The New York Times: Hurricane Nigel Tracked on Map

The New York Times: Hurricane Nigel Tracked on Map


Nigel was ‍a Category ‌1 hurricane in the Sargasso Sea⁣ Monday‌ afternoon Eastern time, ⁢according‌ to the National Hurricane Center.

The hurricane had sustained wind speeds ‌of 80 miles per hour. Follow our coverage here.

Tropical-storm-force winds, with sustained speeds of ⁣at least 39 miles per hour, typically arrive as weather conditions begin ‍to deteriorate, and experts say their estimated arrival time is a good ⁣deadline for completing storm preparations and evacuating if⁤ asked to do so.

Arrival times and likelihood of damaging winds

Tropical-storm speeds or greater

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Nigel is the 14th named storm to ⁣form in the Atlantic in 2023.

In late May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted that there would be 12 to 17 named storms this⁢ year, a “near-normal”​ amount. On Aug. 10,⁤ NOAA officials revised their estimate upward, to 14 to 21 storms.

There were 14 named storms last year,‌ after two extremely busy Atlantic hurricane seasons in which forecasters ‍ran out of names and⁣ had to resort to backup lists. (A record 30 named storms‌ formed ⁣in 2020.)

This year features an El​ Niño ‌pattern, which arrived in June. The intermittent climate phenomenon can⁤ have wide-ranging effects on weather around⁢ the world, and it typically impedes⁣ the formation of Atlantic hurricanes.

In the Atlantic, El Niño increases ‍the amount of wind shear, ‍or the change in‍ wind speed and direction ​from the ocean or land surface into the atmosphere. Hurricanes need a calm​ environment to​ form,⁤ and the instability⁣ caused by increased wind shear makes those conditions less likely. (El Niño ​has the opposite effect in the ‌Pacific, reducing ⁤the amount of ​wind ​shear.)

At the⁤ same time, this year’s​ heightened sea surface temperatures pose a number of⁤ threats, including the ⁢ability to supercharge storms.

Sources‍ and notes

Tracking map Source: National Hurricane Center | Notes: Map shows probabilities of at least five percent. ‌The forecast includes the five ⁤days starting up to three hours before the storm’s latest reported time and location.

2023-09-18 17:58:57
Article from www.nytimes.com
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