Hurricanes and cyclones
Last reviewed: 20-08-2008
"Hurricane", "cyclone" and "typhoon" are different terms for the same thing: a revolving tropical storm accompanied by torrential rain and wind speeds exceeding 119 kilometres per hour (74 miles per hour).
The storms can be hundreds of kilometres wide and they bring destructive winds, torrential rain, storm surge and sometimes tornadoes.
The worst recent storms include Cyclone Nargis, which hit Myanmar in 2008 leaving nearly 140,000 people dead or missing, and Hurricane Katrina, which destroyed New Orleans in 2005, killing more than 1,800 people and displacing 2.16 million.
In the Americas and Caribbean the tropical storms are called "hurricanes". In the western Pacific, East Asia and Australia they are "typhoons". And in the Indian Ocean they are "cyclones".
The storm strength varies from Category 1 to 5, the lowest referring to storms with winds of 119-153 kph (74-95 mph) and Category 5 to winds exceeding 249 kph (155 mph), according to the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale.
But the impact of the storm depends not just on wind speed, but also on where they strike, how much flooding they cause and the quality of the buildings and infrastructure.
Weather-watchers use satellite images to track tropical storms as they develop, and try to predict when and where one will hit land and at what speed. But storms are unpredictable and can suddenly weaken or swerve off course.
WIND SPEEDS:
- Less than 63 kph (39 mph) - tropical depression
- More than 63 kph - tropical storm and given a name
- More than 119 kph - designated either a hurricane, typhoon, severe tropical cyclone, severe cyclonic storm or tropical cyclone depending where it is in the world
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