Did Hurricane Wilma have 209 mph sustained winds?
At last week's 30th Conference on Hurricanes and Tropical Meteorology of the American Meteorological Society, Dr. Eric Uhlhorn of NOAA's Hurricane Research Division presented a poster that looked at the relationship between surface winds measured by the SFMR instrument and flight-level winds in two Category 5 storms. Hurricane Hunter flights done into Category 5 Supertyphoon Megi (17 October 2010) and Category 5 Hurricane Felix (03 September 2007) found that the surface winds measured by SFMR were greater than those measured at flight level (10,000 feet.) Usually, surface winds in a hurricane are 10 - 15% less than at 10,000 feet, but he showed that in super-intense Category 5 storms with small eyes, the dynamics of these situations may generate surface winds that are as strong or stronger than those found at 10,000 feet. He extrapolated this statistical relationship (using the inertial stability measured at flight level) to Hurricane Wilma of 2005, which was the strongest hurricane on record (882 mb), but was not observed by the SFMR. He estimated that the maximum wind averaged around the eyewall in Wilma at peak intensity could have been 209 mph, plus or minus 20 mph--so conceivably as high as 229 mph, with gusts to 270 mph. Yowza. That's well in excess of the 200 mph minimum wind speed a top end EF-5 tornado has. The Joplin, Missouri EF-5 tornado of May 22, 2011 had winds estimated at 225 - 250 mph. That tornado ripped pavement from the ground, leveled buildings to the concrete slabs they were built on, and killed 161 people. It's not a pretty thought to consider what Wilma would have done to Cancun, Key West, or Fort Myers had the hurricane hit with sustained winds of what the Joplin tornado had.

Figure 1. Hurricane Wilma's pinhole eye as seen at 8:22 a.m. CDT Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2005, by the crew aboard NASA's international space station as the complex flew 222 miles above the storm. At the time, Wilma was the strongest Atlantic hurricane in history, with a central pressure of 882 mb and sustained surface winds estimated at 185 mph. The storm was located in the Caribbean Sea, 340 miles southeast of Cozumel, Mexico. Image source: NASA's Space Photo Gallery.

Figure 2. Damage in Joplin, Missouri after the EF-5 tornado of May 22, 2011. Image credit: wunderphotographer thebige.
Official all-time strongest winds in an Atlantic hurricane: 190 mph
The official record for strongest winds in an Atlantic hurricane is 190 mph, for Hurricane Allen of 1980 as it was entering the Gulf of Mexico, and for Hurricane Camille of 1969, as it was making landfall in Pass Christian, Mississippi. In Dr. Bob Sheets' and Jack Williams' book, Hurricane Watch, they recount the Hurricane Hunters flight into Camile as the hurricane reached peak intensity: On Sunday afternoon, August 17, and Air Force C-130 piloted by Marvin Little penetrated Camille's eye and measured a pressure of 26.62 inches of mercury. "Just as we were nearing the eyewall cloud we suddenly broke into a clear area and could see the sea surface below," the copilot, Robert Lee Clark, wrote in 1982. "What a sight! Although everyone on the crew was experienced except me, no one had seen the wind whip the sea like that before...Instead of the green and white splotches normally found in a storm, the sea surface was in deep furrows running along the wind direction....The velocity was beyond the descriptions used in our training and far beyond anything we had ever seen." So, the 190 mph winds of Camille were an estimate that was off the scale from anything that had ever been observed in the past. The books that the Hurricane Hunters carried, filled with photos of the sea state at various wind speeds, only goes up to 150 mph (Figure 2). I still used this book to estimate surface winds when I flew with the Hurricane Hunters in the late 1980s, and the books are still carried on the planes today. In the two Category 5 hurricanes I flew into, Hugo and Gilbert, I never observed the furrowing effect referred to above. Gilbert had surface winds estimated at 175 mph based on what we measured at flight level, so I believe the 190 mph wind estimate in Camille may be reasonable.

Figure 3. Appearance of the sea surface in winds of 130 knots (150 mph). Image credit: Wind Estimations from Aerial Observations of Sea Conditions (1954), by Charlie Neumann.

Figure 4. Radar image of Hurricane Camille taken at 22:15 UTC August 17, 1969, a few hours before landfall in Mississippi. At the time, Camille had the highest sustained winds of any Atlantic hurricane in history--190 mph.
The infamous hurricane hunter flight into Wilma during its rapid intensification
While I was at last week's conference, I had a conversation with Rich Henning, a flight meteorologist for NOAA's Hurricane Hunters, who served for many years as a Air Reconnaissance Weather Officer (ARWO) for the Air Force Hurricane Hunters. Rich told me the story of the Air Force Hurricane Hunter mission into Hurricane Wilma in the early morning hours of October 19, 2005, as Wilma entered its explosive deepening phase. The previous airplane, which had departed Category 1 Wilma six hours previously, flew through Wilma at an altitude of 5,000 feet. They measured a central pressure of 954 mb when they departed the eye at 23:10 UTC. The crew of the new plane assumed that the hurricane, though intensifying, was probably not a major hurricane, and decided that they would also go in at 5,000 feet. Winds outside the eyewall were less than hurricane force, so this seemed like a reasonable assumption. Once the airplane hit the eyewall, they realized their mistake. Flight level winds quickly rose to 186 mph, far in excess of Category 5 strength, and severe turbulence rocked the aircraft. The aircraft was keeping a constant pressure altitude to maintain their height above the ocean during the penetration, but the area of low pressure at Wilma's center was so intense that the airplane descended at over 1,000 feet per minute during the penetration in order to maintain a constant pressure altitude. By they time they punched into the incredibly tiny 4-mile wide eye, which had a central pressure of just 901 mb at 04:32 UTC, the plane was at a dangerously low altitude of 1,500 feet--not a good idea in a Category 5 hurricane. The pilot ordered an immediate climb, and the plane exited the other side of Wilma's eyewall at an altitude of 10,000 feet. They maintained this altitude for the remainder of the flight. During their next pass through the eye at 06:11 UTC, the diameter of the eye had shrunk to an incredibly tiny two miles--the smallest hurricane eye ever measured. During their third and final pass through the eye at 0801 UTC, a dropsonde found a central pressure of 882 mb--the lowest pressure ever observed in an Atlantic hurricane. In the span of just 24 hours, Wilma had intensified from a 70 mph tropical storm to a 175 mph category 5 hurricane--an unprecedented event for an Atlantic hurricane. Since the pressure was still falling, it is likely that Wilma became even stronger after the mission departed.
I'll have a new post by Tuesday at the latest.
Jeff Masters
Reader Comments
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Hey! No fair! Some of us aren't mentally dextrous enough to engage in true waffling.
September 17, 1965, to March 28, 1971,
EDIT
The CMC does see a low for Florida and takes it to the GOM..
then develops a low off the NC coast
Hopefully, concerning this conversation, the admins see...NOTHING!!!!!
I love that show, but few of my friends in school have seen it.
oh well, it is an off day Sunday afternoon, no rules broken. I think
640 Grothar: It really isn't polite to correct someone's spelling on the blog, or their grammar. But sometimes it can be funny. Since English is not really my first language, I am always a little hesitant to correct someone anyway. English is by far, one of the most difficult languages to write correctly. Even Klingon is pretty much phonetic.
It isn't polite to point out that one is correcting a spelling or grammar error...
...though pointedly correcting the text of someone attacking another for such errors is easily justifiable under the "We all make mistakes, especially including you." doctrine.
When quoting someone, I too routinely correct spelling, capitalization, and punctuation errors without announcing that I'm doing so:
It makes the reading easier, especially for languages infrequently used on the forum.
Constantly seeing misspellings/etc confuses the mind into making the same errors. And for me personally, making the correction helps to ensure that I won't copy that error in the future.
I pretty much leave grammatical errors alone. Frequently, "breaking the rules" of grammar is a purely stylistic choice. English has no rules of grammar: there is no official body deciding what is proper English and what is not.
And at least as frequently, the "rules" are wrong. eg For most people, "he quickly ran to the store" conveys a different meaning than "he ran quickly to the store". One describes how soon he started and the other describes how he ran.
Yet the "properly worded" substitute for both (according to most grammar texts) is ambiguous at best.
On the other hand, mischosen homonyms and misspellings that humorously change the meaning of a sentence from what was intended are fair game for (t)witticisms.
eg "I wait for your response with baited breath, chum."
Sweet!
NHC BULLETIN
HURRICANE BERYL ADVISORY NUMBER 12
NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL AL092011
1100 AM AST SUN AUG 24 2012
...BERYL STRENGTHENS TO 345 MPH... BREAKING ALL CYCLONE RECORDS FOR FOR THE ERA... THIS IS A VERY SERIOUS PHENOMENON MAKING HISTORY
SUMMARY OF 1100 AM AST...0600 UTC...INFORMATION
----------------------------------------------
LOCATION...16.0N 60.4W
ABOUT 75 MI...125 KM ESE OF GUADELOUPE
ABOUT 120 MI...195 KM SE OF ANTIGUA
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...345 MPH...300 KT
PRESENT MOVEMENT...W OR 280 DEGREES AT 12 MPH...8 KM/H
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...754 MB
accordin to the Elements of Style, required in my curriculum, it is perfectly fine to deviate from standard grammar rules to better express you meaning.
The problem comes when the deviation is in no way necessary or even beneficial
as a kid i eat 2 boxes, but i am too impatient to wait for them to fully toast. :)
It's been dry and partly cloudy today
But it has to have some sort of flow. English isn't my favorite subject (or was). Back when schools were good.
I pretty much leave grammatical errors alone; frequently, "breaking the rules" of grammar is a purely stylistic choice. English has no rules of grammar: there is no official body deciding what is proper English and what is not.
And frequently the "rules" are wrong. eg For most people, "he quickly ran to the store" conveys a different meaning than "he ran quickly to the store". One describes how soon he started and the other describes how he ran. Yet the "properly worded" substitute for both (according to most grammar texts) is ambiguous at best.
Yikes, I am quickly drying my socks out after stepping in a huge puddle getting out of my car today in Boca. Then, I quickly I had to go back out to my car, and shut the window I left open, quickly realizing that the interior was getting drenched. I quickly realized, what a moron I was.
On a serious note, we are getting a nice soaking in SE Florida. Wonder if it will keep up thru tomorrow nite, since we are under a flood watch until 8pm Monday night.
Much needed rain though, for our golf course. Any tropical characteristics starting to form in the area? Wondering?
We had 37 inches from TS Nicole in 2010....i think a storm in the pacific in 2009 dumped about 2000mm of rain in the Philippines if i'm not mistaken
That's true.
We got over 20 inches from Ex Nicole at that time..I remember Cantore waiting in Florida on TWC for TS Nicole at the time and it barely even rained but when it got to us, oh boy!
Excellent, rainy hot and damp does not work for me. You are probably used to the local weather. I would probably be whining. I am happy to live where it is not humid very often. And not Hot and Humid at the same time, which is a plus.
Speaking of Pluses and Minuses. I don't see any on the Blog today. Am I missing something. I am obviously logged on so that isn't it. Did someone break that feature.
DEVELOPING A WEAK SURFACE LOW ACROSS WESTERN CUBA ON THE
SOUTHWESTERN PERIPHERY OF THE RIDGE THAT EVENTUALLY WEAKENS AND
DISSIPATES ACROSS THE NW GULF WATERS.
Excellent. You have to read that a few times to make it work.
lol, that's funny...seems a bit close to the Jamaican creole
that is a typo, not no grammar error.
and my schoolings is good, i is homeschooled
:)
There, that is about the worst grammar i can think of.
That is like my theory of Papa John's should have eat-in restaurants.
Y0 |]4\/\/G
7H4 41|\|7 |}4|]!
abt 's bad 's cn think
Yes it was quite correct. But you had to mentally punctuate it.
Not sure if it supposed to have some or not. English was not one of my good subjects. Went more for Euro History and Auto Shop and Electronics.
Which eventually weakens and dissipates... the ridge or the weak low?
Or take shelter in the nearest camper with wings!
DOOM
What? Only on the ''B'' Storm by August 24th? Bust season.
Only need 2 when one of them is that one.
I thought Ivan had wave heights in the region of 130ft or am I mistaken
We had so much rain from Nicole...it was almost unbelievable
Where did the +'s and -'s go to? Did the Admins take them and take the day off as well.
sort of like a hurricane-tsunami
absolutely!
No, after that they change Chris to Chuck Norris...500mph
how about 345 ?
THE END OF THE DAYS!!!!
I'm still seeing them as well pedley
It's a real good thing Wilma was being her bad self all by her lonesome out there in the CAR....
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