The sex therapy video realformer hurricane, Paulette, essentially died last week, on Sept. 16.
But Paulette has risen again, in the form of a tropical storm (meaning an organized storm with wind speeds of at least 39 mph). The storm is spinning in the far eastern Atlantic.
"Because 2020, we now have Zombie Tropical Storms," the National Weather Service tweeted Tuesday morning. "Welcome back to the land of the living, Tropical Storm #Paulette."
Paulette diminished into a "post-tropical storm" last Wednesday, meaning a tropical cyclone that loses the wind speeds and symmetrical shape needed to be classified as a tropical storm (hurricanes are powerful tropical storms). But amid a profoundly busy Atlantic hurricane season that has seen a record-breaking number of storms for this point of the year (the season exhausted all the 2020 storm namesand is now using Greek letters), the return of Paulette is another exceptional event.
A hurricane turned post-tropical storm hasn't reformed into a tropical storm since 2004, when the storm Ivan also returned from the dead.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Unusually warm ocean waters and a lack of hurricane-shredding winds have created favorable conditions for storm formation in the Atlantic Ocean this year. Warmer oceans fuel tropical storms as more water naturally evaporates into the air, giving storms energy and moisture to intensify.
Paulette, however, won't be a long-lived storm. A National Weather Service forecaster noted Tuesday that the storm will pass over cooler ocean waters and meet winds that will weaken the cyclone in the coming days.
SEE ALSO: Why it's impossible to forecast the weather too far into the futureWhile 2020 has seen an extraordinary number of tropical storms form in the Atlantic, atmospheric scientists don't expect more storms to form overall as the climate relentlessly warms and the oceans absorb colossal amounts of heat. Rather, many researchers expect strong hurricanes, fueled by warmer waters, to grow more intense, meaning higher wind speeds and more damaging and dangerous cyclones.
'Hunger Games' franchise returns to theaters with prequel adaptationiPhone vulnerability targets Apple's iOS Mail appEverything coming to Disney+ in May 2020Disney+ developing Star Wars series with 'Russian Doll' coAirbnb introduces new cleaning standards and 24Zoom has more than 300 million users now, with just 10 million at 2019's endAmazon tech workers called out sick to protest working conditionsDisney+ developing Star Wars series with 'Russian Doll' coA surprising 'Little Fires Everywhere' finale lets the past burnBing made the best coronavirus tracker. Seriously. ‘Bridge on the River Kwai’ to Be Screened at Academy Museum Drawn Into Their Worlds Terasaki Budokan CARE Fair Arrives July 20 JANM Mourns the Passing of Yoshihiro Uchida Monterey Park Police Arrest Teen’s Father THROUGH THE FIRE: Melancholy Wong Makes Emmys History as ‘Beef’ Wins for Acting, Directing, Writing OCBC Obon Festival on July 20 Shumei Hall to Host Workshop and Exhibition by Sumi LTSC Founders Receive UCLA Social Welfare Award
0.1347s , 14345.828125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【sex therapy video real】Zombie storm Paulette, a past hurricane, reforms in the Atlantic ocean,Global Perspective Monitoring