Largest and Most Intense Tropical Cyclone On Record Hits the Philippines 160
mrspoonsi writes "A monstrous storm has arisen in the Western Pacific. The storm, called 'Supter-Typhoon Haiyan', has become the year's most intense. It bore down on the central Philippines this morning, packing winds up to 195 mph (314 km/h), with gusts up to 235 mph (378 km/h), threatening massive damage and sending over 100,000 people into evacuation centers. (Animation of landfall.) Flood waters went as high as 10 feet. The secretary general of the Philippine National Red Cross said, 'About 90% of the infrastructure and establishments were heavily damaged.'"
Typhoons are ranked my pressure, not winds (Score:5, Informative)
It's estimated central pressure is 899 mb but it could be lower. The lower the pressure the stronger the storm. Since 1987, there have been only four storms in the western Pacific with a central pressure below 899 mb (Megi in 2010, 885 mb; Flo in 1990 890 mb; Ruth in 1991 895 mb; and Yuri in 1991 895 mb)
Re:Typhoons are ranked my pressure, not winds (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Typhoons are ranked my pressure, not winds (Score:5, Informative)
The diameter (extent of tropical storm-force winds) of hurricane Katrina was about 600 km, which is rather large for a storm. Hurricane Sandy (largest on record in the Atlantic) was about 1500 km across. I have to remind my European friends about this when they comment about the long recovery time from these storms for a "so-called" first-world nation. These storms were as large or larger than entire European countries - recovery efforts in an area that large are going to be slow even in a first-world country.
The rate of travel and rainfall amounts matter too. Hurricane Mitch [wikipedia.org] was only a category 1 when it made landfall and a tropical storm or tropical depression most of its time over land, but it's the second deadliest Atlantic hurricane on record because it lingered for almost two weeks dropping torrential rain causing massive flooding and landslides.
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Re:Typhoons are ranked my pressure, not winds (Score:5, Informative)
There's only been ONE hurricane to ever make landfall in the US with that low a pressure, the 1935 labor day hurricane. To put the numbers in perspective Sandy made landfall at 945mb and Katrina at 920mb.
Re:Typhoons are ranked my pressure, not winds (Score:5, Informative)
There's only been ONE hurricane to ever make landfall in the US with that low a pressure, the 1935 labor day hurricane.
Hurricanes (and typhoons) lose strength when they move over cooler water, so the strongest storms are those that stay in the tropics as they proceed westward. So the most intense Atlantic storms make landfall in Central America rather than the US coast. Wilma (2005) was the most intense Atlantic storm ever recorded, at 882 mbar, and Gilbert was a close second at 882 mbar. Both made landfall in Central America.
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And the Pacific basin is larger. More space for the hurricane to develop without hitting land.
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And the Pacific basin is larger. More space for the hurricane to develop without hitting land.
True, but that only explains part of it. The South Pacific is even larger than the North Pacific, but fewer big storms occur there. In fact, there are fewer big storms anywhere in the Southern Hemisphere. Oceans in the Southern Hemisphere tend to be cooler because of the Antarctic icebox, and the wind shear is stronger and can tear apart storms before they really get started.
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I reckon people care more about sustained wind speeds and gust speeds though...
it's not like you're going to pop or crush from the pressure itself..
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Let's also be clear that no direct measurements were took. Everything about the storm from its windspeed to minimum pressure is an estimate based on meteorological theory. Only in the Atlantic basin do they fly aircraft into cyclones and actually figure out what the pressure and wind-speed actually are.
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Typhoons are ranked your pressure? :P
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Re:Name (Score:5, Informative)
Haiyan is the name given to the super typhoon by the World Meteorological Organization (source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-24863480 [bbc.co.uk] )
What I understood is that the Philippines counts the number of storms that hit the country (this is the 25th this year!!), so in their counting, it gets a name with a Y. (Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/searealtime/2013/11/08/from-haiyan-to-yolanda-how-the-philippines-names-its-storms/ [wsj.com] )
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We localize the names to make them easier to remember, at least for us over here.
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Haiyan is what the International community calls it. [wikipedia.org] The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration has its own naming scheme [wikipedia.org]
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Mobilize the Help Now (Score:4, Insightful)
I imagine the suffering from this storm will be severe and can only hope that the help was mobilized before the storm struck. These storm victims are going to need everything to survive. Food, housing and medical care as well as tools and livestock to start over could save countless lives. Imagine a storm that severe striking Miami or New York.
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Even if one is selfish but not completely stupid, they'll understand that other nations come running when we need help too.
Level 7 on modified Saffir scale (Score:5, Interesting)
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I think force is a better measure of strength since many structures fail at some threshold amount of force which varies as the square of wind speed. A wall might withstand the force of a 120 mph wind but fail at 130 mph or a shed might handle a 70 mph wind but fail at 80 mph. The amount of damage then varies with the number of structures vulnerable to the maximum force applied to them by
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Re:Level 7 on modified Saffir scale (Score:5, Interesting)
Living in Canada, in an area where there fiercest winds we have are 100 km/h
Really? Really? Come on man, I'm in Alberta right now and we see 120km/h and 130km/h gusts through the mountains, and we haven't even hit on tornado's, updrafts(favorite in southern ontario), microbursts, and those lovely unpredictable t-storms in the summer that spawn in the lakes, or prairies. We sure do see winds higher than 100km/h.
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Yes we see wind gusts well over 100KM/H, but very little sustained like what would would get out of a hurricane.
I see you've never been to the north or south of Alberta. Sustained winds in the 110km/h range are common, in fact they can be bad enough to shut down highways to truck traffic.
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Canada's a big place. I live near in Ottawa. Rarely do we see sustained winds above 100 km/h. No tornados in this area either (although further south in Ontario sees a few small ones).
Ottawa is the odd man out in the province, rarely do you see much of anything outside of severe thunderstorms. And while you don't see tornado's you do have them up that way, and further south in Ontario, we get into the northern tip of tornado alley. And if you mean "small" as in F4 and EF3's then I guess...that's small. Really even as densely packed as southern ontario is, we miss a few of them and only can guess due to reported damage, further into northern ontario there are plenty as well, the diffe
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Reading comprehension fail.
He didn't say Canada never sees winds above 100 kph.
He said he lives in an area of Canada that never sees winds above 100 kph.
Big difference.
For the record, the Interior of BC where I live sees gusts above 100 kph. Not very often, though, and rarely for very long.
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Reading comprehension fail.
Says the person who missed the implied "words between the lines."
Not Climate Change (Score:1, Troll)
Remember kids, this is weather, not climate, and just natural a oscillation of the normal pattern.
We sure couldn't afford to have this sort of shit every year.
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You could make the stronger statement, "hurricane frequency and intensity are strongly influenced by a trace gas in the atmosphere that it is hypothesised strongly influences the Earth's radiative balance", but that would be extremely silly. Please also note that this is almost certainly more related to the PDO than it is to the SUV you almost certainly drive.
No, that was extremely silly. (Score:1)
Saying "but that would be extremely silly" is the extremely silly part.
Well, maybe saying this: "the SUV you almost certainly drive." tops it in crass stupidity, but it's a close run thing.
Here you go: CO2 isn't only a product of SUVs.
And that temperature? 33C of it is from the greenhouse gasses that blanket the earth, the single largest contributor that has no control to remove on a century to millenia timescale is CO2, the other (H2O) raining out within weeks and therefore not self-sustaining on even mont
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I am not a mathematician but I don't think the heat transfer from the phase change actually sends much of that out away from the planet. TFA mentioned ocean temperatures of 30C. That sounds like a catastrophe factory to me.
BTW, everybody, I'm sorta proud to be thought a troll, but a simple look at my history will clarify that my original post was yet another lame attempt at sarcasm.
I blame China (Score:1)
Largest and most intensive trop system since Charo (Score:4, Funny)
Tornado the size of a hurricane (Score:4, Informative)
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With gusts up to an EF-5.
different beasts, but yeah (Score:3)
I'm no meteorologist but those wind speeds would make this an F4 tornado. We get tornadoes here in the middle of North America, but they don't last for days. Good luck to everybody there.
Very strong tropical cyclones like this one do contain very high sustained winds equivalent to what you would find in a significant (F3 or higher) tornado, which is why the NWS occasionally issues blanket tornado warnings for areas lying in the path of the most intense and dangerous part of a hurricane's eyewall, which is usually the NE quadrant. The practice is controversial, though, and has been inconsistently applied. Keep in mind that wind speed isn't everything when it comes to how much damage is done
bet they are happy .... (Score:3)
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Some relief agencies (Score:5, Informative)
I'm sure that the relief agencies would be happy to take a donation. I think these are correct, but double check for yourself. I apologize for not including everybody, please don't let that stop you from making a donation.
American Red Cross [redcross.org]
British Red Cross [redcross.org.uk]
Canadian Red Cross [redcross.ca]
Australian Red Cross [redcross.org.au]
New Zealand Red Cross [redcross.org.nz]
Irish Red Cross [redcross.ie]
Deutsches Rotes Kreuz [www.drk.de]
Croix-Rouge Francaise [croix-rouge.fr]
Röda Korset [redcross.se]
Røde Kors [rodekors.no]
Røde Kors [rodekors.dk]
Rode Kruis [rodekruis.nl]
Schweizerisches Rotes Kreuz [redcross.ch]
Croce Rossa Italiana [cri.it]
Cruz Roja Española [cruzroja.es]
Polski Czerwony Krzyz [www.pck.pl]
Salvation Army donations [salvationarmy.org]
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I can't donate because they don't accept Bitcoins or World of Warcraft gold.
Not for anything (Score:2)
Re:Not for anything (Score:5, Funny)
Just hope the red light cameras get knocked out first. I'd hate to see the ticket when my car gets blown through a red light when moving near 200MPH!
followup to recent 7.1 earthquake (Score:5, Informative)
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A magnitude 7.1 earthquake struck the PI a few weeks ago which cause widespread damage to buildings and infrastructure. Bridges collapsed and many roads are still impassible. The earthquake and hundreds of strong aftershocks serve to intensify the effects of this storm.
In case it is not fully clear... the earthquake exacerbated the effect on human infrastructure and safety. It did not intensify the windspeed or lower the pressure of the storm.
I'm sure 99% of people will read it in this manner, I just want to forestall the 'earthquakes cause superstorms' correlation.
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No, this is what you get if you sacrifice the wrong colour of goat. Forgetting the entire goat earns you a free visit from Balmer.
10 feet? (Score:1)
How about using metric system (ISO standard)?
Typhoon Ida (1958) was more intense (Score:3)
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Super typhoon Ida achieved it's maximum intensity well out at sea when it had a tiny eye, similar to Wilma when it rapidly intensified in it's early stages. Ida subsequently lost most of energy before it landfall in Japan as a cat-3.
Meanwhile Super Typhoon Haiyan made landfall at near peak intensity with an eye wall diameter of nearly 20km..
.
When they come to clean it up... (Score:3)
...hopefully they'll leave the cholera at home this time.
Supter-Typhoon Haiyan (Score:1)
10K dead (Score:2)
Re:oh noes (Score:5, Insightful)
I would say that a huge storm that can possibly make millions of people homeless, and kill thousands would definitely fit the description "stuff that matters".
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But what can the /. community do? We're all underpaid tech nerds living off Ramen noodles. =(
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You can help out directly by creating an account on openstreetmap.org and then helping to map the buildings in the (likely) most affected city of Tacloban. We have set up a task manager job to track the progress of the mapping work at the link below. Every little bit of extra mapping work helps out first responders by giving them a better picture of where aid is likely to be needed. Imagine trying to navigate around a city of 200,000 people without decent maps and then on top of that, a city where many r
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efinitely fit the description "stuff that matters".
Yes, it matters on the whole. No, it doesn't really belong on a tech news website, but then again, a good percentage of the stuff coming through the firehose is tabloid tripe these days.
I don't have anything against helping people out but I read /. to get away from the drama of reality for awhile. You might as well put one of those stupid red tickers at the bottom of the page and be done with it.
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This isn't a tech news site, it's a STEM news site -- and meteorology and climatology are both sciences.
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Most things being reported by mainstream newsmedia fit the description "stuff that matters". The question is, why does this matter to STEM nerds, which ostensibly is the intent of this website? (I say STEM nerds because just about anyone interested in a particular thing can be called a " nerd" nowadays; however this website started when nerd had a more specific meaning.)
The answer is, Slashdot cherry-picks clickbait, polarizing-to-STEM-nerds stories out of mainstream newsmedia. Rather than having any rea
Re:oh noes (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah how dare they live where natural disasters could hit! They should be in one of the few regions in North America or Europe which have an unusually low number of natural disasters. Anywhere else and you might as well be sitting on god's shooting range like those crazy Japanese who nobody ever offers aid to due to their recklessness.
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People are welcome to live where they want, but it does help to build something strong enough to keep the rain out. There is no such thing as a 'natural' disaster. Poverty and corruption and negligence are responsible for the suffering.
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Yeah, fuck 'em. I feel the same about the assholes who rebuilt their houses in the same place they were flooded out by the Mississippi river, and demanded to be covered by their insurance at the same rates! The Mexicans sat under Wilma for 48 full hours and nobody died and property damage was minimal, including the houses on the beach. Lights were back on in the center of town in less than 12 hours. Well made concrete and underground electrical lines hold up pretty well. Sorry, I cannot sympathize. Their ho
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Uh, I was responding to a comment about Sandy and New Jersey. Poverty is hardly an issue for those people with their beach houses there. And if they want to rebuild, they damn well better do it right next time. As for the Philippines, corruption is the cause of the poverty and whatever disasters they suffer, not nature. And like the AC said, praying for them doesn't do squat. Try harder.
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I was responding to this specifically [slashdot.org] before you jumped in. The disaster is still man made. I did not specify which man. Though I will say now that the ones on top the totem pole are the ones to look at. They neglected to care for their people. Hurricanes, regardless how big, don't make surprise attacks these days.
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Build with what? There are plenty of people who live in shacks made of simple materials because having a roof over their head is better than saving up for 1000 years at their rate of income for a house built according to western standards.
Re:oh noes (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah how dare they live where natural disasters could hit! They should be in one of the few regions in North America or Europe which have an unusually low number of natural disasters.
People tend to live in places which have some unique economic advantage: fertile ground, a navigable river or deep water port. The miner will be looking for mountain-building, the rancher, grasslands on which to raise cattle. To get what you want you can't always play it safe.
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Wow I thought I was well clear of the Poe effect...
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It's called a 'tease'. The weather segment gets the highest ad rates. It doesn't matter that the department is run by soothsayers.
Re: You didn't, for a start. (Score:2)
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I also can't demonstrate my points in reality, and rely on fiction as the entire basis of my perspectives. Let's have an Atlas Shrugged party together(BYOB, parasites).
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Could you pretend to have a point? In the context of the post, I was pretending to not care about facts at all; including a factual argument would have weakened the point.
Re:Manbearpig in 5...4...3... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Manbearpig in 5...4...3... (Score:5, Interesting)
Interesting,eh? This is when Slashdot moderation gets scary.
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Yes. Obama created this storm to destroy his Kenyan birth certificate that his mother secreted at an Indonesia Bank ...
Really? I heard that was all just a plot to help hide the fact that Obama is a lizard man* [theatlanticwire.com] and Biden used to wear a mullet [hotair.com] (party on Joe!).
* That was enlightening. There are some Slashdotters I can peg to a number of those theories..
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The "Fancy Haired One"? What's scary is that could be applied to several people of similar political bent.
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global warming doesn't care about poor people
Nope, sorry... global warming is false. This is all part of God's plan. Someone in the Philippines must have admitted they support gay marriage.
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DON'T TREAD ON ME!!!!
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Everybody knows wind is cold.
Never ridden a motorcycle in 43C/110F day? That wind feels like a hair dryer set on Hot/High.
Re:Hair dryer? (Score:2)
I always thought it was more like a blast furnace. Riding through the Sacramento Valley in summer, leathers zipped and gauntlets on, I used to marvel at the fools in shorts and shirtsleeves, and wonder how they survived at all. By around 160kph every leak or gap in my protection felt as if it was on fire.
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Good heavens, no! I hope that you and your family will be able to eat next year, despite the extra $5.27 you paid in federal taxes for foreign aid and relief. It accounts for a whopping 1% of the federal budget.
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I suppose it wouldn't be fair to go back to when the Earth was a molten glob and the proto-Moon collided with it.
You're absolutely correct when you say that.
Now that's one helluva typhoon.
No, no it is not. A typhoon is an atmospheric event and requires, you know, an actual atmosphere in which to occur.