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Because the system was operationally assessed as non-tropical by the National Hurricane Center (NHC) and designated after the fact, it went without a name. June saw two tropical storms—Bret and Cindy—form in the tropical Atlantic (south of 23.5°N, east of 60°W) for the first time on record. The former made landfall on Saint Vincent. An ...
The National Hurricane Center uses both UTC and the time zone where the center of the tropical cyclone is currently located. The time zones utilized (east to west) are: Greenwich, Cape Verde, Atlantic, Eastern, and Central. [5] In this timeline, all information is listed by UTC first, with the respective regional time zone included in parentheses.
It then began to rapidly intensify and became the first major hurricane of the 2023 Pacific hurricane season at 15:00 UTC on July 14. In the Western Pacific, after several weeks of inactivity, on July 12, a tropical depression formed off the coast of Aurora, Philippines. It made landfall in Dinapigue, Isabela on the next day.
Hurricane season 2023 has only just begun, but forecasters already know all the names they’ll use for any big storms. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290 ...
The National Hurricane Center continues to track the season’s 16th named storm in Tropical Storm Philippe while keeping tabs on two other systems with a chance to become the season’s 17th. As ...
Tropical cyclones that intensify into tropical storms between the coast of Americas and 140°W are named by the National Hurricane Center ... 2023–24; Names Alvaro ...
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) designated the system Tropical Depression 17 on Saturday morning, and it continued to pick up steam, becoming a named tropical storm at 5 p.m. EDT Saturday.
[2] [27] At the 1969 Hurricane Warning Conference, the National Hurricane Center requested that Carol, Edna, Hazel, and Inez be permanently retired due to their importance to the research community. [2] [28] This request was subsequently accepted and led to today's practice of retiring names of significant tropical cyclones permanently.