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    Tropical Storm Dalila: Natural Hazards

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    Tropical Storm Dalila: Natural Hazards

    WASHINGTON, D.C., UNITED STATES

    08.02.2011

    Courtesy Photo

    NASA

    Tropical Storm Dalila was already starting to fade on July 26, 2007, when the QuikSCAT satellite captured this image. The image shows wind speed in color and wind direction with barbs. The white barbs point to areas of intense rain. Dalila was never a big storm and was just declining from its peak when the data used to create this image were captured. High wind speeds -- red and purple -- are north of the calm region, represented by a green spot, that marks the center of the storm. In a well-organized storm, high winds circle a calm eye like a bull's eye. Though the wind direction circles the center in neat bands, the storm itself is spread in a horizontal oval instead of a symmetrical circle.

    Tropical Storm Dalila was the eighth tropical system to form in the East Pacific during the 2007 season, and the fourth named storm. Dalila formed south of Baja California and arced northwest over cooler waters as it degraded. At the time this image was taken, the storm's winds blew at 74-83 kilometers per hour (40-45 knots or 46-52 miles per hour) said weather.unisys.com/hurricane/e_pacific/2007/DALILA/track.dat UNISYS Weather.

    NASA image courtesy of David Long, Brigham Young University, on the winds.jpl.nasa.gov/ QuikSCAT Science Team, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.



    NASA Identifier: DALILA_QST_2007207

    IMAGE INFO

    Date Taken: 08.02.2011
    Date Posted: 02.08.2013 02:56
    Photo ID: 833167
    Resolution: 1740x1560
    Size: 1.19 MB
    Location: WASHINGTON, D.C., US

    Web Views: 21
    Downloads: 0

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