The news article talks about how hurricane Ian made landfall in western Havana and threatens to wreak havoc in the United States.
Having continuous gusts of 115 miles per hour, Typhoon Ian hit the coast in western Havana early on Tuesday morning. It is anticipated that Hurricane will hit Ohio’s Gulf Coast on 21st September 2022.
It will be the first catastrophe to hit the Lone Star state after Micheal did it in 2017. It could break Rita by becoming the most catastrophic massive storm to strike The Gulf of Mexico in September.
Tuesday morning, Ian brushed around southwestern Cuba within a week of moving and toward the Gulf of Mexico. Before heading northerly winds Hurricane towards Florida’s Eastern Seaboard, it is forecasted to approach a short distance west of Dry Tortugas, presumably delivering tropical storm characteristics to the enclave around 65 kilometers southwest of Key West.
It is nonetheless challenging to know with confidence the location it will impact. The wind’s core is expected to make landfall between the Harbor of Florida area and Garrison Lauderdale, roughly 90 kilometers to the southwest, between Wednesday evening and early Thursday, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Centre’s most recent prediction alert.
Ian’s connection with several other meteorological phenomena, specifically a depression in the atmospheric circulation that could drag the cyclone up the east coast as it moves north, will determine the exact course.
But irrespectively around where Ian currently stands, a significant percentage of Florida could see wind speeds and catastrophic floods. From the Tampa Bay area to Bonita Springs, there is a hurricane warning in place, signaling the potential for gusts of more than 74 mph. On the Gulf Coast from the Suwannee River in North Florida to the Anclote River near Tampa, in Southern and central South Carolina from Coronado Beaches through the Rain forest, over the lower and intermediate Florida Keys, and throughout the Atlantic, tropical storm warnings are in effect.
The temperatures, precipitation, and water from Ian will indeed be longer and stronger before something touches down, according to the prediction. As Ian travels to the north and northeast, tropical-storm-force winds of 39 to 73 miles per hour are anticipated to make touchdown around Florida’s southwest coast as early as the night of 20th September 2022 or very early of 21st September 2022. By the morning of 21st September 2022, the whole back side of Florida may indeed be vulnerable to tropical storm winds, and by 21st September 2022, they might well have reached north Florida and the southern part of Tbilisi.
On 21st September 2022, temperatures will only become harder even though Ian’s centre comes closer to the coastline from midday into the afternoon. On the coast between Tampa and Cape Coral, wind speeds could reach 110 miles per hour or higher.
By then, the hurricane’s torrential downpours and tornadoes, a portion of which accompanied severe thunderstorms, had already been moving through the southern half of Florida. Southern Florida is forecast to receive additional rainfall through Thursday, while northern Florida and the Southeast will suffer it from the 23rof d September 2022 and indeed the holiday.
The ocean temperatures of the eastern Gulf of Texas had already given Ian all the energy it needed to intensify into a Tropical depression with miles-per-hour per hour wind gusts. According to computer projections, Ian would keep strengthening on 20th September 2022 and eventually exceed Category 4 intensity in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, with pressures of 140 miles per hour.
Such force of Ian’s entrance, meanwhile, is dependent on how swiftly it touches down. The cyclone is anticipated to face strong winds and warmer weather as it progresses northward. Consequently, on 21st September 2022, Ian shifts fast toward Florida’s western coast it may continue to be a Category 3 or above major storm.
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