Kajiki was a typhoon in the Gulf of Tonkin Monday morning Indochina period, announced the joint Taifun warning center in its recent advice.
Predict wind speeds and direction
Where will it rain?
Fall floods can occur inland and away from the storm center. Even weaker storms can create excessive rainfall that can flood low areas.
1-day forecast rainfall
Kajiki’s precipitation follow
When a storm comes close enough to land, the signals of the US radar network will bounce off the rainfall within a tropical cyclone, which makes it easier to find the more intensive section of the storm and the hardest precipitation. During the hurricanes, the storm center will be the area on the rain’s radar sweater, which refers to the eye and completely surrounds the most intense winds and rain winds and rain, which are called the eye wall. From the center, rain bands that vary in the intensity becomes.
What is the risk of RIP currents?
RIP flows, even from distant storms, are the third highest cause of death in connection with hurricanes, after the weather service was flooded inland by excessive rain and storm surges. This year, the Hurricane Center has started to provide RIP -topical forecasts.
Persecution of power failures
The harmful winds from Kajiki caused power outages on the way of the storm.
Share of customers without electricity
What does the storm look like from above?
Satellite images can help to determine the strength, size and cohesion of a storm. The stronger a storm becomes, the more likely an eye will form in the middle. When the eye looks symmetrical, this often means that the storm does not meet anything to weaken it.
Which storms have ended up nearby?
Taifune also hit US areas and caused devastating damage to places such as Guam that were beaten by Super Typhoon Mawar in May 2023.
The typhoon season is all year round; However, most of the typhoons form from the beginning of July to mid -December.
Most typhoon scratch or streams such as the Philippines, Japan and Taiwan; You can also meet the Korean Peninsula China and Vietnam and bring harmful winds and storm surges.
Sources and notes
Tracking map The persecution of data comes from the National Hurricane Center and the common TAIFUN WARN Center. The card shows probabilities of at least 5 percent. The forecast serves for up to five days, with this period of time starting up to three hours before the time reported, in which the storm reaches its last location. The data of the wind speed probability are available north of 60.25 degrees north width.
Wind anchor table The arrival times are generated from a New York Times analysis of the National Hurricane Center data. Geographical locations use data from the US Census Bureau and Natural Earth. Time zones are based on Google. The table shows the predicted arrival times persistent, harmful winds of 58 miles per hour or more for selected cities with the chance that such winds will reach them. When harmful winds reach a location, there is no more than 10 percent the likelihood that you will arrive before the “earliest reason” time and a 50 percent chance that you will arrive before the “most likely” time.
Satellite card The pictures come from the national ocean and atmospheric management and the Japanese meteorological agency about the cooperative institute for research in the atmosphere.
Precipitation card Data for multi -day forecasts or observed rainfall comes from the national weather service. The 1-day forecast comes from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Note: All basemaps are built with daylight (urban areas). Natural aldales (streets, labels, terrain)
Source: www.nytimes.com

