Another late season storm brewing in Caribbean, threatening Central America | Weather News
Another late season storm brewing in Caribbean, threatening Central America | Weather News
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Bu içerikte, Orta Amerika’ya hayati tehlike oluşturabilecek yağmurlar getirmesi beklenen bir Karayip kasırgası hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. Sistem, Honduras’a kasırga uyarıları verilmeden önce Meksika ve Amerika Birleşik Devletleri’ne gitmek üzere hareket etmektedir. Bu kasırga, sezonun 19. adlandırılmış fırtınası olacak şekilde Sara adını alacaktır. Kasırganın yolculuğu ve olası etkileri hakkında belirsizlikler bulunmaktadır, ancak son hava modelleri Sara’nın Orta Amerika üzerinde daha uzun süre kalacağını ve Amerika Birleşik Devletleri’ne yönelik kasırga tehdidini azaltacağını göstermektedir. Kasırga mevsiminin sona ermesine yakın bu büyük fırtına son derece olağandışı olacaktır ve uzmanlar bunu sıcak denizlerin ve yüksek hava sıcaklıklarının bu mevsim için normalden daha yüksek olmasına bağlamaktadır. Son olarak, NOAA’nın tahminine göre 2024 Atlantik kasırga sezonunun oldukça yoğun geçmesi beklenmekte ve bu sezonun ortalamadan daha fazla fırtına getirmesi öngörülmektedir.
It is forecast to become Tropical Storm Sara on Thursday near Central America before moving east towards the US.
A tropical depression in the Caribbean is threatening to bring life-threatening rains to Central America before heading to Mexico and the United States as tropical storm warnings have been issued.
The growing system of rain clouds was about 100km (60 miles) from the east coast of Nicaragua and Honduras on Thursday with maximum sustained winds of 55km/h (35mph), just below tropical storm strength.
It is expected to become a tropical storm by Friday as it moves westwards towards Honduras and would be called Sara, the 19th named storm of the season.
The centre of the storm could cross Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula on Monday or Tuesday as it turns sharply to the east, slowing over land and dumping heavy rains on flood-prone mountains and valleys in northern Honduras as well as generating a storm surge over the low-lying Atlantic coast of Central America, known as the Mosquitia.
After that, weather experts said, there is still uncertainty about Sara’s path, including a possible hurricane threat to Florida next week. Florida is still recovering from two major hurricanes that struck its west coast this year, Helene in September and Milton in October.
“While an eventual Florida impact is a possible scenario, any potential landfall remains around 7 days out, and there is still much uncertainty as to what actually moves into the Gulf [of Mexico] next week,” wrote Ryan Truchelut, a hurricane expert in Tallahassee, Florida.
The latest weather models show Sara spending more time over Central America, likely weakening the storm and reducing the hurricane threat to the United States.
A major storm this late in the hurricane season, which ends on November 30, would be highly unusual. “Of the 642 tropical storm or hurricane landfalls on record in the continental US since the 1850s, only 4 occurred after November 15, and just one, 1985’s Kate, was a hurricane,” Truchelut wrote on his WeatherTiger blog.
Truchelut, and other forecasters have put the rare conditions down to warmer seas and higher weather temperatures for this time of year. The seas in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean are not cooling off as they normally do at this time of year.
“There’s plenty of fuel available to sustain a hurricane, if atmospheric conditions allow,” Truchelut added.
Earth saw another unusually warm month with October ranking as the second warmest October on record, according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
In May, NOAA predicted the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season was likely to be well above average with 17 to 25 named storms. The forecast called for as many as 13 hurricanes and four major hurricanes.
An average hurricane season produces 14 named storms, seven of them hurricanes and three major hurricanes.
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