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North Atlantic primed and ready for hurricanes


By todd - Posted on 02 August 2007

In order for tropical storms to strengthen into hurricanes, they need two main ingredients -- warm water and moderate upper-level winds. Satellite imagery provide excellent measures of sea surface temperatures, indicating how the region of hurricane formation in the North Atlantic, Caribbean, and Gulf of Mexico are at ideal temperatures for storm formation.

Satellite image shows warm waters in major hurricane forming region

Of course, the Atlantic isn't the only region susceptible to tropical cyclones (we just don't call them "hurricanes" elsewhere). The map below shows additional warm areas of water, ideal for the formation of these storms. Too close to the equator, though, the storms won't form because of the weak Coriolis effect there.
Satellite image shows warm waters in major tropical cyclone forming regions

Note the unusually cool water along the equator in the eastern Pacific, off the coast of South America. This cold water allows penguins to thrive in the Galapagos Islands and also controls global climate in many ways. When this water warms, we call it an El Niño event.