Cyclone Sidr: It Gets Worse
Cyclone Sidr, currently in the Bay of Bengal and headed towards India or Bangladesh, recently became the 15th Category 4 or 5 storm of 2007, with sustained winds estimated at 115 knots or more than 130 miles per hour. Now, it's all a matter of where and when.
The storm is expected to go through so-called "eyewall replacement cycles" -- weakening and then strengthening again -- over the next few days. Forty-eight hours out, it may start weakening before landfall. But let's face it: Irrespective of the particular meteorological details, we've got a powerful storm that is definitely going to hit somewhere where there could be very severe damage and/or loss of life. The big picture is this: Sidr is bad, bad news.
Naval Research Laboratory
To emphasize that, consider this forecast track for the storm, courtesy of the
Meanwhile, the Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory provides us this image of the
AOML
However, if we peer below the surface and seek to examine the total heat potential in this particular basin, there's a revealing finding. It appears that the further west Sidr travels in the direction of
AOML
Now we watch and wait ... and, in the meantime, we can also chide our U.S.-centric media. I just checked CNN.com, and despite its devastating potential, see no mention yet of Cyclone Sidr.
Find this article at: http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/blogs/hurricanes-storms/cyclone-sidr-47111309
No comments:
Post a Comment