GOING DOWN A STORM

What is the difference between a typhoon and a hurricane?

TYPHOONS and hurricanes are often confused, with many not knowing the difference between the two natural phenomenons.

The main difference is the location of the storm. Here is all you need to know about these catastrophic occurrences.

Advertisement
A radar showing the eye of hurricane DorianCredit: Reuters

What is a Typhoon?

Hurricanes, cyclones and typhoons are names for the same weather phenomenon.

The difference between them is their location.

Typhoons are storms that develop in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.

Typhoons are classified as "typhoon", "very strong typhoon" or "violent typhoon" - but some are calling Hagibis a "super typhoon".

Advertisement

This term means that it could bring extreme weather to a country which regularly sees typhoons, but not on this scale.

Wrecked vehicles in Osaka in the wake of Typhoon Jebi in 2018, Japan's worst storm for 25 yearsCredit: REUTERS

What is a hurricane?

Powerful storms arising in the Atlantic or eastern Pacific are called hurricanes.

North of the equator they spin anticlockwise because of the rotation of the earth.

Advertisement

They turn the opposite way in the southern hemisphere.

Cyclones are like giant weather engines fuelled by water vapour as it evaporates from the sea.

Warm, moist air rises from the surface, creating a low pressure system that sucks in air from surrounding areas - which in turn is warmed by the ocean.

As the vapour rises it cools and condenses into swirling bands of cumulonimbus storm clouds.

Advertisement
Workers remove debris from a beach in Dorian's pathCredit: AFP or licensors
Hurricane Dorian has left 70,000 people in the Bahamas in need of food and shelterCredit: Getty Images - Getty

The system grows and spins faster, sucking in more air and feeding off the energy in sea water that has been warmed by the sun.

At the centre, a calm "eye" of the storm is created where cooled air sinks towards the ultra-low pressure zone below, surrounded by spiralling winds of warm air rising.

Advertisement

The faster the wind, the lower the air pressure at the centre and the storm grows stronger and stronger.

LATEST WEATHER NEWS

FOG-ET IT
Ryan Reynolds' Wrexham forced to play in 'nightmare' conditions
CRASH TRAGEDY
At least 3 dead after bus 'with tourists on board' crashes into Norway lake
LIGHT IT UP
'Once-in-a-decade' Northern Lights display could hit UK in early 2025
FESTIVE DIP
Swimmers brave the cold to hit the beach for a Boxing Day swim

Tropical cyclones usually weaken when they hit land as they are no longer fed by evaporation from the warm sea.

But they often move far inland - dumping huge amounts of rain and causing devastating wind damage - before the "fuel" runs out and the storm dies.

Hurricanes can also cause storm surges when the low air pressure sucks the sea level higher than normal, swamping low-lying coasts if the height of the storm coincides with high tide.

Advertisement
Bahamas facing environmental disaster as 'catastrophic' spill reported at Norwegian-owned oil facility damaged by Hurricane Dorian


We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at tips@the-sun.co.uk or call 0207 782 4368 . You can WhatsApp us on 07810 791 502. We pay for videos too. Click here to upload yours.


Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com