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Typhoons and galaxies


Bart

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[...] If there were more planets in the solar system it would show its spiral more evidently. [...]

 

If there were more planets in the solar system they would crash into each other, reducing the number of planets. Hmmm, does the asteroid belt bear any resemblance to a galaxy (within the confines of the belt, that is).

Edited by BearOfNH
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They are called typhoons in the southern hemisphere and hurricanes in the northern hemisphere. I agree that the similarities to spiral galaxies cannot be denied. I think the similarities are related to our misunderstandings of spiral galaxy mechanics. In storms there is a pressure difference in the surrounding atmosphere which spirals clouds in from high to low pressure volumes. The is also how I think spiral galaxies work. I think spriral galaxies appearances are based upon a background field like an aether. Today's "aether" ideas are dark matter and a Higgs field although I would expect such particulates in such a field are vastly smaller than any modern theory presently could allow.

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They are called typhoons in the southern hemisphere and hurricanes in the northern hemisphere. I agree that the similarities to spiral galaxies cannot be denied. I think the similarities are related to our misunderstandings of spiral galaxy mechanics. In storms there is a pressure difference in the surrounding atmosphere which spirals clouds in from high to low pressure volumes. The is also how I think spiral galaxies work.

Or maybe it's just that there is such a thing as angular momentum, which is conserved in the absence of an external torque or is changed when there is an external torque. Rotating systems following the rules that rotating systems follow isn't an earth-shattering concept in my book.

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I always thought pantheory's explanation was the right one Ophiolite.

Typhoons and hurricanes rotate in opposite directions in northern and southern hemispheres, just like your sink or toilet bowl, due to Coriolis effects ( radial movement in a rotating frame of reference ), hence the different nomenclature.

Do you have a reference, I'd really like to know if its just an east/west thing?

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MigL, on 04 Dec 2013 - 9:08 PM, said:

I always thought pantheory's explanation was the right one Ophiolite.

Typhoons and hurricanes rotate in opposite directions in northern and southern hemispheres, just like your sink or toilet bowl, due to Coriolis effects ( radial movement in a rotating frame of reference ), hence the different nomenclature.

Do you have a reference, I'd really like to know if its just an east/west thing?

 

 

Hurricanes, cyclones, and typhoons are all the same weather phenomenon; we just use different names for these storms in different places. In the Atlantic and Northeast Pacific, the term “hurricane” is used. The same type of disturbance in the Northwest Pacific is called a “typhoon” and “cyclones” occur in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean.

 

http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/cyclone.html

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I always thought pantheory's explanation was the right one Ophiolite.

Typhoons and hurricanes rotate in opposite directions in northern and southern hemispheres, just like your sink or toilet bowl, due to Coriolis effects ( radial movement in a rotating frame of reference ), hence the different nomenclature.

Do you have a reference, I'd really like to know if its just an east/west thing?

 

Stringjunky quoted a definition from the NOAA which I think was a little unintentionally misleading.

 

There is a Northern Hemisphere / Southern Hemisphere difference just this is not represented in the names; typhoons and hurricanes (same things just the USA office calls them Hurricanes and the Japanese Typhoons) are cyclonic weather systems around a low pressure centre. Cyclonic systems rotate anti-clockwise in the north and clockwise in the south. So a severe cyclonic weather system in the southern hemisphere - regardless of who names it - will be going in the opposite angular direction to a cyclonic weather system in the northern hemisphere. The Australians, who I think provide most of the info and do the ad-hoc naming etc for pacific area, refer to these as simply tropical cyclones. Not sure there are enough land-bound high maintained speed storms in the southern for an agreed hurricane naming system

 

You can more rarely get anticyclonic tropical storms - these rotate in the opposite directions to cylconic; ie anticyclones go anti-clockwise in the southern, clockwise in the northern, and are around a patch of high pressure.

 

And it does all come down to coriolis effect - but the bathwater down the plug hole is, I am afraid, still nonsense.

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Or maybe I confused typhoons with cyclones. My apologies.

No need to apologise. I can see how the confusion could easily arise.

 

On a segue to nothing directly related, in World War II the Typhoon was a partially successful replacement for the Hurricane. The latter was the fighter that, with the Sptifire, defended Britain during the blitz. And, as you likely know, blitz is German for lightning, of which there is plenty in typhoons and hurricanes.

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Aviation buff ?

Typhoons may not have been built in numbers comparable to Hurricanes, but the European war was nearly over by the time it entered service. It was a much more powerful machine ( size, speed etc.) and was in service in the middle east ( Egypt I believe ) well into the 50s.

 

Britain's new protector ( and Germany's. Italy's and Spain's ) is the Eurofighter Typhoon.

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