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Understanding rapid intensification of hurricane

Courtesy NOAA and Climate Central

“Hurricane Milton has rapidly intensified into a monster of a hurricane.” You have likely heard our meteorologists say this line... But what does rapid intensification actually mean? It’s a tropical system that increases wind speeds by 35 mph in 24 hours.

In terms of total destruction -- winds, storm surge, inland flooding, and tornado damage -- a 120 mph hurricane is 43 times more destructive than a 75 mph hurricane and a 155 mph hurricane is 333 times more destructive than a 75 mph hurricane!

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Clearly, while a 35 mph wind increase may not seem that much, the exponential power of wind is enormous and the damage factor goes up by seven-fold.

Here’s a chart from the National Weather Service showing the differences in total destruction based on wind speed:

courtesy National Weather Service

You can read a full explanation of this chart and wind speed comparison right here.

So what causes Rapid Intensification? Simply put, warm water.

More fancy: Tropical Heat Potential (more here).

But getting back to simple, the warmer the water and the deeper that warm water is, the more fuel for the hurricane. That warm water means warm air above it and warm air rises. When it rises up into the atmosphere it cools down, releasing its energy. The hurricane becomes stronger.

In order for a hurricane to thrive, we only need water to be around 80°. The water that Hurricane Milton is going over is 86-88 degrees.

The water temperatures in the Gulf are in the mid-80s. (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

What’s concerning is that in the past two decades, the frequency of rapidly intensifying hurricanes continues to go up due to climate change and warming water. Climate Central shows that since 1995 the frequency continues to increase:

This process of RI is seen more frequently since 1995 (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

All of this is due to warmer ocean waters, but the bottom line is the real bottom line: the billions and billions of dollars in damage is a direct result of these stronger hurricanes:

courtesy Climate Central

The die is pretty well cast it seems on a warmer atmosphere and warmer waters, so this threat is likely to continue. The best we can do is build better and stronger at the coast and be prepared for these storms to very often bring in the worst of destruction.

You can read more about Climate Central’s study right here.

Thoughts and positive vibes to Florida this week. It’s going to be a long one.


About the Authors
Frank Billingsley headshot

KPRC 2's chief meteorologist with four decades of experience forecasting Houston's weather.

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