source to track the tropics 24/7 since 2013! The main goal of the site is to bring all of the important links and graphics to ONE PLACE so you can keep up to date on any threats to land during the Atlantic Hurricane Season! Hurricane Season 2023 in the Atlantic starts on June 1st and ends on November 30th. Love Remember when you're preparing for a storm: Run from the water; hide from the wind! Category Wind Speed Storm Surge mph ft 5 ≥157 >18 4 130–156 13–18 3 111–129 9–12 2 96–110 6–8 1 74–95 4–5 Additional Classifications Tropical Storm 39–73 0–3 Tropical Depression 0–38 0 The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale is a classification used for most Western Hemisphere tropical cyclones that exceed the intensities of "tropical depressions" and "tropical storms", and thereby become hurricanes. Source: Hurricane Season 101 The official Atlantic Basin Hurricane Season runs from June 1st to November 30th. A tropical cyclone is a warm-core, low pressure system without any “front” attached. It develops over tropical or subtropical waters, and has an organized circulation. Depending upon location, tropical cyclones have different names around the world. The Tropical Cyclones we track in the Atlantic basin are called Tropical Depressions, Tropical Storms and Hurricanes! Atlantic Basin Tropical Cyclones are classified as follows: Tropical Depression: Organized system of clouds and thunderstorms with defined surface circulation and max sustained winds of 38...

GFS Model

Shortcuts and Gestures • ← → Move forward and backward through forecast times • SPACE Play or pause animation • + − Speed up or slow down the animation • ↓ ↑ Show previous and future model runs at the same valid time • click View point sounding • click + drag View area-averaged sounding • CTRL + click + drag View vertical cross section • CMD + click + drag View vertical cross section (Mac) • R Open/close region selection menu • ESC Close open popup windows, like this one • SHIFT+drag Show ruler on map • UNITED STATES • This page supplies graphical forecasts from numerical weather models. Global models with imagery for the entire world include the ECMWF, GFS, ICON, CMC, NAVGEM, and their associated ensemble prediction systems. Mesoscale models for the United States include the NAM in various forms, the HRRR, several other WRF variants, and the Canadian RGEM and HRDPS. The mesoscale hurricane models HAFS, HWRF, and GFDL are run on tropical disturbances and storms. Climate models like the CFSv2, CanSIPS, and NMME provide monthly to seasonal forecasts. Products include map displays, model-derived soundings, and vertical cross sections. These products are generated using data from the Terms of Use • Social media: All images are free to share. If this content becomes a frequent centerpiece of your feed, please consider citing • Blogs, articles, and websites: Graphics may be used if not embed real-time updating content from this page as a persistent fixture unless you obtain spec...