Tropical storms Flashcards
1
Q
Storms
A
- occur when there are large diff in atmospheric pressure between 2 areas
- e.g low pressure system in Australia, high pressure system in Central Asia (causes NE Monsoon)
- storms dont just occur during Monsoon seasons
- occur throughout year, due to Hadley cells and ITCZ
2
Q
Hadley Cells
A
- equatorial regions; area of low pressure due to constant solar energy received (large angle of incidence
- equatorial warm air rises 30 degrees north and south, cools down rapidly, rain(Cloud form)
- concurrently, cooler and denser air at 30N and 30S move towards lower pressure area at equator
- forms stable circulatory system, bring dry and cool air to 30N and S, forming desert conditions; bring winds and storm systems towards equator
- draw annotated diagrams
3
Q
Deserts
A
-form along Horse latitudes (30N, 30S)
4
Q
Inter Tropical Convergence Zone
A
- area that is affected by tropical storms, cyclones, hurricanes, typhoons
- area of lowest pressure, where most of world’s storms occur
- receives converging winds blowing frm Hadley Cells from north and south
- not always at equator becos of seasons
- Jan: ITCZ below equator, sun directly over 23S/Tropic of Capicorn
- July: ITCZ above equator, sun directly above 23N/Tropic of Cancer
- can use this to predict times of yr where particular area may have high potential of storms occurring
5
Q
Tropical cyclones
A
- extreme/severe weather phenomenon
- intense low pressure weather systems that develop over warm oceans in tropics
- strong tropical storms, winds of strong velocity, accompanied by torrential rainfall, cause widespread damage and loss of lives
- move away frm equator
- Atlantic: Hurricanes
- Pacific: Typhoons
- Indian: Cyclones
6
Q
Characteristics of tropical cyclones
A
- diameter: 100km to 2000km
- may last as long as a month
- speed: 24km/h
- wind speed: 120km/h
7
Q
How and why do tropical cyclones form?
A
- have sustained speeds of more than 119km/h due to steep pressure gradient
- atmospheric pressure above warm ocean surface very low
- steep pressure gradient result in strong winds spiralling inwards and upwards at high speeds
- warm moist air over ocean expands and rises, then condenses, releases latent heat
- continuous large scale release of latent heat warms air, cause it to expand and rise further
- this reduces air pressure near ocean surface, creating and sustaining area of low pressure at centre (eye) of cyclone
- warm air rises, cools, eventually sinks
- descending dry air creates calm and cloud-free environment in the eye
8
Q
Conditions required for tropical cyclone formation
A
- warm tropical oceans temp at 26 degrees, depth up to 60m
- low pressure area needs to be far enough frm equator (5-20 N/S) for coriolis effect to create rotation in the rising air mass (too near equator, insufficient rotation, tropical cyclone will not develop)
- need to have low pressure system (unstable air)/depression that has potential to grow (less than 10% tropical disturbances turn into cyclones)
- thus tropical cyclones only found in tropical areas (warm shallow seas like Caribbean)
- once they travel on land/ cooler waters, lose source of energy and strength v quickly