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Jova was also one of the fastest–intensifying tropical cyclones on record in the Eastern Pacific tropical cyclone basin. [1] Jova was the tenth named storm, seventh hurricane, fifth major hurricane [a] of the 2023 Pacific hurricane season. Jova originated from a tropical wave that entered the Pacific Ocean on September 1. The system briskly ...
Hurricane Jova was a powerful Category 3 Pacific hurricane that made landfall on southwestern Mexico in October 2011. The tenth named storm, ninth hurricane and fifth major hurricane of the 2011 Pacific hurricane season , Jova developed from a tropical disturbance that initially formed on October 5, 2011.
The name Jova has been used for seven tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. Hurricane Jova (1981) – Category 1 hurricane that passed north of Hawaii as a tropical depression; Hurricane Jova (1987) – Category 2 hurricane that stayed at sea; Hurricane Jova (1993) – Category 4 hurricane that paralleled the Mexican coast
There, Jova underwent a burst of rapid intensification in which it went from a 70 mph (110 km/h) tropical storm to a 160 mph (260 km/h) Category 5 hurricane in a 24‑hour period ending at 03:00 UTC on September 7, an increase of 90 mph (150 km/h). [25] Later that day, Jova started an eyewall replacement cycle, starting a weakening trend.
Hurricane Jova, churning west across the open Pacific Ocean, strengthened into a major Category 5 hurricane for a time from Wednesday evening into Thursday morning in the Eastern Pacific. However ...
The 2011 Pacific hurricane season was a Near average season in terms of named storms, although it had an above average number of hurricanes and major hurricanes.During the season, 13 tropical depressions formed along with 11 tropical storms, 10 hurricanes and 6 major hurricanes.
Hurricane John, the most recent Category 3 hurricane in the Eastern Pacific, on September 23, 2024.. Category 3 is the third-highest classification on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale, and categorizes tropical cyclones with 1-minute maximum sustained winds between 96 and 112 knots (110 and 129 mph; 178 and 207 km/h; 49 and 58 m/s).
The 2005 Pacific hurricane season was a near-average Pacific hurricane season which produced fifteen named storms, seven hurricanes and two major hurricanes. It was also the second consecutive season in which no tropical cyclone of at least tropical storm intensity made landfall .