al78 wrote:Highest August and/or September ACE index.
Highest October - December ACE index
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al78 wrote:Highest August and/or September ACE index.
Teban54 wrote:A common one that I'm sure others are thinking of: the 6th sub-900 mb Atlantic hurricane, which would be the first in 19 years since Wilma.
kevin wrote:Also, another one could be the most active late-season (October - December), depending on how you look at it. If the new disturbance becomes a MH (not per se likely at this point), 2024 will become the only 3 MH late-season together with 2020.
A few of the most active late-seasons in the database:
2005 = 10/4/2
1950 = 9/5/2
1887 = 9/5/0
2020 = 7/6/3
2001 = 7/5/2
1961 = 6/2/1
2024 = 5/4/2
Teban54 wrote:kevin wrote:Also, another one could be the most active late-season (October - December), depending on how you look at it. If the new disturbance becomes a MH (not per se likely at this point), 2024 will become the only 3 MH late-season together with 2020.
A few of the most active late-seasons in the database:
2005 = 10/4/2
1950 = 9/5/2
1887 = 9/5/0
2020 = 7/6/3
2001 = 7/5/2
1961 = 6/2/1
2024 = 5/4/2
How exactly did you define late season in your list? If it's any TCs that existed after October 1st, 2020 should be 7/6/5 (Delta, Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, Iota are MHs), and 2024 should be 7/5/3 (Kirk, Milton, Rafael). Excluding TCs that formed before October 1st would make it 6/4/2 (no Kirk but still has Leslie).
Regardless, if we start counting from September 24th (Helene, when 2024's "peak" really started), 2024 has an impressive 10/7/4 after the date, on par with (if not more than) 2020's 7/6/5 after September 24. According to Phil Klotzbach, 2024 has set or tied the following records:
- New record for 10 TS from 9/24 to 11/4 (previous was 9 TS in 1950)
- 1950 had another TS in mid-November
- New record for 7 H from 9/25 to 11/5 (previous was 6 H in 1870)
- Tied record for 4 MH from 9/26 to 11/6 (previous was 4 MH in 2020, all other seasons had at most 2)
- 2020 had another MH in mid-November (Iota)
kevin wrote:Teban54 wrote:kevin wrote:Also, another one could be the most active late-season (October - December), depending on how you look at it. If the new disturbance becomes a MH (not per se likely at this point), 2024 will become the only 3 MH late-season together with 2020.
A few of the most active late-seasons in the database:
2005 = 10/4/2
1950 = 9/5/2
1887 = 9/5/0
2020 = 7/6/3
2001 = 7/5/2
1961 = 6/2/1
2024 = 5/4/2
How exactly did you define late season in your list? If it's any TCs that existed after October 1st, 2020 should be 7/6/5 (Delta, Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, Iota are MHs), and 2024 should be 7/5/3 (Kirk, Milton, Rafael). Excluding TCs that formed before October 1st would make it 6/4/2 (no Kirk but still has Leslie).
Regardless, if we start counting from September 24th (Helene, when 2024's "peak" really started), 2024 has an impressive 10/7/4 after the date, on par with (if not more than) 2020's 7/6/5 after September 24. According to Phil Klotzbach, 2024 has set or tied the following records:
- New record for 10 TS from 9/24 to 11/4 (previous was 9 TS in 1950)
- 1950 had another TS in mid-November
- New record for 7 H from 9/25 to 11/5 (previous was 6 H in 1870)
- Tied record for 4 MH from 9/26 to 11/6 (previous was 4 MH in 2020, all other seasons had at most 2)
- 2020 had another MH in mid-November (Iota)
I defined it as any storm forming after October 1, which is indeed a relatively arbitrary decision. I did make a typo, thanks for the correction. 2024 should have 6/4/2.
Teban54 wrote:kevin wrote:Teban54 wrote:How exactly did you define late season in your list? If it's any TCs that existed after October 1st, 2020 should be 7/6/5 (Delta, Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, Iota are MHs), and 2024 should be 7/5/3 (Kirk, Milton, Rafael). Excluding TCs that formed before October 1st would make it 6/4/2 (no Kirk but still has Leslie).
Regardless, if we start counting from September 24th (Helene, when 2024's "peak" really started), 2024 has an impressive 10/7/4 after the date, on par with (if not more than) 2020's 7/6/5 after September 24. According to Phil Klotzbach, 2024 has set or tied the following records:
- New record for 10 TS from 9/24 to 11/4 (previous was 9 TS in 1950)
- 1950 had another TS in mid-November
- New record for 7 H from 9/25 to 11/5 (previous was 6 H in 1870)
- Tied record for 4 MH from 9/26 to 11/6 (previous was 4 MH in 2020, all other seasons had at most 2)
- 2020 had another MH in mid-November (Iota)
I defined it as any storm forming after October 1, which is indeed a relatively arbitrary decision. I did make a typo, thanks for the correction. 2024 should have 6/4/2.
Gotcha. Even then, 2020 definitely should have been 7/6/5 and not 7/6/3, as all the 5 late-season MHs formed in October and November.
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