Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission TRMM homepage
Hurricane Kenna October 25, 2002
 Link to image of Hurricane Kenna
 Link to Precipitation Radar Cross Section image of Hurricane Kenna
See LARGE [1,835 k] 3-D QUICKTIME ANIMATION of Slice
See VERY LARGE [6,775 k] 3-D QUICKTIME ANIMATION of Slice
See LARGE 3-D MPEG ANIMATION of Slice


Monster Hurricane Kenna Poses Severe Threat to Mexican Coast

Hurricane Kenna, the sixteenth tropical disturbance of the 2002 eastern Pacific hurricane season, explosively intensified from a tropical storm to a Category 5 hurricane in less than 48 hours. As of today, Kenna is expected to make landfall over the western Mexican coast as a Category 4 storm. Kenna was born in the warm tropical waters of the eastern Pacific south of Mexico on October 22 to become the strongest storm to threaten the Americas in 2002.

This Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission (TRMM) overpass from the afternoon of October 23 shows the rain structure inside the rainbands and inner core of Kenna. Red and yellow colors indicate the most intense rains. TRMM shows that the rainfall pattern is highly asymmetric, with most of the rain falling west of the storm center. TRMM also reveals that the tight, compact eye is well formed and is flanked by towering thunderstorm clouds. These towers, which are 16-17 km tall, contain the heaviest rains and act to energize the core of the storm, sustaining winds of nearly 140 mph.


NASA Home Page
NASDA Home Page
GSFC Home Page
Breaking News
Rainfall Measurements
Real Time Products
Introduction
Images and Movies
Publications
Data Products
Educational Resouces
Validation
Related Links
Contact Information
Privacy Statement
Image Policy
NASA home page



Current Web Curator:
Harold.F.Pierce@nasa.gov