The latest sat images:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT/FLOAT2/IR4/20.jpg
It looks to my uneducated eye like there is almost a seperate something going on here. Even on the visible image this area apears almost to be mimicing the activity of the center of ciculation of dennis.
So my question is , is it possible for hurricans to split ? I'm not saying this is happening I'm just curious if it's ever happened ?
Question about NE quadrent feature in Dennis
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arcticfire
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Re: Question about NE quadrent feature in Dennis
arcticfire wrote:The latest sat images:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT/FLOAT2/IR4/20.jpg
It looks to my uneducated eye like there is almost a seperate something going on here. Even on the visible image this area apears almost to be mimicing the activity of the center of ciculation of dennis.
So my question is , is it possible for hurricans to split ? I'm not saying this is happening I'm just curious if it's ever happened ?
In a word, no, it is not possible, or at the very least it is incredibly unlikely. The fundamental dynamics of hurricanes prevent such an occurrence from ever happening. Once a hurricane becomes established, there is a strong pressure gradient at low-to-mid levels pointing inward toward the center of the storm, due to the warm core at the center. This ensures that the flow surrounding the storm at low-to-mid levels will always spiral inward, and that no other circulation could get established anywhere near the storm, which would have to occur for a hurricane to "split". Furthermore, the stronger the hurricane gets, the stronger this pressure gradient, and thus such an event becomes even less likely. Hurricanes are essentially giant heat engines, and once one gets going, it doesn't like "sharing" resources, namely the transfer of heat and moisture from the underlying ocean surface.
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arcticfire
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Re: Question about NE quadrent feature in Dennis
Wthrman13 wrote:arcticfire wrote:The latest sat images:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT/FLOAT2/IR4/20.jpg
It looks to my uneducated eye like there is almost a seperate something going on here. Even on the visible image this area apears almost to be mimicing the activity of the center of ciculation of dennis.
So my question is , is it possible for hurricans to split ? I'm not saying this is happening I'm just curious if it's ever happened ?
In a word, no, it is not possible, or at the very least it is incredibly unlikely. The fundamental dynamics of hurricanes prevent such an occurrence from ever happening. Once a hurricane becomes established, there is a strong pressure gradient at low-to-mid levels pointing inward toward the center of the storm, due to the warm core at the center. This ensures that the flow surrounding the storm at low-to-mid levels will always spiral inward, and that no other circulation could get established anywhere near the storm, which would have to occur for a hurricane to "split". Furthermore, the stronger the hurricane gets, the stronger this pressure gradient, and thus such an event becomes even less likely. Hurricanes are essentially giant heat engines, and once one gets going, it doesn't like "sharing" resources, namely the transfer of heat and moisture from the underlying ocean surface.
Thx a bunch for the clear answer , that makes totall sence. It just looks so wonky to me to see that convection in the NE quadrent seemingly "seperating" from the center and continuing to get deeper as it headed for land.
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