Weather: Hurricane Milton's magnitude brings veteran meteorologist to tears

An RnB Thug

El Capitan of The LOVE BOAT
Platinum Member

Milton Is Already a Storm for the Record Books​


Meteorologists were glued to their computers on Monday morning, watching virtual data as the Air Force Reserve Hurricane Hunter airplane made pass after pass through the eye of Hurricane Milton. Every time it did, it found the storm’s pressure had dropped and the eyewall wind speeds had increased, indicating that it was becoming more intense by the minute.
The hurricane went from a Category 1 storm at midnight to a Category 5 hurricane by noon. And it didn’t stop there.
By 8 p.m. on Monday, the storm’s maximum sustained wind speeds had increased to 180 miles per hour, making Milton one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes ever. Based on wind speed, it joined a handful of other hurricanes to rival the strongest Atlantic storm ever recorded: a 1980 hurricane named Allen, which had a peak wind speed of 190 m.p.h. before it made landfall along the United States-Mexico border.

As a small, compact system, however, Milton was more similar to Hurricane Wilma in 2005, which holds the record for the lowest pressure in a hurricane, another measure of a storm’s intensity.
Its small size, an excess of extremely warm waters in the Gulf of Mexico and calm atmospheric conditions allowed Milton to “explosively” intensify, as hurricane center forecasters noted Monday afternoon.


The standard meteorological definition of “rapid intensification” is 30 knots in 24 hours, or roughly 35 miles per hour daily. Milton increased by more than double this definition on Monday, at a pace similar to that of Wilma and another record storm, Hurricane Felix in 2007.

Hurricane Rita, which reached 180 m.p.h. wind speeds in 2005, created extensive damage when it made landfall in Louisiana, blowing windows out of buildings and pushing a strong surge inland. Rita packed a punch despite weakening to a Category 3 before landfall, something Milton is also likely to do as it nears Florida.

 
Top