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When the sea is heated, a large amount of sea water evaporates and rises, the sea surface pressure decreases, new air comes in, and it rises, and this cycle will form a counterclockwise vortex in the Northern Hemisphere under the action of geostrophic deflection forces, and as long as there is energy to replenish it, the cyclone will become more and more powerful until the central wind speed exceeds the meter second, and it is called a typhoon, and the storm brought by a typhoon.
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How are typhoons formed?
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The necessary conditions for the formation of a typhoon are: the sea surface water temperature is above; a certain initial perturbation of positive vorticity; The ambient wind has less shear in the vertical direction; Low pressure or cloud disturbances at least a few degrees of latitude from the equator.
The initial stage of a typhoon is a tropical depression, from the initial low pressure circulation to the maximum average wind force near the center of the eight, generally takes about 2 days, the slow one takes three or four days, and the fast one only takes a few hours. During the development phase, the typhoon continuously absorbs energy until the central pressure reaches the lowest value and the wind speed reaches the maximum. After the typhoon makes landfall on land, it will be affected by the combined impact of ground friction and lack of energy, and the typhoon will quickly weaken and die.
Typhoons are a type of tropical cyclone. A tropical cyclone is a low-pressure vortex that occurs over the tropical or subtropical oceans and is a powerful and deep "tropical weather system". Tropical cyclones in the South China Sea and the Northwest Pacific are classified into six categories according to their maximum average wind strength (wind speed) near the center of the bottom layer, of which those with winds of 12 or more are collectively referred to as typhoons.
Broadly speaking, the term "typhoon" is not a tropical cyclone intensity. Tropical cyclones (including tropical storms, severe tropical storms and typhoons as defined by the World Meteorological Organization) with sustained winds of metres per second or more at their centre are referred to as typhoons. Officially, the term "typhoon" even refers directly to the tropical cyclone itself.
Tropical cyclones in the northwest Pacific reach tropical storm intensity, they are given a name. Names are provided by 14 countries and territories of the World Meteorological Organization's Typhoon Committee.
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Causes of typhoons: 1. There should be a wide enough tropical ocean surface, and the sea temperature should be higher; 2. There is a weak tropical vortex in advance; 3. There should be a sufficiently large deflection force of the earth's rotation, and the generation position should be 5 latitudes away from the equator; 4. Above the weak low pressure, the difference between the wind direction and wind speed between the high and low altitudes should be small.
Structure of a typhoon: A typhoon is a deep system of depression with a very low central pressure, with significant convergence towards the center in the lower layers and a major outward divergence at the top. If you cut the typhoon horizontally, you can see that there are three distinct areas, from the center to the outward
Typhoon eye area, cloud wall area, spiral rain belt area.
Pros and cons of typhoons: 1. Typhoons bring abundant fresh water to people. 2. Typhoons can also increase fishing production.
3. The maximum speed of the typhoon can reach more than 200 kilometers per hour. 4. Typhoons have made the temperate zone on the natural earth no longer exist, and many plants and animals will also become extinct due to their difficulty in adapting.
Typhoon Precautions:
Listen, watch or check the typhoon warning information on the Internet in time to understand the best anti-typhoon action countermeasures.
Close doors and windows tightly, and fasten structures that are easily blown by the wind.
Move from a dilapidated house to a safe place.
People in low-lying areas that may be flooded should be evacuated in a timely manner.
Check whether the electrical circuit, furnace, gas and other facilities are safe.
Kindergartens, primary and secondary schools should take temporary shelter measures and suspend classes when necessary.
Open-air group activities or large-scale indoor gatherings should be canceled in a timely manner, and evacuation should be done.
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Typhoons are initially caused by cumulonimbus clouds, which in tropical oceans are exposed to direct sunlight that can cause temperatures to rise above 26, at which point water vapor condenses into cumulonimbus clouds in the air. After the thermal expansion of the air, a low pressure center will be formed, and a convection system will gradually be formed, and a typhoon will slowly be formed.
A typhoon is a tropical cyclone that forms over a wide area of sea above the tropics or subtropics26. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) defines a tropical cyclone with sustained winds of 12 to 13 (i.e. magnitamines) as a typhoon or hurricane.
Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) defines a sustained wind speed of 118 156 km h at the center (called a typhoon. The western North Pacific (north of the equator, west of the international date line, and east of 100 degrees east longitude) is commonly referred to as a typhoon, while the North Atlantic and Eastern Pacific are commonly referred to as hurricanes.
Every year in summer and autumn, many violent storms called typhoons are generated in the northwest Pacific Ocean adjacent to China, some of which dissipate at sea, and some of which land come, bringing violent storms and rains, which are a type of natural disaster.
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Typhoons are a type of tropical cyclone. A tropical cyclone is a low-pressure vortex that occurs over the tropical or subtropical oceans and is a powerful and deep "tropical weather system". When the sea water is directly irradiated by the sun, a large amount of evaporation, after evaporation, the hot air in the area will flow upward, thus forming clouds, and the surrounding air will replenish the area after the hot air rises, thus forming a typhoon.
Viewed from above, the typhoon is a rotating cloud disk, and from the center outward, it is the eye area, the cloud wall area, and the rotating rain belt area. The eye area of the typhoon is a very peculiar area, where the weather is good, there are no strong winds and waves, and the eye of the storm is elliptical or round. In the Cloud Wall area, the weather here is the most violent, and the wind and rain are concentrated in this area, and beyond the Cloud Wall area, in the rotating rain band area, the wind and rain are much weaker.
Typhoon name rules.
The name of the typhoon is not taken after the typhoon, but has been determined for a long time. At the 30th meeting of the World Meteorological Organization, the naming of typhoons was standardized, and the reason why the naming method was standardized is to better remember and communicate, facilitate the transmission of warning information, and avoid the occurrence of confusing naming.
The naming method is to determine a naming table in advance, 140 names, which are composed of names given by many countries, and the names can be named in order. So these names will be reused later, and there will be a cycle. However, some typhoons that have caused significant damage will have their names kicked out of the naming list and new names added.
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Causes: Typhoons originate in tropical seas, where temperatures are high and large amounts of seawater evaporate into the air, creating a center of low pressure. As the air pressure changes and the earth itself moves, the incoming air also rotates, forming a whirlpool of air that rotates counterclockwise, which is called a tropical cyclone.
As long as the temperature does not drop, this tropical cyclone will become more and more powerful, and eventually a typhoon will form. Due to the heavy proportion of sea surface wind and water vapor, in the process of rising, it is cold to form typhoon rain.
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Natural conditions are necessary for the formation of typhoons, and typhoons form in the air above the vast ocean in summer.
First, the temperature is hot in summer, the surface temperature of the sea water is above 26 degrees Celsius, the heat of the sun will quickly evaporate the seawater, and the water vapor will form cumulus clouds in the air. The higher the temperature, the faster the water evaporates, and the more cumulus clouds form.
Second, the ocean area must be large enough, only in the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean will form typhoons and hurricanes, collectively known as tropical storms. The coast of China is the Pacific Ocean, the storms in the Pacific Ocean are typhoons, European and American countries are the Atlantic Ocean, and the tropical storms formed in the Atlantic Ocean are hurricanes.
Third, the two air currents of the ocean form a whirlpool in the air, such as the Pacific northwest wind, encountering the southeast wind from the direction of Australia, the two air currents merge to form a whirlpool, a large number of water vapor cumulus clouds accumulate in the whirlpool, forming a huge typhoon eye in 3 to 4 days.
The wind speed of the typhoon reaches 50 meters per second, and the coast is 100 kilometers to the land, and the typhoon is in a mess everywhere it goes.
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Before 2000, it was named by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center of the United States. Since 2000, the naming rights have been handed over to the Japan Meteorological Agency (Tokyo Regional Specialized Meteorological Center) in the region, and now the names of typhoons** are given to the 14 countries or regions of the Typhoon Committee, with 10 names in each country, for a total of 140 names to the Japan Meteorological Agency to name and number typhoons in order and recycle. >>>More