The Science Behind the Storm: Hurricanes

For those of us who don’t live in areas vulnerable to hurricanes, their destruction is something we watch on TV or read about in the news. And this always brings questions: Is there anything we can do to prevent the devastation of a hurricane? Why do they seem to be getting more and more frequent? And perhaps most importantly, why the funny names?

Name That Hurricane
Hurricanes are named largely out of convenience. Common names are much easier than latitude and longitude to remember, and because more than one may be happening at the same time, naming makes it easier for researchers, news agencies, and the public to distinguish between them. The particular naming system has evolved somewhat from its beginning.

Originally, hurricanes were named after the saint’s day on which they occurred (e.g., Santa Ana). In the late 1800s, an Australian meteorologist starting giving hurricanes women’s names only; this was adopted in 1953 by the National Weather Service. Now both men and women’s names are used, one name for each letter of the alphabet (except Q, U, and Z), on a six year rotating scale. The names differ between the Pacific and Atlantic; Atlantic hurricane names are French, Spanish, or English (the languages used in that region).

When hurricanes are particularly damaging or costly they’re retired, so we will never experience another “Katrina”—at least in name.

Cyclone or Hurricane?
Geographic differences and speed also dictate how a storm is classified and named. For instance, anything less than thirty-nine miles per hour is a tropical depression; thirty-nine or over is a tropical storm, and once they reach seventy-four miles per hour, they are either called a hurricane, typhoon, severe tropical cyclone, severe cyclonic storm, or tropical cyclone, depending on what part of the world you’re in. 

Natural Barriers
While it seems like once a hurricane forms, there’s not much we can do to dissipate it, nature actually has set up protective barriers against it. The only problem is that humans have eradicated many of them.

11 readers liked this story.
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08.18.2009
Harriet M
I never really thought about the process of hurricane-naming before. Thanks for the info!
08.18.2009
Allison Ford
I've always wondered why they started out only giving hurricanes women's names. Seems so sexist.
My boyfriend lived through Hurricane Ike in Houston last summer. It was terrifying. He had no electricity or water for ten days. It is scary to see how a huge metropolis can become absolutely crippled by an act of nature.
I've got a lot of friends who now live in hurricane territory. The stories they have are pretty interesting. I just feel lucky to not live in a place where hurricanes occur.
08.18.2009
Bijani Mizell
Earthquakes are the big scare in California (where I live) but I'd be much more afraid of a hurricane. I'll never forget seeing footage from New Orleans after Katrina hit. I had never seen such devastation before ... and I hope it never happens again.
It feels good to write.

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