Cyclone (Disaster Management) Group 6
Cyclone (Disaster Management) Group 6
CYCLONE
DISASTER
MANAGEMENT Presented by : Group 6
CONTENTS 2/21
• Tropical cyclone: Majorly formed from clouds and thunderstorms, a Tropical cyclone is a
rotating system majorly originating from the subtropical or tropical regions. The surface water
with elevated temperature evaporates and releases energy when the moving air condenses into
clouds. Tropical cyclones develop between 5 to 30 degrees of latitude. For example,
Hurricanes found in Atlantic and Northeast pacific and typhoons found in Northwest pacific.
Cyclones are categorized according to wind speeds and the damage they cause.
• Polar Cyclone: Polar cyclones are also known as the “Arctic hurricanes” in the Northern
Hemisphere. This is due to their energy sources. The heat is transferred from water to air
and the latent heat is released in the form of cloud condensation. Polar cyclones are
cyclones that occur in polar regions like Greenland, Siberia, and Antarctica.
• Mesocyclone: Mesocyclone is when part of a thunderstorm cloud starts to spin, which may
eventually lead to a tornado. ‘Meso’ means ‘middle’. Tornadoes all come from
thunderstorm clouds, but not all thunderstorm clouds make tornadoes. For a tornado to
occur, part of that cloud must spin, and though we cannot really see this happening, this is
the intermediate, or ‘meso’ step from regular cloud to dangerous spinning cloud running
along the ground. It is one of the strong thunderstorms.
7/21
MESOCYCLON EXTRATROPICAL
E CYCLONE
8/21
STORM SURGE
12/21
• Floods: Heavy and continued rains due to cyclones
may cause floods and submergence of low lying areas
resulting in loss of life and property. Floods and
coastal inundation pollute drinking water sources
causing eruption of epidemics.
THANKYO
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