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The 2022 Atlantic hurricane season has officially started, and NASA scientists
are working with partners at NOAA, FEMA and other organizations to
help communities prepare for these storms and respond to their aftermath.
To gain a better understanding of how hurricanes are intensifying and becoming
stronger in the face of climate change, NASA is developing technology and missions to study our home
planet as a complex, dynamic system.
But what’s the recipe for hurricane formation, and how is the behavior of
these storms changing as Earth’s long-term warming trend continues?
NASA research answers these questions to help you understand how excess heat in
Earth’s oceans is changing the way hurricanes form and evolve.
1. What’s the recipe for a hurricane?
The general name for “hurricanes” is tropical cyclones. Outside the United
States, people also call these storms typhoons or simply cyclones. In short,
tropical cyclones are storms with winds swirling rapidly around a center of
warm air.
Hurricanes depend on four main ingredients to form. First, they need heat
or energy stored in the upper layer of the ocean. This ocean heat content powers a storm similar to how fuel
powers an engine. Second, they need high humidity in the air, achieved by
evaporation of ocean waters above 79°F (26°C). As this humid air rises and
interacts with cooler air above, it creates and grows increasingly larger clouds
and thunderstorms. Third, hurricanes need favorable winds. At different heights
in the atmosphere, these winds need to be weak enough to avoid ripping the
storm apart. Fourth, hurricanes need background rotation to organize scattered
thunderstorms into one larger storm that spins increasingly faster into a
cyclone’s characteristic spiral form. Some of this spin comes from Earth’s own
spin as it rotates around its axis.
The map above shows sea surface temperature anomalies on July 14, 2020 indicating how much the water was above or below the long-term average (2003-2014) temperature on that same day. Credits: NASA's Earth Observatory
2. How does climate change interact with a
hurricane’s ingredients?
Ocean heat, air humidity, wind — all these ingredients factor into
hurricane formation. And all are affected by climate change.
The ocean has absorbed 90% of the warming that
has occurred in recent decades due to increasing
greenhouse gasses, and the top few meters store as much heat as Earth's entire
atmosphere. But the way winds interact with this heat or energy in the ocean
also plays an important role in the fate of a storm, explained Scott Braun, a
research meteorologist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
“If you get a storm moving over a shallow layer of warm water, the stronger
winds can mix up the ocean enough that it pulls up that deeper, colder
water, and reduces the energy available for the storm,” Braun said. “However,
if the depth of the warm layer is fairly large, the storm can't really tap into
that cooler water, so there's less chance of that cooler water acting to weaken
the storm.”
Changes in wind speed and direction at different heights, called vertical
wind shear, can make or break a hurricane. It can impede storm formation by
dispersing heat and moisture. If it’s strong, it can also break apart an
existing storm by blowing its top away from its bottom.
“Let's say you've got an environment where at low levels, the winds are out
of the east at five miles an hour, and at the top, they're out of the west at
five miles an hour,” Braun said. “You've got winds trying to move the storm in
different directions as a function of height, and that tends to tilt over the
storm and potentially rip it apart.”
In future climate projections of hurricane behavior, wind shear is the
biggest wildcard, as it may weaken or strengthen storms in different regions.
Research suggests some areas of the world might get stronger winds than others
as a result of global warming, but it is uncertain how that will play out.
3. Does climate change mean more hurricanes each
season?
No. Even though a warm ocean is a key ingredient for hurricane formation,
research shows this warming has not significantly influenced the number of
Atlantic hurricanes that form each year.
However, because projections suggest that as the ocean warms the atmosphere
will also hold more moisture to form clouds and feed storms, scientists are
anticipating stronger and wetter hurricanes in coming years. That is, although
oceanic warming isn’t yet increasing the frequency of hurricanes, this excess
heat appears to be affecting different characteristics of hurricanes that do
form.
This is why Dr. Mayra Oyola-Merced, an atmospheric physicist at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, encourages people living in
places constantly exposed to hurricanes to follow guidance from local
authorities before a storm hits.
“We know that in terms of a warming climate with increasing sea surface
temperatures, we have a higher probability of hurricanes in the extreme portion
of the scale,” Oyola-Merced said. “Sometimes even though it's a Category 1
storm, you can get a lot of damaging rain, winds and storm surges that can put
lives and property in danger.”
The map above shows the tracks of all 30 Atlantic storms in 2020, highlighting a few of the named storms. Three of them—Eta, Iota, and Delta—saw their winds intensify by at least 80 miles (130 kilometers) per hour in 24 hours. Credits: NASA's Earth Observatory
4. How is climate change affecting hurricane
intensity?
Research suggests that with rising temperatures, it will be more likely
that storms will undergo rapid intensification, which is defined as an increase in
hurricane wind speeds by 35 mph (or about 56 kilometers per hour) within 24
hours. These quick changes can leave local authorities and communities in the
path of a hurricane without time to prepare.
Already, rapid intensification appears to be one of the major influences of
a warming ocean on hurricane behavior. While rapidly intensifying storms
occurred less frequently in past decades, the Atlantic is now producing about
one of these storms per season, Oyola-Merced said. And as this phenomenon has
happened more often in recent decades, scientists are just beginning to
understand how to predict it.
“The reason we don't know much about that is because until around 2005,
this was a very rare thing to happen,” Oyola-Merced said. “This gets tricky
because if you have a forecast when something like this happens, and the model
is not able to capture this rapid intensification, it means that you have the
wrong information, and you're giving the public the wrong information.”
5. Is climate change slowing down hurricanes?
Yes. In recent decades, hurricanes have been stalling more as they approach
coasts, dropping more rainfall over confined locations. Research shows Atlantic
hurricanes are experiencing a reduction of roughly 17% in forward motion speeds
than in previous decades, which translates into an increase of about 25% in
rainfall, Oyola-Merced explained.
“The longer a system spends over the ocean getting warm by now this
extremely heated water, you're also going to increase its rainfall,”
Oyola-Merced said. “When you have land that's already saturated, where it’s
constantly raining, and then you come with another storm that's packed with
precipitation, it's a recipe for disaster.”
Natural color image of Hurricane Iota in the Gulf of Mexico from NOAA's GOES-16 geostationary satellite. Credits: NOAA/NASA Earth Observatory
With data from more than 20 satellites, NASA plays a foundational role in
hurricane science. Before, during, and after a hurricane strikes, NASA satellites
are in a prime position to identify impacts and help communities prepare,
respond, and recover. With tools like the Disasters Mapping Portal, the agency supports regional
governments and disaster management
agencies.
When it comes to operational forecasting, NASA’s main role is through its
crucial partnership with NOAA. NASA designs, builds, and launches NOAA’s suite
of satellites that provide the data that specifically feed numerical weather
prediction models.
Banner image: Nighttime view of Hurricane Ida
making landfall in Louisiana on August 30, 2021, as seen by the Visible
Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the Suomi NPP satellite. Credits: NASA's
Earth Observatory
By Roberto Molar Candanosa
NASA's Earth Science News Team
Source: Five
Questions to Help You Understand Hurricanes and Climate Change | NASA
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