Under the hot summer sun, the ocean’s surface waters become warmer than the atmosphere above them. As the heat is transferred to the atmosphere, it can strengthen low-pressure disturbances and drive the characteristic weather phenomena known in the Atlantic region as hurricanes and in the Pacific as typhoons or tropical cyclones (see the Quick Study on hurricane formation by Kerry Emanuel in Physics Today, August 2006, page 74). A new model from a research collaboration led by Anand Gnanadesikan at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in Princeton, New Jersey, shows how strongly correlated the sea surface temperature (SST) is to the ocean’s color. The image depicts average concentrations (in mg/m3) of chlorophyll—the green pigment in phytoplankton—from 1997 to 2000 in the Pacific Ocean, where more than half of the reported typhoon-force winds (greater than 32 m/s) occur. Considering an extreme scenario,...
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1 October 2010
October 01 2010
Citation
Jermey N. A. Matthews; Color-dependent cyclone activity. Physics Today 1 October 2010; 63 (10): 21–22. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4797245
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