The Impact of Ocean Temperature on Idalia's Forecast

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Forecasters are watching several factors, with the biggest being the very high sea surface temperature in the Gulf of Mexico. Wind shear is another important factor, which could possibly weaken the hurricane, as well as cold water. Longterm research shows Atlantic hurricane intensity is increasing amidst a warming climate, though rainfall intensity is the biggest indicator. Climate change can influence hurricane activity, but it is only one factor.


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Forecasters are watching several factors, but the biggest is the very high sea surface temperature in the Gulf of Mexico. The Gulf is typically warm in late August, and we often see hurricanes this time of year. But this summer, the sea surface temperature has been extremely high, with record temperatures far above average. Near Cuba, sea surface temperatures were close to 86 degrees Fahrenheit (30 degrees Celsius) as Idalia passed by the island on Monday .

Sea surface temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico have been the highest on record for this time of year.

As the storm moves north, it will pass over sea surface temperatures that are even warmer. By Wednesday morning, the storm is forecast to be over waters that are around 88 F (31 C) at the surface. That is very, very high. The heat isn’t just at the surface – the ocean heat extends deep into the upper ocean layer, or the thermocline, which is roughly 150 feet (50 meters) to 500 feet (150 meters) deep .

The heat in the ocean extends deep into the upper ocean layer, or the thermocline, which is roughly 150 feet (50 meters) to 500 feet (150 meters) deep.

That accumulated heat provides fuel for the storm. As the ocean temperature increases, the amount of water vapor available to the storm also increases. Physics show that warmer air can hold more water vapor. With more heat and water vapor in the atmosphere, clouds heat up and the storm can rotate faster. It can also bring more intense rainfall.A few things will weaken a hurricane. One is if the storm encounters cold water .

Without wind shear, a hurricane over waters this warm has the potential to become a catastrophic Category 4 or 5 hurricane.

Without warm water as a fuel source, the hurricane can no longer strengthen. In this case, however, the Gulf is exceptionally warm. Wind shear is another important factor. Wind shear is a difference in wind speed and direction at different heights in a storm. Strong wind shear can tear apart a tropical storm. That’s common in the Atlantic basin during El Niño years like 2023. The question everyone has been asking this year is whether the wind shear will be strong enough to counter the extreme heat, and that doesn’t appear to be happening with Idalia .

Research shows that Atlantic hurricane intensity has an increasing trend as the climate warms.

The wind shear was around 16 knots on Monday morning. The moderate wind shear along its path wasn’t expected to be strong enough to tear the hurricane apart – it’s still going to rapidly intensify because of the heat. That wind shear is still beneficial for people in the storm’s path. Without it, a hurricane over water this warm could grow into a catastrophic Category 4 or 5 hurricane. Right now, Idalia is forecast to be a Category 3 or close to it, which is still dangerous .

Tropical cyclone-induced rainfall has increased on average of 1.3% per year in the past 20 years across the world’s basins, and 1.6% per year in the Atlantic.

Long term, research shows Atlantic hurricane intensity has an increasing trend as the climate warms. If you just look at wind speed, the average intensity of storms across all six major ocean basins isn’t increasing. But rainfall intensity is a different story. My research shows that over the past 20 years, tropical cyclone-induced rainfall has increased by about 1.3% per year on average across the world’s basins and by even more in the Atlantic, about 1 .

Climate change is only one factor influencing hurricane activity.

6% per year. We linked the increase in rainfall intensity to increasing sea surface temperature and water vapor. Other researchers have found the same thing. Each ocean basin is very different, and there are several factors influencing hurricane activity. Climate change definitely has an impact, but it isn’t the only factor.


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