TROPICAL STORM FREDDY - GEOGRAPHY

News: Over 60 dead as cyclone hits second time

 

What's in the news?

       Mozambique and Malawi were counting the cost of Tropical Storm Freddy, which killed more than 60 people, injured scores and left a trail of destruction as it ripped through southern Africa for the second time in a month over the week-end.

       Port Quelimane, Mozambique was the worst affected area due to the storm.

 

Cyclones:

       Cyclones are a type of low-pressure environment with rapid inward air circulation.

       In the Northern Hemisphere, air flows counter clockwise, while in the Southern Hemisphere, it circulates clockwise.

 

Tropical Cyclones:

       The term ‘Tropical Cyclone’ is used by the World Meteorological Organization to describe weather systems with winds greater than ‘Gale Force’ (minimum of 63 km per hour).

       Tropical cyclones are formed in the region between the Tropics of Capricorn and Cancer.

       They are large-scale weather systems that form over tropical or subtropical oceans and coalesce into surface wind circulation.

       Tropical cyclones are one of the world’s most destructive natural disasters.

 

Favorable Conditions for the Formation of Tropical Cyclone:

       A large area of water surface with a temperature above 27° C

       The Coriolis force is strong enough to form a cyclonic vortex.

       Variations in the vertical wind speed are minor.

       A weak low-pressure area or low-level cyclonic circulation already exists.

       Above the sea level system, there should be a higher divergence.

 

Local Names:

       North Atlantic (including Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico): Hurricanes

       Eastern and Central North Pacific: Hurricanes

       Western Northern Pacific: Typhoons

       Arabian Sea/Northern Indian Ocean: Tropical Cyclones

       South Indian Ocean: Tropical Cyclones/Willy-Willy for southwest Australia

       Coral Sea/South Pacific: Tropical Cyclone.