2005 Hurricane Season:
      Water Vapor with SST
      Gray Scale IR Satellite
Description:
"This hurricane season shattered records that have stood for decades - most named storms, most hurricanes and most category five storms. Arguably, it was the most devastating hurricane season the country has experienced in modern times," said retired Navy Vice Adm. Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr., Ph.D., undersecretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator.
With 28 named storms, 15 hurricanes, seven major hurricanes, and four category 5 hurricanes, the 2005 hurricane season certainly blew the records away. It was also the first season in which four major hurricanes hit the U.S.. The season started early and ended late with two tropical storms in June (which hadnt happened since 1986) and three tropical storms in November with one that formed in December and dissipated in January. The season also included the most rapid intensification of a hurricane in 24 hours in the Atlantic Ocean, a record held by Wilma. The third and fourth most intense hurricanes ever recorded in the Atlantic basin were Rita and Wilma.
Even with all these records, the 2005 hurricane season will arguably be most remembered for Hurricane Katrina, which devastated parts of Mississippi, Louisiana and in particular, New Orleans. Over 1600 people died during the storm and an estimated cost for all the damage, $75 billion, makes Katrina the costliest hurricane ever.
Two datasets are available for the 2005 hurricane season. The first (image at upper right) is a water vapor satellite image with sea surface temperatures below it available from June 30, 2005 through October 31, 2005. Because water vapor emits radiation, satellites can be set to detect water vapor in the atmosphere. All clouds contain water vapor, so when the satellite detects an area with a high concentration of water vapor, it is detecting a cloud. The clouds in hurricanes are easy to detect because they are well formed and contain an excess of water vapor. The shading of the ocean indicates the temperature; the orange and red areas are the warmest, and the blue areas are the coolest. One reason the unusually powerful hurricane season of 2005 was the above average temperature of the oceans.
The second is a gray-scale infrared satellite image available from June 1, 2005 through January 3, 2006. IR satellites measure emitted heated. Where there are clouds, the satellites measure the heat emitted by the clouds rather than the ground below it. Because clouds are so much colder than the ground, they are easy to detect on IR satellite images. The brightest white clouds are the highest ones, indicating that they have powerful storms below.
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| Ocean temperature as used in the dataset "Wisconsin (Water Vapor with SST - Tropical Atlantic Breeding Ground)" |
Notable Features:
| Name | Date | Peak Strength | Landfall Location | Damage Cost |
| Arlene | June 8-13 | Trop. Storm | Cuba Pensacola, FL | $ 11.8 mil |
| Bret | June 28-29 | Trop. Storm | Mexico | $ 9 mil |
| Cindy | July 3-7 | Cat. 1 | Yucatan Peninsula Grand Isle, LA | $ 320 mil |
| Dennis | July 4-13 | Cat. 4 | Cuba Pensacola, FL | $ 4 bil |
| Emily | July 10-21 | Cat. 5 | Yucatan Peninsula Mexico | $ 550 mil |
| Franklin | July 21-29 | Trop. Storm | No Landfall | N/A |
| Gert | July 23-25 | Trop. Storm | Mexico | $ 5 mil |
| Harvey | Aug. 2-8 | Trop. Storm | No Landfall | N/A |
| Irene | Aug. 4-18 | Cat. 2 | No Landfall | N/A |
| Jose | Aug. 22-23 | Trop. Storm | Mexico | $ 45 mil |
| Katrina | Aug. 23-31 | Cat. 5 | South Florida Louisiana Coast Pearlington, MS | $ 75 bil |
| Lee | Aug. 28-Sept. 2 | Trop. Storm | No Landfall | N/A |
| Maria | Sept. 1-14 | Cat. 3 | No Landfall | N/A |
| Nate | Sept. 5-10 | Cat. 1 | No Landfall | N/A |
| Ophelia | Sept. 6-23 | Cat. 1 | Brushed Outer Banks, NC | $ 70 mil |
| Phillippe | Sept. 17-24 | Cat. 1 | No Landfall | N/A |
| Rita | Sept. 17-26 | Cat. 5 | Cameron Parish, LA | $ 10 bil |
| Stan | Oct. 1-5 | Cat. 1 | Yucatan Peninsula Mexico | $ 1-2 bil |
| Tammy | Oct. 5-6 | Trop. Storm | Jacksonville, FL | $ 30 mil |
| Vince | Oct. 8-11 | Cat. 1 | Huelva, Spain | N/A |
| Wilma | Oct. 15-25 | Cat. 5 | Yucatan Peninsula South Florida | $ 16-20 bil |
| Alpha | Oct. 22-24 | Trop. Storm | Dominican Republic | N/A |
| Beta | Oct. 26-31 | Cat. 3 | Columbia | N/A |
| Gamma | Nov. 14-21 | Trop. Storm | Honduras | N/A |
| Delta | Nov. 23-28 | Trop. Storm | N/A | N/A |
| Epsilon | Nov. 29-Dec. 8 | Cat. 1 | N/A | N/A |
| Zeta | Dec. 30-Jan. 6 | Trop. Storm | N/A | N/A |
Data Category
Major: Atmosphere
Keywords:
Atmosphere, 2005 hurricane season, IR satellite,water vapor, satellite
| Data Set Name | 2005_hurricane/wvsst |
| Data Set Source | Space Science and Engineering Center, University of Wisconsin |
| Data Set Developer | Space Science and Engineering Center, University of Wisconsin |
| Visualization Developer | Rick Kohrs, SSEC |
| Audio | No |
| Download | FTP |
| Data Set Name | 2005_hurricane/grayir |
| Data Set Source | MCIDAS |
| Data Set Developer | AWC |
| Visualization Developer | Steve Albers, NOAA/GSD |
| Audio | Yes |
| Download | FTP |
Water Vapor with Sea Surface Temperature (81 mb)
Gray Scale IR Satellite (28 mb)