There
is likely to be a large dump of rain on Fukushima
Cyclonic
Trifecta: Three Storms Swirl Through Asia-Pacific
As
Tropical Cyclone Phailin was slamming into the northeast coast of
India on Saturday, two other very dangerous storms were churning in
waters of the Asia-Pacific region
13
October, 2013
The
MODIS instrument on NASA’s Terra satellite captured the action in
the mosaic of images above. I chose this false color scheme (the
3,6,7 band combination) because the peach and reddish-orange tones
emphasize small ice crystals in clouds that tower high into the
atmosphere.
Meteorologist
Jeff Masters estimates that Phailin probably had sustained winds of
125 to 130 mph at landfall, which would have made it a Category 3
storm. Thankfully, it appears that a mega-disaster was averted by the
largest evacuation effort in Indian history. More than a million
people were moved out of harm’s way.
Typhoons
Nari (left) and Wipha (center) as of Sunday night . (Animation:
CIMSS)
Meanwhile,
Typhoon Nari, which killed 13 people in the Philippines on Friday, is
now headed for landfall in Vietnam on Monday, where it may come
ashore as a Category 1 storm. You can see it at the extreme left side
of the animation at right. (Click on the thumbnail for a larger
view.)
Typhoon
Wipha, currently a Category 4 storm is moving toward Japan. It’s in
the center of the animation. As the projected track shows, the
current forecast calls for Wipha to skirt Japan’s coast as it
recurves out to sea. But it could spell trouble for the stricken
Fukushima nuclear complex
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.