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To: Openurmind
Anything north of the equator in the east pacific is now called a Hurricane. And anything below a Category 1 Hurricane is considered a Tropical Storm.

So it started as a Tropical Storm, grew into a Cat 4 Hurricane, and then slowed back down to a Tropical Storm again.


So if it hits these US or Mexico, hurricane. Not us, typhoon.

And yes, I am aware of that, but the article was written/talking about a single point in time. It should be consistent in using one or the other, not interchanging them.
141 posted on 08/22/2023 12:40:23 PM PDT by Svartalfiar
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To: Svartalfiar

It formed north of the equator in the east pacific. Geography makes the difference. In the north west pacific they are called Cyclones. In the Indian ocean they would be called a typhoon.

https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/hurricanes-cyclones-and-typhoons-explained/

The name changes in stages as the winds increase and then decrease. They start as a Tropical depression, build into a tropical storm, build into a hurricane/cyclone/typhoon, build into higher category hurricanes/cyclones/typhoons. Then as the winds decrease they drop in categories down to a tropical storm again, then down to a tropical depression again.

So what they call it depends on the wind speeds at the time they are referring to it and where it is geographically.


142 posted on 08/22/2023 3:24:21 PM PDT by Openurmind (The ultimate test of a moral society is the kind of world it leaves to its children. ~ D. Bonhoeffer)
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