![]() Holbach History Hurricane Analysis Forecast System (HAFS) Hurricane Earl Hurricane Edouard Hurricane Ensemble Data Assimilation System (HEDAS) Hurricane Irene Hurricane Irma Hurricane Isaac Hurricane Maria Hurricane Matthew Hurricane Sandy Hurricane Weather Research and Forecast (HWRF) model Jason A. Alaka Global Hawk Gulfstream-IV (G-IV) H*Wind Heather M. Klotz climate convection COYOTE cyclogenesis Doppler radar Doppler wind lidar dropwindsondes Education and outreach Eric W. Meteor., 7, 313-323.ĭata Assimilation Dynamics and Physics HFIP-Hurricane Forecast Improvement Project IFEX - Hurricane Field Program Modeling and Prediction Observations Presentations Publications Societal Impacts Tag Cloud Air-sea interaction Airborne eXpendable Bathythermograph (AXBT) Altug Aksoy Andrew Hazelton Awards Bachir Annane boundary layer Bradley W. Burpee, 1968: Experiments in barotropical hurricane track forecasting. J., 1966: Objective analysis of pressure height data for the tropics. R., 1963: Development of tropical cyclones in relation to circulation patterns at the 200-millibar level. Anthes, 1971: On the asymmetric structure of the tropical cyclone outflow layer. Some papers that came from our research into Hurricane Carla:īlack, P. Carla left 43 dead in its wake and US$325 million in damages. Heavy rains followed its track as a low-pressure cell through the Midwest up to the Great Lakes. And it dumped up 17 inches (432 mm) of rain along the Texas coast. Although the central winds fell as the storm moved inland, Carla spawned 26 tornadoes in Texas and Louisiana. It struck Matagorda Island and Port O’Conner with devastating gusts, destroying thousands of buildings and inundating Sabine Pass with a surge of 10 feet (3 m). As it came ashore the maximum sustained winds were down to 145 mph (230 km/hr). Only one DC-6 was available for research as the hurricane approached the coast, finding the winds were decreasing from the peak values earlier that day of 175 mph (280 km/hr). On the 11th Carla was now being tracked by coastal radar stations. National attention was now focused on the looming storm, and local Houston reporter Dan Rather persuaded the CBS national news to extend their coverage to include his reports from the Texas shore. Hurricane Carla depicted on Galveston radar on Sept. The DC-6s and B-57 found Carla’s maximum sustained winds had reached 150 mph (240 km/hr) and were increasing as they left the storm to recover at Dallas, TX. 10th, the forward pace of Carla had reduced to an agonizingly slow crawl, but the storm winds ramped up. Another four-plane series of flights into the storm found the hurricane at the same intense level, with the aircraft recovering at Kelly AFB in Texas to be closer to the storm on its approach. The storm resumed a northwesterly heading and made a slow but steady approach toward Texas. This day they were joined by USWB’s B-57 high-altitude jet and the B-54 investigating the storm. 8th, the winds were up to 125 mph (200 km/hr). When the two DC-6 research planes penetrated Carla again on Sept. The hurricane’s center skirted around the peninsula, and once it moved away from land, Carla strengthened into a major hurricane. 6th found that Carla had become a hurricane as it moved slowly northwestward toward the Yucatan. A second round of research flights on Sept. ![]() The depression moved slowly northward and by the next day it had reached tropical-storm level and was named. ![]() Weather Bureau’s two DC-6 research aircraft flew investigatory missions into the depression, recovering in Kingston, Jamaica. 3rd, a tropical depression formed roughly 200 miles (300 km) north of the Colombian coast. Carla was the first tropical cyclone to have its entire life history recorded by research flights.Ĭarla formed from a persistent area of disturbed weather in the southern Caribbean Sea. On September 11, 1961, Hurricane Carla made landfall at Port O’Connor, Texas, bringing storm surge, torrential rains, high wind gusts and tornadoes to northern Texas and Louisiana. ![]()
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