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  2. Warming oceans made every 2024 hurricane stronger ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/warming-oceans-made-every-2024...

    "Every hurricane in 2024 was stronger than it would have been 100 years ago," Dr. Daniel Gilford, climate scientist at Climate Central and lead author of the study, said in a release.

  3. Dangerous hurricanes are being made even worse because of ...

    www.aol.com/dangerous-hurricanes-being-made-even...

    Since 1980, tropical cyclones, a generic term for hurricanes and tropical storms, have cost communities $1.4 trillion in damages and claimed more than 7,200 lives, according to The National Center ...

  4. Hurricane dynamics and cloud microphysics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_dynamics_and...

    Hurricanes are mixed-phase clouds, meaning that liquid and solid water (ice) are both present in the cloud. Typically, liquid water dominates at altitudes lower than the freezing level and solid water at altitudes where the temperature is colder than -40 °C. Between 0 °C and -40 °C water can exists in both phases simultaneously.

  5. Tropical cyclones and climate change - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropical_cyclones_and...

    Rapidly intensifying cyclones are hard to forecast and therefore pose additional risk to coastal communities. [7] Warmer air can hold more water vapor: the theoretical maximum water vapor content is given by the Clausius–Clapeyron relation, which yields ≈7% increase in water vapor in the atmosphere per 1 °C (1.8 °F) warming.

  6. Hurricanes are now twice as likely to zip from minor to ...

    www.aol.com/news/hurricanes-now-twice-likely-zip...

    In 2017, before it devastated Puerto Rico, Hurricane Maria went from a Category 1 storm with 90 mph (145 kph) to a top-of-the-chart whopper Hurricanes are now twice as likely to zip from minor to ...

  7. Maximum potential intensity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_potential_intensity

    On shorter time-scales, variability in the maximum potential intensity is commonly linked to sea surface temperature perturbations from the tropical mean, as regions with relatively warm water have thermodynamic states much more capable of sustaining a tropical cyclone than regions with relatively cold water. [9]

  8. What we know — and don’t — about how climate change impacts ...

    www.aol.com/know-don-t-climate-change-093000175.html

    In the years since, hurricanes appear to be getting stronger, according to a 2020 paper from researchers at NOAA and the University of Wisconsin. They found that the likelihood that a cyclone will ...

  9. Rapid intensification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rapid_intensification

    The tendency for strong tropical cyclones to have undergone rapid intensification and the infrequency with which storms gradually strengthen to strong intensities leads to a bimodal distribution in global tropical cyclone intensities, with weaker and stronger tropical cyclones being more commonplace than tropical cyclones of intermediate ...