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Subject: H3) What is it like to fly into a
hurricane?
Contributed by Chris Landsea
The most incredible sight that I've ever seen is in the middle of
a strong hurricane. One might not believe this, but most hurricane
flights are fairly boring. They last 10 hours, there are clouds
above you and clouds below - so all you see is gray, and you don't
feel the winds swirling around the hurricane.
But what does get interesting is flying through the
hurricane's rainbands and the eyewall, which can get a bit turbulent.
The eyewall is a donut-like ring of thunderstorms that surround
the calm eye. The winds within the eyeall can reach as much as
200 mph [325 km/hr] at the flight level, but you can't feel
these aboard the plane. But what makes flying through the
eyewall exhilarating and at times somewhat scary, are the
turbulent updrafts and downdrafts that one hits. Those flying
in the plane definitely feel these wind currents (and sometimes makes
us reach for the air-sickness bags). These vertical winds may reach
up to 50 mph [80 km/hr] either up or down, but are actually much weaker
in general than what one would encounter flying through a continental
supercell thunderstorm.
But once the plane gets into the calm eye of a hurricane like
Andrew or Gilbert, it is a place of powerful beauty: sunshine
streams into the windows of the plane from a perfect circle of
blue sky directly above the plane, surrounding the plane on all
sides is the blackness of the eyewall's thunderstorms,
... and directly below the plane peeking through
the low clouds one can see the violent ocean with waves sometimes
60 feet high [20 m] crashing into one another. The partial vacuum of
the hurricane's eye (where one tenth of the atmosphere is gone)
is like nothing else on earth. I would much rather experience a
hurricane this way - from the safety of a plane - than being on
the ground and having the hurricane's full fury hit without
protection.
The USAFR 53rd Hurricane Hunters have a 'cyber flight' through a
hurriacne. To try it CLICK HERE.
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