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sidebar3.jpg Chris Mooney is a visiting associate in the Center for Collaborative History at Princeton University and the author of three books, The Republican War on Science, Storm World, and Unscientific America.

Sheril Kirshenbaum is a marine biologist and author at Duke University. Sometimes she's a classicist, radio jock, or congressional staffer. Never sure what's next, she continues to enjoy the journey. For more information, visit her website.

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« Cyclone Jaya Rapidly Intensifies | Main | Catch Me on the Radio This Morning »

How Strong Did Cyclone Jaya Get?

Category: Hurricanes
Posted on: April 1, 2007 12:12 PM, by Chris C. Mooney

Yet another of these perennial data issues has come up with the latest tropical cyclone, Jaya, which is currently tracking mercilessly towards Madagascar. (As if they need another storm this season.) As is obvious from the image below, the storm has weakened considerably in comparison with how strong it was yesterday.

JayaIndianOceanApril1.jpg

But the question is, how strong was Jaya at its peak? Both the Joint Typhoon Warning Center and Tropical Storm Risk (which uses JTWC's data) consider the storm to have peaked at Category 3. But the Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies at the University of Wisconsin, which assesses storm strength from satellite images every half hour, suggests that Jaya peaked at around 120 knot winds (sustained for one minute) and a minimum sea level pressure of 924 millibars. That sounds like a Category 4 storm.

And then there's Meteo-France, which says the storm peaked at 930 millibars and 100 knot winds sustained over 10 minutes. If you convert that to one minute sustained winds--and I don't have the conversion factor handy at the moment--it might again imply that Jaya was a Category 4 storm.

So, in short, just as was the case with Cyclone George, there may be a legitimate dispute over whether Jaya was a Category 3 or 4. The more I blog about hurricanes and their intensities, the more I realize how murky it all really is.

Meanwhile, in other news, it looks like we'll soon have our first Northwest Pacific typhoon of 2007. Kong-Rey, pictured below, is projected to steadily intensify on its way towards Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands:

KongReyApril1.jpg

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Comments

1

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4520665474899458831

This video suposedly "debunks" the notion that carbon dioxide emissions are responsible for global warming. Some guy brought it up on my xanga. I wanted to know your opinion on the video.

Posted by: Adrian Clement | April 1, 2007 2:52 PM

2

I don't have references handy, but I recall that for Dvorak-based estimation of TC intensity, 10-minute wind is either 1-minute wind * 0.9 , or 1-minute wind * 0.88 , depending on the weather agency. After the reduction factor is applied, the wind speed is rounded to the nearest 5 kts.


Additionally, meteo France's Dvorak estimate for Jaya was 6.0 3
advisory periods in a row. A Dvorak estimate of 6.0 indicates 115
kt 1-minute winds, or just above the cat 4 boundary. (See here) NOAA's
SSD also estimated Jaya to have a Dvorak number of 6.0 3 times in a row .


I don't know why JTWC's Dvorak estimates stayed at 5.5, but 0.5 or 1.0
difference in Dvorak estimates is normal as far as I know.

Posted by: llewelly | April 1, 2007 3:57 PM

3

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6Wr1hcIp2U is the real link sorry

Posted by: Adrian Clement | April 2, 2007 1:18 AM

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