Eye Wall - region immediately surrounding the center, strongest winds, heavy rains, turbulence
Rain Bands - spiraling strips ofclouds in the fringes associated with rainfall
Effects of Tropical Cyclones
Strong Winds
StormSurge
HeavyRains
Classifications of Tropical Cyclones
Tropical Depression (wind speed 61 kph or less)
Tropical Storm (wind speed 62-88 kph)
Severe Tropical Storm (wind speed 89-117 kph)
Typhoon (wind speed 118-184 kph)
Super Typhoon (wind speed exceeding 185 kph)
Impending signs of a typhoon
Increasedocean swell
Changes inclouds
Barometricpressure drop
Abrupt changes in wind speed
Storm Surge
A localized unusual increase ofsea water level beyond the predicted astronomical tide level primarily due to intense winds and lowered atmospheric pressure during the passage of an intense tropical cyclone from sea to land
Buildings, roads, bridges, piers, and other infrastructure may not only submerge, they can also be washed away and destroyed when a storm surge hits an area if they are not strongly rooted on the ground
Thunderstorm
A violent, transient type of weather disturbance associated withthousands of cumulonimbus clouds at which usually involves lightning and thunder, strong winds, intense rainfall and occasionally tornadoes and hail
Hazards associated with Thunderstorms
Lightning
Hail
Tornadoes
Flash floods
Flooding
The abnormal rise of water level in rivers, coastal areas, plains and in highly urbanized centers which may be a result of natural phenomena, human activities or both
Effects of Flooding
Loss of lives and damage to amenities and loss of access to basic necessities
Power loss
Domestic potable water loss/shortage
Risk of acquiring waterborne diseases
Economic hardships
Mitigating Flood Hazard
Flood hazard assessment and mapping
Flood prediction
Flood forecasting and warning
Flood-control engineering measures
What to do BEFORE a flood
Tuned in to news in TV and radio for updates, flood warnings, evacuation alerts
Gather/call all family members to inform them of impending flood
Place important/delicate personal property to higher ground to avoid damage
What to do DURING a flood
Avoid having to walk/drive through floodwaters
Wear boots to avoid being electrocuted
Turn off gas lines/cooking gas tanks
Shutdown electricity from control panels
What to do AFTER a flood
Take precautions against risk in property that may have been structurally compromised and contaminated
Document the damage to your property
El Niño
Refers to the large-scale ocean-atmospheric climate interaction linked to a periodic warming in sea surface temperature across the central and east-central Equatorial Pacific
The presence of El Niño can significantly influence weather patterns, ocean conditions, and marine fisheries across large portions of the globe for an extended period of time
LaNiña
La Niña is a climate pattern that describes the cooling of surface-ocean water along the tropical west coast of South America
1. increased ocean swell– A swell is a
series of oceanwaves brought about by strong winds.
Changes in clouds – Cumulus clouds may fill the sky about 36 hours before a typhoon.
2. changes in wind direction – Winds usually shift from southeast to southwest or northwest as a storm approaches.
3. changes in barometric pressure – The air pressure drops rapidly when a typhoon is near.
4. rainfall increases – Rainy days are more frequent during typhoons.
3. changes in barometric pressure – The air pressure drops rapidly just prior to a typhoon’s arrival.