Untitled Document
During its daytime overpass
of the southeast coast of Brazil on March 26, 2004, the Terra satellite captured
this surprising sight: a tropical cyclone. The South Atlantic is generally not
thought of by meteorologists as a place where tropical cyclones can form.
The water temperatures are
generally too cool and the vertical wind shear too strong. The area is so devoid
of tropical storm activity that no government agency has an official warning
system for storms there, which is why this storm is unnamed.
In this image, the storm
is at roughly 28 degrees south latitude, southeast of the city of Curitaba,
which makes a tan splotch against the green vegetation at the top of the image,
left of center. According to Dr. Greg Holland, a meteorological researcher currently
with Radiosonde North America, it’s unlikely—though not impossible—that the
storm will make landfall in Brazil given the strong westerly winds that are
typical of the region’s weather patterns.
“There have been reports
in the past of storms with tropical characteristics in that region,” he says,
“so I would be very amazed if this is truly the first cyclone ever. However,
it is the first time we have ever had such solid observations of a tropical
storm there.”
According to Holland, wind
speed observations from QuickScat on March 26 showed maximum surface winds of
about 50 knots, but the satellite wasn’t positioned to observe the part of the
eye where the highest wind speeds would be expected. So it is possible that
the storm is near the 65-knot wind threshold for being a Category 1 hurricane.
Credit: Jacques
Descloitres, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC
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