Mighty hurricanes get mightier
These and other strong tropical cyclones have become more powerful in recent years.
Web edition : Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008
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LOOK IN THE EYEThe strongest North Atlantic hurricanes, such as 2005’s Wilma (seen in visible light at left and in false color denoting cloud heights at right), have been getting even stronger in recent years, a new analysis suggests.Full Story NASA/GSFC/LaRC/JPL, MISR Team

Some of the world’s strongest storms, particularly North Atlantic hurricanes, have, on average, gained wind speed during the past three decades, thanks to a warming trend in many of the ocean basins where such storms are spawned.

New analyses reported in the Sept. 4 Nature indicate that in the strongest tropical cyclones — also known as hurricanes in the North Atlantic and typhoons in the North Pacific — peak wind speeds increased as much as 3 meters per second each decade from 1981 to 2006.

In other words, the strongest North Atlantic hurricanes in the 1990s had peak wind speeds about 10 kilometers per hour faster than those in the region’s strongest storms of the 1980s. Wind speeds measured for the largest storms from 2000 to 2006 were faster still, says James P. Kossin, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

Using satellite observations of more than 2,000 tropical cyclones worldwide, Kossin and his colleagues estimated each cyclone’s peak winds by looking at the temperatures of the tallest clouds spotted during the storm’s lifetime. Previous research, including data gathered by instruments dropped from aircraft, has shown that the colder and higher the clouds, the faster the winds at ground level, Kossin says.

The researchers found that the largest increases in cyclone peak winds were in the North Atlantic and eastern North Pacific oceans, regions where sea surface temperatures had warmed from 1981 to 2006.

Cyclones are essentially heat engines that extract power from warm seas, says Kossin. The larger the temperature difference between the ocean surface and the upper atmosphere, the larger a cyclone can become, he notes.

The new study is the first to use the same analytical technique to examine cyclone activity in a number of ocean basins, says Peter J. Webster, an atmospheric scientist at Georgia Tech in Atlanta. The findings clarify and confirm the results of a more limited analysis he and his colleagues reported in 2005, he notes.

The new study is “further evidence for the effect of global warming on hurricane intensity,” says Kerry Emanuel, an atmospheric scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Even though there hasn’t been a significant increase in the total number of tropical cyclones worldwide, the new research “offers definitive evidence that there are more of the very strongest hurricanes around the world,” he adds.

The strongest storms, which “used to be category 2 and 3 storms in the 1950s, are now category 4 and 5 storms,” agrees Judy Curry, an atmospheric scientist at Georgia Tech.

Some researchers, however, question the new findings. Chris Landsea, an atmospheric scientist at the National Hurricane Center in Miami, notes that storm strength in the Atlantic Basin tends to fluctuate in cycles spanning many decades, a trend the new analysis doesn’t capture because its period of satellite observations is too short. Also, he notes, Indian Ocean tropical cyclones after 1997 were observed by a new satellite viewing at a different angle from that used by earlier instruments — a factor that could have influenced the team’s results for those storms.


Found in: Earth
Comments 6
  • I'm a little concerned about the use of the phrase "global warming" in this article as it suggests a long term process occurring in lockstep with CO2 concentrations. For Atlantic hurricanes, the flip of the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) in 1995 correlates with the sharp increase in tropical activity since then. Other periods of a warm AMO correlate with other active periods, e.g. the 1930s to 1950s.

    This is a cyclic process and should flip back not too long from now.
    Ric Werme Ric Werme
    Sep. 5, 2008 at 9:26pm
  • The comment I wish to make is that here in Colorado we can find the deposits left by hurricanes that blew through here in the Mesozoic (an arm of the gulf ran right through here). It was warmer then, but I have never heard a word about the hurricane deposits showing the signature of Giant Hurricanes, In any rate it could be measured. Likewise it was noticeably warmer 150,000 years ago (and the polar bears DIDN'T go extinct). It would be VERY easy to find, along the gulf, the deposits those hurricanes left--measure them and correlate with temperature. Thus, one of the gems in the global warming crown is subject to being proven--one way or the other. My bet is that warmer weather increases shear and results in smaller hurricanes. Anybody need a really neat PhD topic?
    Stan Kerns
    Stanley Kerns Stanley Kerns
    Sep. 4, 2008 at 5:50pm
  • This appears to be an instance of political plum plucking... e.g. "Don't bother me with the facts, I've already made up my mind." This is dangerous for Science, and should be avoided always. I'm not saying that anthrogenic warming of equatorial oceans doesn't exist. It may be true that storms are getting stronger as well. It's all so variable, and climate trends depend on the baseline you start with. It's always more complicated than a political buzzword, and a 30 second spin spot. What about anthrogenic cooling caused by the burning of forests and increased coal use by tropical, and sub-tropical economies? Particulate matter in the high atmosphere can cause a global cooling effect, and increase the differential in temperature between tropical oceans, and mid-latitude oceans. The statement that storms are driven by heat is incorrect. Storms are driven by the difference in temperature between two regions, not absolute temperature. This study needs a much longer baseline, and more parameters to be valid re: the conclusions.
    James Boettcher James Boettcher
    Sep. 4, 2008 at 12:58pm
  • We need a war on hurricanes,
    Brian Sandler brian334@peoplepc.com

    I recently received a patent on a machine designed to destroy hurricanes.
    At my website http://bsandler.com there is a complete description of the machine.
    Please contact me at the above address if you have any questions.
    Thanks,
    Brian Sandler
    Brian Sandler Brian Sandler
    Sep. 4, 2008 at 11:20am
  • Science News needs to be more careful in their articles that suggest global warming. For example several years ago I was appalled to see a very misleading article where winter pictures of the Shenandoah Valley in VA from the early 1900's were compared with summer pictures of the same area in the late 1900's. As every airplane pilot knows well the haze that occurs in the summer greatly reduces visibility compared to winter. But the Science News article claimed the reduced visibility proved global warming was destroying visibility in the Shenandoah Valley.
    jerry clontz jerry clontz
    Sep. 4, 2008 at 10:19am
  • A statistical comparison of hurricanes in solar cycles 16, 17, 18, 19 (ca 1923 through 1964) might be less political since the 1970s and 1980s were relatively quiet times hurricane wise. Predicating a changed average off a time period of relatively low activity is absent, and politicized, science.
    ba nonymous ba nonymous
    Sep. 3, 2008 at 12:18pm
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