
Oscar Is Full Of Surprises As The Storm Becomes A Hurricane
Oscar is full of surprises today with the storm going from a 10% chance of form as of last night to now being a category
Oscar is full of surprises today with the storm going from a 10% chance of form as of last night to now being a category
Oscar rapidly developed into a tropical storm to the east of the Turks and Caicos Islands in a small area of favorable conditions. The low-level
Milton made landfall yesterday as a category-three hurricane south of Tampa Bay, Florida. It produced a storm surge of around 15 feet, torrential rainfall, over
Milton remains a powerful category five hurricane this morning with winds of 160 mph. Milton is starting to interact with vertical wind shear, but the
Once Milton’s eyewall replacement cycle ended, the storm began to intensify once again and regained category-five status this afternoon. Milton’s structure is near textbook as
One of the only factors that would cause Milton to weaken was an eyewall replacement cycle, which is in progress this morning. Still, even though
Milton has achieved near record-breaking intensity with pressure now falling below 900 MB, which has not been observed in decades, only Wilma in 2005 at
Milton has rapidly intensified into a category three hurricane as of the 7 AM update with winds of 120 mph. This morning, Milton has a
Milton has formed a well-organized central-dense overcast with deep convection and very cold cloud tops this evening. These signals suggest strong lifting is occurring and
Milton is getting better organized with convection developing around the low-level center of circulation along with an improving upper-level outflow, especially on the northern side