What Are the Different Types of Cyclones? Crash Course Geography #12 - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

What Are the Different Types of Cyclones? Crash Course Geography #12 - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


What Are the Different Types of Cyclones? Crash Course Geography #12 - By Math and Science



Transcript
00:0-1 On the evening of November 12 , 1970 , the
00:02 Bhola cyclone barreled up the Bay of Bengal . There
00:04 were sustained winds of 240 km/h and a storm surge
00:08 or flooding that raised the sea level up to 10.4
00:11 m , that's 34 ft . The damaging wind and
00:15 flooding were devastating . And as of 2021 the Bhola
00:18 cyclone is the deadliest tropical cyclone in history , killing
00:21 an estimated 300 to 500,000 people . And the abysmal
00:24 response of the then West Pakistan government was a factor
00:27 in the War of Liberation that led to the creation
00:29 of Bangladesh . Just think about that a weather system
00:32 was so powerful , it helped create an entirely new
00:35 country , massive weather systems can wreak havoc in an
00:37 instant like the bhola cyclone , but they can also
00:40 move in slowly and create gradual change in our weather
00:42 for days like warm springtime rains or a weird unseasonal
00:45 batch of hail . Understanding when different weather systems occur
00:48 , how they form and their impacts is an important
00:50 part of physical geography , especially because all weather from
00:54 massive thunderstorms too small bouts of fog drives energy exchange
00:57 within the atmosphere . I'm Elise a career and this
01:00 is crash course geography . Yeah , yeah . Yeah
01:09 . Weather encapsulates all the atmospheric conditions in a specific
01:12 place at a specific time . And if you live
01:14 in the mid latitudes or everything , roughly between 35
01:17 55 degrees north and south latitude , you can expect
01:20 the weather to be predictably unpredictable . A bright sunny
01:22 day in south Dakota or the south island of New
01:24 Zealand or Scotland can suddenly change to overcast and gray
01:27 and then just as abruptly clear up day to day
01:29 , we might not notice what's going on in the
01:31 atmosphere unless there's a natural disaster headed our way or
01:34 we're stuck doing a lot of small talk , nice
01:36 weather we're having today Brandon . It's so seasonal ,
01:39 don't you think ? But there are so many complex
01:41 global circulation patterns in the atmosphere and the oceans as
01:45 we've learned because the earth is curved and tilted ,
01:47 the amount of incoming solar radiation or insulation isn't the
01:51 same everywhere . Each year tropical regions received 2.5 times
01:54 more energy than the polls , which has to be
01:56 evened out with the help of circulation in the atmosphere
01:58 . The uneven amounts of insulation also caused temperature differences
02:01 that drive some of the biggest rebalancing efforts . Mid
02:04 latitude cyclones which are also called wave Cyclones or extra
02:07 tropical cyclones . These enormous weather systems spanned 1000 kilometers
02:12 or more , even though they share the word cyclone
02:14 . A mid latitude cyclone is a relatively huge circular
02:17 weather system . Unlike the bhola cyclone , which is
02:19 a relatively smaller , extremely windy tropical storm , we'll
02:23 talk more about tropical cyclones later . Mid latitude cyclones
02:25 can last a week or more , bringing lots of
02:27 changes in the day to day weather or severe storms
02:30 as they travel from west to east with the westerly
02:32 winds , these weather systems can form in the mid
02:34 latitudes of both hemispheres , but to zoom into where
02:37 I live is an example . In the northern hemisphere
02:39 . We see mid latitude cyclones form along the polar
02:42 front , which is a band of low pressure in
02:44 the latitudes just below the polls that sits between two
02:46 large high pressure areas , the subtropical high pressure to
02:49 the south and the polar high to the north .
02:51 A battle rages in the skies between the warm ,
02:54 moist air from the tropics and the cold air from
02:56 the poles . In fact , the term polar front
02:58 was first proposed by Norwegian meteorologists , Yacoubi , darkness
03:01 and Calver Solberg while studying mid latitude storms in Norway
03:04 . The First World war was raging and it seemed
03:07 that the boundary between warm and cold air was like
03:09 a battlefront between the allied and central forces . Generally
03:12 , we can call these two opponents air masses which
03:15 are vast bodies of air with similar temperature and humidity
03:17 that form over a region like when an air mass
03:19 forms over tropical oceans , it will be relatively warmer
03:22 and more humid than one that forms over the frigid
03:24 interior of northern Canada , which will be cold and
03:26 very dry . And as they move , they bring
03:28 their temperatures and moisture with them . The mid latitudes
03:31 get a lot of clashes between air masses and that's
03:34 where a lot of the storms and precipitation comes from
03:36 because when different air masses come together , they're like
03:38 water and oil or Godzilla and mothra . They don't
03:41 love mixing . Instead they meet along sloping boundaries called
03:44 fronts . For example , if the cold air masses
03:46 feeling feisty and moves in on a warm air mass
03:48 , we get a cold front . The nose of
03:50 the advancing cold front is like a snowplow , hugging
03:52 the surface because it's dense and heavy , pushing the
03:55 warm air out of the way and flinging it upward
03:57 and with a cold front comes shifting winds , dropping
03:59 temperatures and lowering pressure . If the displaced warm air
04:02 is unstable and wants to rise and has lots of
04:04 moisture will get heavy rain from thunderstorms and in advancing
04:07 wall of cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds . But when a
04:10 cold air mass backs off the warm air mass sees
04:13 its chance and creeps in forming a warm front .
04:15 The warm air can't displace the denser colder air near
04:18 the ground so the warm front slides over it like
04:20 a thick blanket . Overall , a warm front is
04:22 much less sudden and violent than a cold front and
04:24 tends to linger , leaving warm , wet air behind
04:26 . The first sign of one is high cirrus clouds
04:29 , followed by lower and thicker alto stratus clouds and
04:31 then still lower and thicker stratus clouds that bring drizzly
04:34 rain . So different air masses bring different weather in
04:36 their wake and influence the weather conditions of locations as
04:39 they pass . Warm and cold fronts are relatively small
04:41 skirmishes , but wars or mid latitude cyclones can start
04:45 when cold and warm air meet on the polar front
04:48 while these air masses duke it out closer to the
04:49 surface of the earth , there's another crusade happening five
04:52 kilometers above them . The upper air west release .
04:55 These winds blow very fast because there's less friction higher
04:58 up and within the upper air westerly is about 10
05:00 kilometers above the earth . There's a wind that blows
05:03 really , really fast . It's the polar front jet
05:06 stream and it travels up to 450 km/h , wrapping
05:09 all around the planet , even though it's way up
05:12 in the atmosphere , a small change in the path
05:14 of the jet stream can cause a bend in the
05:16 polar front that leads to a low pressure area where
05:18 a warm front moving forward and a cold front moving
05:20 towards the equator clash . As the air converging and
05:23 rising to form a low pressure area turns into a
05:25 full blown mid latitude cyclone . The colder air masses
05:28 denser and moves faster , overtaking the spiraling cyclonic warm
05:31 front and wedging beneath it , and it won't be
05:34 over until the cyclone is completely cut off from the
05:36 warm air mass that was its source of energy and
05:38 moisture in this battle , Both the polar front and
05:40 the polar front jet stream can also move seasonally .
05:43 They can steer the cyclonic systems and their air masses
05:46 across the continent as they follow the sun north into
05:48 the arctic in summer and swing down further south in
05:51 the winter . And no two storms are alike because
05:53 no two air masses are alike . So with so
05:55 much going on , you can't blame the weather forecasters
05:57 too much for not predicting the unpredictable . Now ,
05:59 massive weather systems aren't unique to the mid latitudes ,
06:02 even if warm and cold fronts do happen there a
06:04 lot In tropical and subtropical oceans and seas . We
06:07 can also get spiraling low pressure storms which are some
06:10 of the largest storms on Earth , a storm that
06:12 starts the tropical oceans between the tropic of cancer and
06:15 the tropic of capricorn can have incredible winds over 118
06:19 km/h . They go by many names hurricanes in the
06:21 Atlantic , typhoons in the pacific and cyclones in the
06:24 indian Ocean . So we're talking about tropical cyclone storms
06:27 now , but we're filming this in florida near the
06:29 atlantic . So I'll call them hurricanes from here on
06:31 . Unlike the mid latitude battles between warm and cold
06:34 air masses , tropical hurricanes formed from a single warm
06:37 air mass without a cold air opponent . There's no
06:39 front . The warm air over the oceans means there's
06:42 lots of water vapor . So as this warm air
06:44 rises and condenses the extra energy released , fuels its
06:47 transformation from a week low pressure area Into a violent
06:50 swirling storm extending up 12-14 km and taking up the
06:54 full height of the troposphere . A chimney effect pulls
06:57 more and more moisture Laden air into the system .
06:59 Air is sucked in at the base by low pressure
07:01 in the eye of the hurricane and sent spiraling because
07:04 of the coriolis effect . The air then rises rapidly
07:07 to the top and is full of water vapor ,
07:08 which condenses and releases latent heat . Energy producing thunderstorms
07:11 , an enormous amounts of rain , A great deal
07:14 of time , effort and money has been spent studying
07:16 hurricanes . So we know some things like in the
07:18 atlantic , the official hurricane season is from the first
07:21 of june through the 30th of november , but hurricanes
07:23 pop up most frequently in late summer and early fall
07:26 when ocean surfaces are warmed to 26 degrees Celsius or
07:28 more . And the ocean air has maximum community .
07:31 And we found a correlation between rising sea surface temperatures
07:34 and longer tropical storm lifetimes and greater intensity in the
07:37 atlantic basin . Looking to the future models suggest that
07:40 the intensity of extremely severe storms will only increase in
07:42 the coming decades . But there's still a lot to
07:45 learn , like we can't predict a hurricane's path with
07:47 great certainty more than three days in advance , even
07:49 though it's tracked by radar plane and weather satellites and
07:52 where a storm makes landfall becomes the most pressing question
07:55 as a storm grows and meteorologists track its movement .
07:58 Hurricanes , source of moisture and energy is the warm
08:00 ocean air and water so they grow when they're over
08:02 water but begin to dissipate once they make landfall .
08:05 But by then they could have already caused tons of
08:07 damage to coastal communities . The boundary between water and
08:10 land in tropical and subtropical regions is naturally marked by
08:13 mangroves and wetlands , which absorbed the brunt of the
08:15 storm surge , buffering inland areas from flooding . For
08:18 example , the low lying coastal areas of Bangladesh and
08:20 India form the world's largest delta and is also the
08:23 location of the sender bonds , the world's largest mangroves
08:25 . However , even with the forbidding ecological buffer ,
08:28 there are also large pockets of people and rural settlements
08:30 which ties back to colonial land policies and practices .
08:33 There is increasing pressure to develop these coastal areas for
08:35 fish farming , tourism , manufacturing and oil and gas
08:38 exploration , all activities that are destroying the mangroves along
08:42 with the ecological functions they provide . If we combine
08:44 that destruction of a natural buffer with the scientific fact
08:47 that the best hurricane warnings are given around 36 hours
08:49 in advance , we're left hoping our transportation infrastructures can
08:52 handle a mass evacuation that quickly to save people's lives
08:55 . And in Bangladesh , the most densely populated country
08:58 in the world . The stakes for that task couldn't
09:01 be higher . In countries like the United States ,
09:03 areas susceptible to hurricanes continue to experience population growth ,
09:06 economic development and urbanization . Even as hurricane warning systems
09:10 have improved and more lives have been saved , the
09:13 loss of property and the number of people displaced has
09:15 steadily risen . Our relationship to weather is complicated because
09:19 so much of our experience depends on where we build
09:21 our communities and why the light drizzle near a warm
09:23 front might call for rain boots or an umbrella .
09:25 The thunderstorm near a cold front may have us running
09:27 indoors and comforting our dogs from the thunderclaps . But
09:30 the damage of tropical storms can lead to incredibly severe
09:33 consequences . We can't go anywhere on earth to completely
09:35 avoid weather . So our choices about what chunk of
09:38 the atmosphere to live under matter . Next time we'll
09:41 zoom out and look at whether patterns across whole regions
09:43 . When we talk about climate , many maps and
09:46 borders represent modern geopolitical divisions that have often been decided
09:49 without the consultation permission or recognition of the land's original
09:52 inhabitants . Many geographical place names also don't reflect the
09:56 indigenous or aboriginal peoples languages . So we at Crash
09:59 Course want to acknowledge these people's traditional and ongoing relationship
10:02 with that land and all the physical and human geographical
10:05 elements of it . We encourage you to learn more
10:06 about the history of the place you call home through
10:09 resources like native land dot C A . And by
10:11 engaging with your local indigenous and aboriginal nations through the
10:14 websites and resources . They provide thanks for watching this
10:17 episode of Crash Course Geography , which is filmed at
10:19 the Team Sandoval Pierre studio and was made with the
10:21 help of all these nice people . If you want
10:23 to help keep Crash Course free for everyone forever ,
10:26 you can join our community on Patreon .
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