13 Visitors Tracking Severe Weather!
SevereWeatherTracking.com main goal is to bring all of the important links and graphics to ONE PLACE so you can keep up to date on any threats to your area during Severe Weather!
Severe Weather Resources
- NOAA NWS Storm Prediction Center
- NOAA NWS Weather Prediction Center
- National Weather Service
- NWS Climate Prediction Center
- Chad's Track The Tropics
- Weather Nerds Model Guidance
- Twister Data Model Guidance
- Albany GFS/ EURO Models/ Ensembles
- Pivotal Weather Model Guidance
- Weather Online Model Guidance
- UKMet Model Guidance/ Analysis/ Sat
- ECMWF (EURO) Model Guidance
- WXCharts Model Guidance
- NOAA NESDIS GOES Satellite
- CyclonicWX Model Guidance
- NDMC U.S. Drought Monitoring
Tropical Cyclone Structure

The Eye
The hurricane's center is a relatively calm, generally clear area of sinking air and light winds that usually do not exceed 15 mph (24 km/h) and is typically 20-40 miles (32-64 km) across. An eye will usually develop when the maximum sustained wind speeds go above 74 mph (119 km/h) and is the calmest part of the storm.
But why does an eye form? The cause of eye formation is still not fully understood. It probably has to do with the combination of "the conservation of angular momentum" and centrifugal force. The conservation of angular momentum means is objects will spin faster as they move toward the center of circulation. So air increases it speed as it heads toward the center of the tropical cyclone. One way of looking at this is watching figure skaters spin. The closer they hold their hands to the body, the faster they spin. Conversely, the farther the hands are from the body the slower they spin. In tropical cyclone, as the air moves toward the center, the speed must increase.
This sinking air suppresses cloud formation, creating a pocket of generally clear air in the center. People experiencing an eye passage at night often see stars. Trapped birds are sometimes seen circling in the eye, and ships trapped in a hurricane report hundreds of exhausted birds resting on their decks. The landfall of hurricane Gloria (1985) on southern New England was accompanied by thousands of birds in the eye.
The sudden change of very strong winds to a near calm state is a dangerous situation for people ignorant about a hurricane's structure. Some people experiencing the light wind and fair weather of an eye may think the hurricane has passed, when in fact the storm is only half over with dangerous eyewall winds returning, this time from the opposite direction within a few minutes.
The Eyewall
Where the strong wind gets as close as it can is the eyewall. The eyewall consists of a ring of tall thunderstorms that produce heavy rains and usually the strongest winds. Changes in the structure of the eye and eyewall can cause changes in the wind speed, which is an indicator of the storm's intensity. The eye can grow or shrink in size, and double (concentric) eyewalls can form.Rainbands
Curved bands of clouds and thunderstorms that trail away from the eye wall in a spiral fashion. These bands are capable of producing heavy bursts of rain and wind, as well as tornadoes. There are sometimes gaps in between spiral rain bands where no rain or wind is found. In fact, if one were to travel between the outer edge of a hurricane to its center, one would normally progress from light rain and wind, to dry and weak breeze, then back to increasingly heavier rainfall and stronger wind, over and over again with each period of rainfall and wind being more intense and lasting longer. View a radar loop of Hurricane Katrina as it moved onto the Louisiana and Mississippi coasts in August 2005. (Very large loop - 140 images (13 meg.)- may take a while depending upon your connection.)Tropical Cyclone Size
The relative sizes of the largest and smallest tropical cyclones on record as compared to the United States.
