Tropical Storms 🌪 Flashcards
1
Q
Tropical storms
A
A violent rotating storm
2
Q
Reason for mid latitude location
A
- Warm climate necessary for hot surface water of 27C to provide energy
- Low wind shear preventing hot air to dissipate
3
Q
Sandy timeline
A
- October 2012
- Low wind shear and water above average temp for the year
- Eye moved north - diameter of 1100 miles
- Course shifted 8 days before landfall, moving left towards US, due to cold air and low pressure in Greenland, eastward jet stream
- Pushed storm to warmer coastal waters combined with full moon, increasing potential storm surge
4
Q
Sandy social effects 7
A
- 111 deaths
- 24 states effected
- 75% NY isolated with no power
- 4% had to be rehoused
- looting
- queues for fuel
- 3% still homeless after a year
5
Q
Sandy political effects
A
- Occurred weeks before 2012 election
- Increased pressure to address climate change
6
Q
Sandy economic effects
A
- $63 billion in damages
- Energy Grid damaged
- NYSE closed
- Loss of economic activity
- Loss of water supply and phone lines
7
Q
Sandy environmental effects 4
A
- Poor air quality
- Water pollution
- Trees uprooted
- Sewage leaks / overflow
8
Q
Sandy short term responses 6
A
- 1 million forced to evacuate
- 17.5 million meals given by Red Cross
- 7 million kits of medical supplies
- 11000 sheltered
- National guard deployed
- Course of the hurricane confused efforts
9
Q
Sandy long term responses
A
- 23000 people and businesses given assistance
- $10 billion to respond with $50 billion to rebuild
- Accusations of misallocation of Red Cross supplies pulling PR stunts
10
Q
Hurricane prediction
A
- Only occur at certain times of year
- Tracking by air = limited scale / prediction
- Satellites = birds eye view, determine path, track storm
- Supercomputer = can predict paths and guide response, needs constant data
11
Q
Hurricane scale of magnitude
A
Saffir-Simpson scale 1 to 5 based on wind speed
12
Q
Why is monitoring hurricanes beneficial
A
People can evacuate sooner reducing potential deaths, and those at risk understand potential of storm and can prepare
13
Q
Why use Saffire-Simpson scale
A
Easy to compare magnitude of events and categorise as well as compare outcomes
14
Q
Tropical storm hazards 5
A
- Strong winds
- Heavy rainfall
- Storm surges
- River flooding
- Landslides
15
Q
Storm surge
A
- Rise in sea level that occurs during tropical storms with strong winds pushing water to shore
- Form when low pressure at centre of storm lifts the water up (rises by 1cm for every millibar of pressure)