User:RandomInfinity17
Hello! I track tropical and subtropical cyclones around the world.
This user participates in WikiProject Tropical cyclones. |
This user participates in the Non-tropical storms task force. |
This user likes tracking tropical cyclones. |
This user is really fascinated by the weather. |
This user is interested in severe weather. |
This user is a participant in WikiProject Weather |
This user's most intense tropical cyclone ever experienced was Hurricane Marie in 2014. |
Interesting weather and space images
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A possible subtropical cyclone in the Black Sea on September 27, 2005.
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Radar scan of the 2021 Western Kentucky tornado lifting debris from the town of Mayfield 30,000 feet into the atmosphere.
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Storm Dennis, the most intense European windstorm of the 21st century, on February 15, 2020.
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Track of Tropical Storm Five of the 1952 Atlantic hurricane season, the northernmost forming Atlantic tropical cyclone.
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A house that was wiped off its foundation after the extremely violent 2011 Hackleburg–Phil Campbell tornado.
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Subtropical Cyclone Katie near Easter Island on May 2, 2015.
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One of the first photos of the Andromeda Galaxy, taken in 1899 by Issac Roberts.
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Satellite image of the 2022 Hunga Tonga–Hunga Haʻapai eruption and the extratropical remnants of Cyclone Cody.
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Radar loop of the most prolific December tornado outbreak on record on December 15, 2021.
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Cryovolcanoes spewing out ice at the south pole of Enceladus.
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Hurricane Dorian approaching Canada as powerful extratropical cyclone on September 7, 2019.
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A record-breaking bomb cyclone off the coast of the Pacific Northwest on October 24, 2021.
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Subtropical Storm One at peak intensity on January 16, 2023.
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C/2022 E3 (ZTF), a long-period comet, on January 27, 2023.
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A waterspout inside of Tropical Storm Colin on June 6, 2016.
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Track of Cyclone Freddy, the longest-lived tropical cyclone on record.
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A potential subtropical storm of the coast of Morroco on February 17, 2002.
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The 1904, Moscow tornado, one of the deadliest Russian tornadoes on record.
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2023 CX1 entering Earth's atmosphere over France on February 13, 2023.
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Subtropical Storm Raoni off the coast of Argentina on June 28, 2021
Tropical cyclones in 2023 (personal analysis)
[edit]Subpages
[edit]My Subpages:
Good ones/Actively working on
[edit]- My sandbox
- Effects of the 1982–83 El Niño in Peru†
- Tropical Storm Namtheun (2021)†
- Unusual areas of tropical cyclogensis†
- Potential Tropical Cyclone Four†
- F6
- 2023 Naypyidaw tornado†
- List of costliest tropical cyclones
Inactive
[edit]- Significant tornadoes of 2023
- Table of Central Pacific tropical cyclones†
- Deadliest tropical cyclones by basin
Mainspace
[edit]- List of costliest tropical cyclones
- Template:Table of F5 and EF5 tornadoes
- Weather of 1985
- October 2022 Southern Ocean cyclone
† open to editing from others
My best works
[edit]- Weather of 2023 (/ Top ) – Started article and contributed significantly to it by adding weather events as they go
- Template:10 deadliest tornadoes worldwide and Template:F5 and EF5 tornadoes () – Started them and my contributions are most of the template content
- List of costliest tropical cyclones (/ Low ) – Started article and most of the article is my contribution, had to delete "some" but I still have the original still exists here
- Weather of 1985 (/ Low ) – Started article and added all events
- October 2022 Southern Ocean cyclone (/ Top ) – Created article for the most intense extratropical cyclone ever
- In-flight fire (/ Mid ) – Needed article for far too long
- 1966 Air New Zealand DC-8 crash (/ Low ) – Technically, I didn't create this article, but I pushed it into B-class
- Rocky Mountain Airways Flight 217 () – The "Mircale On Buffalo Pass" finally has its own article
Random Tropical Cyclone (
)[edit]Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Gati (/ɡɑːtɪ/) was the strongest tropical cyclone on record to make landfall in Somalia, and one of few tropical cyclones to do so in the country. The seventh depression, third cyclonic storm, and second very severe cyclonic storm of the 2020 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Gati formed from an area of low pressure in the Arabian Sea, on 21 November. The storm then explosively intensified, becoming a very severe tropical cyclone and reaching its peak intensity, the following day. Gati weakened slightly before making landfall in northeastern Somalia on 22 November. Gati was the first hurricane-force cyclone to make landfall in Somalia on record. Gati then weakened and became disorganized as it moved inland. The JTWC issued its final advisory on Gati shortly after it moved into the Gulf of Aden on 23 November. The name Gati was suggested by India, which means 'motion' in Hindi.
Gati caused heavy rainfall over Somalia, peaking at 128 mm (5.0 in) in Bosaso. An estimated 10,000 animals were killed by Gati in Ufeyn. The storm killed at least 9 people and displaced approximately 42,000 others in the country and caused millions of dollars in damages. Minor impacts were also observed on the Yemeni island of Socotra and in the Ethiopian Highlands. (Full article...)