We can dare sex videosnow see violent hurricanes like never before.
Hurricane scientists have started a research campaign to send marine robots into the heart of churning cyclones. The unprecedented missions aim to improve researchers' understanding of how hurricanes rapidly intensify into monstrous storms with destructive winds and deadly flooding.
Most recently, the innovative collaboration between the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Saildrone, the company that engineers the innovative sailing drones, sent a robust robot into Hurricane Fiona, the furious tropical storm that deluged Puerto Rico and is now headed toward Canada's east coast.
The 23-foot-long Saildrone met 50-foot waves and winds exceeding 100 mph, which you can see in the Sept. 22 footage below. And that's precisely what these machines are designed to do: Gather data in all parts of the storms, including the hurricane's eyewall — where winds are the strongest.
"We want to go straight through — we want to go through the eyewall," Gregory Foltz, a NOAA oceanographer who's working on the mission, told Mashable last year.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Warm ocean waters, greater than 80 degrees Fahrenheit, are fuel for storms. The Saildrones will help researchers better grasp how oceans transfer this heat and energy to storms.
As Mashable previously reported, of particular interest to storm researchers are the conditions that stoke tropical storms to "rapidly intensify," meaning a storm's winds increase by at least 35 mph in a 24-hour period. For communities, stronger storms bode more destructive winds and higher coastal storm surges — dangers everyone in them would benefit from knowing about.
Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newslettertoday.
Crucially, intensification events are growing more common. "The frequency of rapid-intensification events has increased over the past four decades, and this increase has been linked to climate change," Jim Kossin, an atmospheric research scientist at NOAA, explained in an agency Q&A last year. Indeed, the seas are now relentlessly warming. They soak up most of the heat civilization is trapping on Earth.
As the surface temperatures of oceans warm, hurricane scientists don't expect more hurricanes overall, but expect storms to grow more powerful (though certainly not always). Already, the frequency of strong Atlantic storms (Category 3 or higher) have increased since 1979.
Why the U.S. heat wave will be long and persistentWe read Mary Trump's book about Donald Trump so you don't have toHBO doc ‘Showbiz Kids’ shows the dark side of child stardom: ReviewNBC's Peacock: How it works, what to watch, and is it worth itSomeone trolled a GOP Senator by signing him up for Nickelback newslettersScarlet Johansson and her grandma doppelgänger finally hit the red carpet togetherBarack Obama paid tribute to JayAdele pays an emotional visit to Grenfell Tower in London after the fireI'm playing video games like a caveman during the pandemic. It rules.J.K. Rowling and Stephen King join forces to troll Donald TrumpElon Musk, Barack Obama, Joe Biden accounts push crypto scam after major Twitter hackGuy drives his Smart car straight into a store to avoid the rainMeet White Castle's new robot chef, FlippyWe can finally see inside the VIP world of Tinder Select and it's... meh?The Queen is heckled as she visits London tower fire victims'Louie' the 132Mom accidentally texts son her extremely polite road rage rantRevolut brings crypto trading to U.S. customersTesla's Model Y is the latest SUV to have its price slashedStar Wars returns to the Clone Wars in 2021 with 'The Bad Batch' The Morning News Roundup for November 28, 2014 An Interview with Julia Wertz Warm Up with Our Winter Issue The Morning News Roundup for November 12, 2014 The Morning News Roundup for November 7, 2014 An Interview with Shelly Oria The Morning News Roundup for December 3, 2014 Staff Picks: Megg, Mogg, Maxim Maksimich by The Paris Review Barry Gifford’s Novels Find a New Generation of Readers Writing Tennessee Williams’s Life The Morning News Roundup for November 11, 2014 All the President’s Turkeys by Dan Piepenbring Conversation About John Cage and William Gedney’s Iris Garden An Interview with Michael Hofmann René Magritte Was Born on This Day in 1898 On Samuel Rutherford Crockett and the Word “Draffsack” The Morning News Roundup for November 17, 2014 A Fake Oral History of Allen Tate The Morning News Roundup for November 20, 2014 The Morning News Roundup for November 21, 2014
3.1586s , 8614.6015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【dare sex videos】,Fresh Information Network