Quantcast
issue
Read articles, including Science News stories written for ages 9-14, on the SNK website.
Low central pressure among Hurricane Sandy’s unusual features
After slamming the Caribbean, storm approaches landfall in mid-Atlantic states
A+ A- Text Size

After slamming the Caribbean, storm approaches landfall in mid-Atlantic states

By Alexandra Witze

Web edition: October 29, 2012

Enlarge
A Perfect Storm
Hurricane Sandy, shown in this GOES-13 satellite image taken at 12:20 p.m. Eastern time October 29, has continued to gather strength as it heads directly for the mid-Atlantic region.
NOAA-NASA GOES Project

Hurricane Sandy barreled into the U.S. East Coast on October 29, bringing heavy rains, high winds and severe storm surges from the Carolinas to New England.

Sandy began its life inauspiciously the week before as “Tropical Depression 18” in the southwestern Caribbean Sea. Warm ocean waters, combined with little wind shear that could have torn the embryonic storm apart, allowed it to strengthen into a tropical storm and then a hurricane with winds of at least 74 miles per hour. At least 65 people died as Sandy ripped across Jamaica, Haiti, Cuba and the Bahamas.

As the massive storm skirted the southeastern states, first one trough of air pressure and then another guided it northeast and then toward the west and onshore. By this point it was transitioning from a hurricane (which gathers its strength from warm ocean waters) to an extratropical cyclone (which gathers strength from temperature gradients in the atmosphere).

No matter what you call it, Sandy is a record-breaking storm. It has already displayed the lowest central pressure ever recorded north of Cape Hatteras, N.C. As of 11 a.m. Eastern time on Monday, Sandy had a minimum central pressure of 943 millibars, breaking the record of 946 millibars from the 1938 “Long Island Express” hurricane.

This year’s Atlantic hurricane season has been busier than normal and even busier than predicted, with 19 named storms and 10 hurricanes. The season officially closes on November 30.

Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

NASA GOES Project: [Go to]

Hurricane Sandy information from the National Weather Service: [Go to]

Comments (3)

Please alert Science News to any inappropriate posts by clicking the REPORT SPAM link within the post. Comments will be reviewed before posting.

  • The central pressure of 940mb today of hurricane sandy is nothing compared to our 'perfect storm in Scotland 1993 of 914mb. This was called the Braer storm due to the previous week's storm causing the grounding of the oil tanker 'BRAER' on the south coast of Shetland. This perfect storm caused the eventual breakup of the tanker and the abandonment of salvage attempts.
    I remember this storm well as I was Master of an offshore anchor handling / tug and went to the rescue of the tanker in horrendous weather but my attempts were unsuccessful due to the prevailing weather (storm force 11). The tanker went aground 2 hours after I arrived on scene, the coastguard agency (MCA in the UK) had already evacuated the vessel by helicopter so there was no-one to take my tow line.
    David Theobald David Theobald
    Oct. 30, 2012 at 9:57pm
  • I could suggest a technique by which the we can reduce the destruction by hurricanes by 50 %
    Abel Barretto
    Canacona
    Goa
    India
    9422057978
    9423885867
    Abel Barretto Abel Barretto
    Oct. 31, 2012 at 10:08am
  • Well, Abel Barretto, you could. But you don't...
    -rocketmouse
    rocketmouse rocketmouse
    Nov. 5, 2012 at 9:19am
Registered readers are invited to post a comment. To encourage fruitful discussion, please keep your comments relevant, brief and courteous. Offensive, irrelevant, nonsensical and commercial posts will not be published. (All links will be removed from comments.)

You must register with Science News to add a comment. To log-in click here. To register as a new user, follow this link.

Follow Us