Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2019–20 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season was a slightly above-average season in tropical cyclone and subtropical cyclone formation west of 90°E.The season officially began on 15 November, however, the formation of the first system—Zone of Disturbed Weather 01—occurred on 22 July 2019, well before the official start of the season.
Name Duration Peak intensity Areas affected Damage (Deaths Refs Wind speed Pressure Flora: 1 – 5 December 1964: 140 km/h (85 mph) 965 hPa (28.50 inHg)
The season's first storm, Moderate Tropical Storm Ana, formed as a zone of disturbed weather on 20 January 2022, marking the latest first system in a Southwest Indian Ocean cyclone season ever. [1] [2] The second, and strongest storm of the season, Cyclone Batsirai, formed on 24 January, and became a long-lived and powerful storm.
Just a few hours later, the MFR designated the disturbance as Zone of Disturbed Weather 01. [6] Soon after, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA) on the disturbance, noting that despite being in an environment with high wind shear, it was intensifying. [7] Later that day, the disturbance had intensified into a tropical ...
The "area of disturbed weather" currently has a low chance for development and is expected to approach the Lesser Antilles during the early to middle part of next week. ... The current cone ...
On 11 January, the MFR marked a zone of disturbed weather, citing the conducive conditions induced by the MJO and an equatorial Rossby wave. The monsoon trough north-northeast of Madagascar had intensified several days prior, as convergence transferred moisture aloft. [4]
On the following day, it was classified as a zone of disturbed weather by the MFR. [108] Convection had accelerated and was near to the circulation's center. [ 109 ] During 22 February, the system began to show signs of organization, and the system gained sufficient organization, noted by curved cloud bands, to be classified as a tropical ...
The same Zone of Disturbed Weather which exited on 20 December, again re-entered on 28 December, following with another Zone of Disturbed Weather, designated 06. On 1 January, 06 intensified into Tropical Storm Danilo. It became the second longest system and dissipated on 12 January.