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The strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded was Typhoon TIP (Taipei) in the Pacific Northwest on 12 October 1979, with an estimated sustained wind of 85 m s over its centre. The heaviest rainfall caused by tropical cyclones occurred on 7-8 January 1966. Tropical Cyclone "Dennis" rained 1144 mm in 12 hours.
The deadliest tropical cyclone was Cyclone Bengal in 1970, which killed at least 300,000 people from the associated wind and waves. The most devastating tropical cyclone was Hurricane Andrew in 1992, which struck the Bahamas, Florida in the United States, and other places, causing $26.5 billion in property damage. Class 17 870MPa
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A typhoon is a tropical cyclone that forms over a wide sea area above the tropics or subtropics26. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) defines a tropical cyclone with a central sustained wind speed of 12 to 13 as a typhoon or hurricane, and a central sustained wind speed of 118 156 km h is called a typhoon.
The western North Pacific, north of the equator, west of the international date line, and 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 the summer and autumn, many violent storms called typhoons occur in the northwest Pacific Ocean adjacent to Japan, some of which dissipate over the sea, while others land and bring violent storms and rains, which are a type of natural disaster.
Typhoons and hurricanes are both tropical cyclones, but they occur in different locations and are called by different names. In the western North Pacific, west of the International Date Line, including the South and East China Seas, it is called a typhoon; A tropical cyclone in the Atlantic Ocean or the eastern North Pacific is called a hurricane, which means a hurricane in the United States, a typhoon in the Philippines, China, and Japan, and a cyclone in the Southern Hemisphere.
The passage of a typhoon is often accompanied by strong convective weather such as strong winds and heavy rain or extremely heavy rain. The wind direction rotates counterclockwise over the Northern Hemisphere (clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere). On the weather map, the isobars and isotherms of a typhoon are approximated as a set of concentric circles.
The center of the typhoon is a low-pressure center, dominated by the vertical movement of the airflow, the wind is calm, the weather is clear, and the area near the eye of the typhoon is a whirlpool wind and rain area, with heavy wind and rain.
The strongest typhoon on record with the lowest pressure near its centre. Typhoons are caused by high ground temperatures, rising air currents, and a high proportion of sea surface wind and water vapor. The ground air is replenished along the ground, and the sea surface temperature is low to absorb the air and water vapor rising from the ground to supplement the space, and the temperature difference is small due to the large sea surface.
There is a lot of water vapor that accumulates over the sea surface, and the rainfall is widespread, and when the water vapor condenses, the volume decreases, and the surrounding water vapor replenishes to form a strong wind.
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The super typhoon pressure is maintained at about 935 hPa, the severe typhoon pressure is maintained at 945-960 hPa, the typhoon pressure is maintained at 965-975 hPa, the severe tropical storm pressure is maintained at 980-990 hPa, the tropical storm pressure is maintained at 995-1000 hPa, and the tropical depression pressure is maintained at 1005-1010 hPa.
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The center of a typhoon is actually the center of depression, with a standard atmospheric pressure of 101 kPa, while the center of a typhoon is mostly between 90 and 100 kPa
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It's kind of high.
The lower the central pressure of the typhoon, the greater the wind speed, and the higher the typhoon level.
The wind speed of a 1000 hPa typhoon is around 20 meters per second.
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This air pressure.
The wind is not too strong. The central pressure is below 975 hPa (33 m/s), which is a Category 12 typhoon. Below 900 hPa (70 m/s) is a Category 5 hurricane.
The central pressure and wind speed of the typhoon can be approximated in this way:
Barometric pressure (hPa).
Wind speed (m seconds).