WW2010
University of Illinois

WW2010
 
welcome
 
online guides
 
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current weather
 
about ww2010
 
index

Online Guides
 
introduction
 
meteorology
 
remote sensing
 
reading maps
 
projects, activities

Meteorology
 
introduction
 
air masses, fronts
 
clouds, precipitation
 
el nino
 
forces, winds
 
hurricanes
 
hydrologic cycle
 
light, optics
 
midlatitude cyclones
 
severe storms
 
weather forecasting

Hurricanes
 
introduction
 
growth processes
 
development stages
 
movement
 
public awareness
 
public action
 
damage
 
names
 
global activity
 
el nino

Development Stages
 
stages
 
tropical depression
 
tropical storm
 
hurricanes

Hurricanes
 
hurricanes
 
eye
 
eye wall
 
spiral bands
 
pres & wind

User Interface
 
graphics
text

.
The Eye
the center of the storm

The most recognizable feature found within a hurricane is the eye. They are found at the center and are between 20-50km in diameter. The eye is the focus of the hurricane, the point about which the rest of the storm rotates and where the lowest surface pressures are found in the storm. The image below is of a hurricane (called cyclone in the Southern Hemisphere). Note the eye at the center.

[Image: (38K)]
Image by: OSEI

Skies are often clear above the eye and winds are relatively light. It is actually the calmest section of any hurricane.

[Embedded Object: Eye Formation Movie (2.58MB)]

The eye is so calm because the now strong surface winds that converge towards the center never reach it. The coriolis force deflects the wind slightly away from the center, causing the wind to rotate around the center of the hurricane (the eye wall), leaving the exact center (the eye) calm.

An eye becomes visible when some of the rising air in the eye wall is forced towards the center of the storm instead of outward -- where most of it goes. This air is coming inward towards the center from all directions. This convergence causes the air to actually sink in the eye. This sinking creates a warmer environment and the clouds evaporate leaving a clear area in the center.



hurricanes
Terms for using data resources. CD-ROM available.
Credits and Acknowledgments for WW2010.
Department of Atmospheric Sciences (DAS) at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

eye wall