Difference between revisions of "2020-21 North Pacific winter windstorm season"
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|style="background-color:#dda0dd"|46 kts | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|46 kts | ||
|style="background-color:#dda0dd"|980 hPa | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|980 hPa | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |Filat | ||
+ | |October 10 – 11 | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#bc80d5"|Windstorm | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#bc80d5"|50 kts | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#bc80d5"|978 hPa | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |Ghwitghwaa | ||
+ | |October 11 – 12 | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|Windstorm | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|38 kts | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|998 hPa | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |Hatiya | ||
+ | |October 13 – active | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#bc80d5"|Windstorm | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#bc80d5"|60 kts | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#bc80d5"|984 hPa | ||
| | | | ||
|} | |} | ||
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|style="background-color:#dda0dd"|47 kts | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|47 kts | ||
|style="background-color:#dda0dd"|965 hPa | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|965 hPa | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |Vaachii | ||
+ | |October 13 – active | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|Windstorm | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|47 kts | ||
+ | |style="background-color:#dda0dd"|992 hPa | ||
| | | | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 01:01, 14 October 2020
The 2020-21 North Pacific winter windstorm season runs from October 1 to March 31.
Tables
Aleutian – Large, strong, deep, and consolidated cyclone reaching peak intensity near the Aleutian islands
Aleutian b "Siberian Slush" – Weaker satellite cyclone associated with a large and broad push of cold Siberian air
Aleutian c – Cyclone that develops in the Aleutian/Bering region as a result of cold advection from a cyclone downstream of it
Kona – cut-off low near Hawaii
Northwesterly (kNW) – Cyclones associated with a northwesterly jet tracking toward the southeast, particularly into the western United States, with a ridge upstream
Fast Elongated Weak (FEW) – storms that are typically east-west elongated, weak and often deepening as they exit Japan into the open north Pacific, travelling quickly east or northeast and lasting less than a day, usually are followed by a strong cyclone which usually forms either behind or peripherally on the surface low (but is a different system)
October
Name | Dates active | Peak classification | Max winds | Min pressure | Typology |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tiñilex | October 2 – 6 | Windstorm | 46 kts | 980 hPa | |
Filat | October 10 – 11 | Windstorm | 50 kts | 978 hPa | |
Ghwitghwaa | October 11 – 12 | Windstorm | 38 kts | 998 hPa | |
Hatiya | October 13 – active | Windstorm | 60 kts | 984 hPa |
Name | Dates active | Peak classification | Max winds | Min pressure | Typology |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Uuk | October 5 – 9 | Windstorm | 47 kts | 965 hPa | |
Vaachii | October 13 – active | Windstorm | 47 kts | 992 hPa |
Impacts
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