PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

NASA sees super typhoon affecting Philippines and Taiwan, headed to China

2013-09-21
(Press-News.org) VIDEO: In this TRMM satellite flyover animation from Sept. 19 rain was falling at a rate of over 140mm/~5.5 inches (red) per hour in the powerful storms within Super Typhoon Usagi's...
Click here for more information.

The most powerful typhoon of 2013 was passing between northern Philippines and southern Taiwan on Sept. 19. When NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Usagi, infrared data showed a large area of powerful thunderstorms and heavy rain surrounding the center while NASA's TRMM satellite measured that heavy rainfall from space.

Super-Typhoon Usagi is a monster storm that according the Joint Typhoon Warning Center is headed for a landfall near Hong Kong on Sept. 22 around 1200 UTC/8 a.m. EDT/8 p.m. local time Hong Kong.

Usagi formed in the open waters of the Philippine Sea about 1,000 km/~620 miles east of the Philippines on September 16, 2013. Usagi rapidly intensified and became a typhoon on Sept. 18 and a Super Typhoon on Sept. 19 when it had estimated maximum winds of close to 140 knots/~161 mph.

NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission or TRMM satellite had an excellent view of Usagi September 19, 2013 at 1035 UTC/6:35 a.m. EDT/6:35 p.m. local time Hong Kong. At NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. a precipitation analysis from TRMM's Microwave Imager (TMI) and Precipitation Radar (PR) instruments was overlaid on an enhanced infrared image from TRMM's Visible and InfraRed Scanner (VIRS). The most striking feature on the image was Usagi's small, clear eye. Rain was measured by TRMM's PR instrument falling at a rate of over 140mm/~5.5 inches per hour in the powerful storms within super typhoon Usagi's eye wall.

TRMM's Precipitation Radar or PR can provide 3-D vertical profiles of rain and snow from the surface up to a height of about 12 miles/20 kilometers. TRMM's 3-D view of the vertical structure near Usagi's eye found that the violent storms in Usagi's eye wall were consistently reaching heights of over 15 km/~9.3 miles. A few storms found in a feeder band spiraling into Usagi from the south were reaching even higher heights of over 16 km/~9.9 miles.

After the TRMM satellite captured rainfall, NASA's Aqua satellite passed over the Super-Typhoon. The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder or AIRS instrument that flies aboard NASA's Aqua satellite captured an infrared image at 17:29 UTC/1:29 p.m. EDT that also clearly showed a pinpoint eye. AIRS measured cloud-top temperatures to determine cloud heights, which also indicate strength. Cloud top temperatures were as cold as 210 kelvin/ -81.6F/-63.1C, indicating very high, very powerful thunderstorms with heavy rainfall potential. Strong thunderstorms with heavy rain were over northern Luzon, Philippines at the time of the image. Infrared data on Sept. 20 revealed that convection (rising air that forms the thunderstorms that make up the tropical cyclone) in the northern quadrant were decaying, or weakening.

Satellite data also showed that Usagi was undergoing eyewall replacement on Sept. 20, which is typical for very powerful typhoons or hurricanes.

There are warnings in effect in Taiwan, the northern Philippines and China. Typhoon Warnings are up for Taiwan, especially for southeastern and southwestern areas as Usagi is forecast to move south of the island. In the Philippines, warnings and watches were posted for the northern provinces of the Philippines that include flash flooding, heavy rain, landslides and storm surges.

In China, the China Meteorological Administration or CMA issued an orange alert. The CMA's website noted that Usagi is expected to move across Bashi Channel at noon (local time) on Sept. 20 then enter northeastern South China Sea to approach coastal Guangdong.

On Sept. 20 at 1500 UTC/11 a.m. EDT, Usagi's maximum sustained winds dropped to 130 knots/149 mph/241 kph. The center of the storm was located near 20.3 north and 123.2 east, about 324 nautical miles south-southeast of Taipei, Taiwan. Super-Typhoon Usagi is moving to the west-northwest at 9 knots/10.3 mph/16.6 kph.

The latest Joint Typhoon Warning Center forecast projects that Usagi will pass north of the Philippines in the next couple days and then pass very close to the southern tip of Taiwan on September 21. This path exposes southern Taiwan to the most dangerous part of the typhoon.



INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Prostacyclin analogs and PDE 5 inhibitors synergistically stimulate ATP release from human RBCs

2013-09-21
Researchers at Saint Louis University School of Medicine have discovered a novel interaction between prostacyclin (PGI2) analogs and phosphodiesterase 5 (PDE5) inhibitors, two groups of drugs used in the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). They found that, in combination, these drugs stimulate enhanced release of a potent vasodilator adenosine triphosphate (ATP) from human red blood cells (RBCs). Their study appears in the September 2013 issue of Experimental Biology and Medicine. PAH is a chronic disorder characterized by sustained increases in pulmonary ...

Followers' actions affect organization's leadership capacity Wayne State researcher finds

2013-09-21
DETROIT — Members of an educational organization contribute to its leadership and can blend personal and social needs to help leaders encourage cooperation, a Wayne State University researcher has found. Administrators of college preparatory programs — which are aimed at high school students but housed in colleges or universities — typically have been viewed as leaders, with students seen as followers. Recent scholarship, however, has begun to focus on the impact of followers on educational organizations' leadership and leadership practices. Michael Owens, Ph.D., assistant ...

TRMM satellite sees system 98W organizing near Guam, Marianas

2013-09-21
NASA's TRMM satellite data revealed heavy rainfall and banding of thunderstorms around the southern quadrant of System 98W in the northwestern Pacific near Guam and the Marianas Islands. Those are two signs that the low pressure area may be consolidating into a tropical depression. At 1700 UTC/1 p.m. EDT on Sept. 20, System 98W was centered about 16.2 north and 146.7 east, about 195 nautical miles north-northeast of Andersen Air Force Base, Guam. System 98W had maximum sustained winds near 25 knots/28.7 mph/46.3 kph. NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission satellite ...

Covert operations: Your brain digitally remastered for clarity of thought

2013-09-21
The sweep of a needle across the grooves of a worn vinyl record carries distinct sounds: hisses, scratches, even the echo of skips. For many years, though, those yearning to hear Frank Sinatra sing "Fly Me to the Moon" have been able to listen to his light baritone with technical clarity, courtesy of the increased signal-to-noise ratio of digital remasterings. Now, with advances in neurofeedback techniques, the signal-to-noise ratio of the brain activity underlying our thoughts can be remastered as well, according to a recent discovery in the Proceedings of the National ...

Stronger sexual impulses may explain why men cheat more than women, study reveals

2013-09-21
AUSTIN, Texas — A recently published study strongly suggests men succumb to sexual temptations more than women — for example, cheating on a partner — because they experience strong sexual impulses, not because they have weak self-control. Previous research has shown that men are more likely than women to pursue romantic partners that are "off limits." However, until now, the explanation for this sex difference was largely unexplored. One possible explanation for this effect is that men experience stronger sexual impulses than women do. A second possibility is that ...

Arctic sea ice minimum in 2013 is sixth lowest on record

2013-09-21
After an unusually cold summer in the northernmost latitudes, Arctic sea ice appears to have reached its annual minimum summer extent for 2013 on Sept. 13, the NASA-supported National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) at the University of Colorado in Boulder has reported. Analysis of satellite data by NSIDC and NASA showed that the sea ice extent shrunk to 1.97 million square miles (5.10 million square kilometers). This year's sea ice extent is substantially higher than last year's record low minimum. On Sept.16, 2012, Arctic sea ice reached its smallest extent ever recorded ...

New research supports intentional weight loss for older adults

2013-09-20
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Sept. 19, 2013 – The medical community touts the importance of not carrying excess weight, but that has not always been the message delivered to older adults. Weight loss has been discouraged among older adults, partly because of health concerns over inadvertent reductions in muscle and bone mass, which is known to accompany overall weight loss. However, new research from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center shows that physical activity and weight loss conducted together for older, overweight and obese adults results in improved body composition, translating ...

In water as in love, likes can attract

2013-09-20
At some point in elementary school you were shown that opposite charges attract and like charges repel. This is a universal scientific truth – except when it isn't. A research team led by chemist Richard Saykally and theorist David Prendergast of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) has shown that when hydrated in water, positively charged ions (cations) can actually pair up with one another. "Through a combination of X-ray spectroscopy, liquid microjets and first principles' theory, we've observed and characterized contact pairing between guanidinium ...

Geosphere, GSA's dynamic online-only journal posts 9 new articles in Sept.

2013-09-20
Boulder, Colo., USA – Geosphere has posted additions to several themed issues: History and Impact of Sea-Level Change Offshore New Jersey; Geodynamics and Consequences of Lithospheric Removal in the Sierra Nevada, California; Cenozoic Tectonics, Magmatism, and Stratigraphy of the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone Region and Adjacent Areas; Origin and Evolution of the Sierra Nevada and Walker Lane. Two other articles cover terrestrial laser scanning and the earthquake hazard of the Hat Creek fault. Abstracts for these and other Geosphere papers are available at http://geosphere.gsapubs.org/. ...

Warming ocean thawing Antarctica glacier, researchers say

2013-09-20
Fairbanks, Alaska— For the first time, researchers completed an extensive exploration of how quickly ice is melting underneath a rapidly changing Antarctic glacier, possibly the biggest source of uncertainty in global sea level projections. Martin Truffer, a physics professor at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, and Tim Stanton, an oceanographer with the Naval Postgraduate School, were able to look underneath the Pine Island Glacier on the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and take exact measurements of the undersea melting process. "This particular site is crucial, because ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Exposure to life-limiting heat has soared around the planet

New AI agent could transform how scientists study weather and climate

New study sheds light on protein landscape crucial for plant life

New study finds deep ocean microbes already prepared to tackle climate change

ARLIS partners with industry leaders to improve safety of quantum computers

Modernization can increase differences between cultures

Cannabis intoxication disrupts many types of memory

Heat does not reduce prosociality

Advancing brain–computer interfaces for rehabilitation and assistive technologies

Detecting Alzheimer's with DNA aptamers—new tool for an easy blood test

Chinese Neurosurgical Journal study develops radiomics model to predict secondary decompressive craniectomy

New molecular switch that boosts tooth regeneration discovered

Jeonbuk National University researchers track mineral growth on bioorganic coatings in real time at nanoscale

Convergence in the Canopy: Why the Gracixalus weii treefrog sounds like a songbird

Subway systems are uncomfortably hot — and worsening

Granular activated carbon-sorbed PFAS can be used to extract lithium from brine

How AI is integrated into clinical workflow lowers medical liability perception

New biotech company to accelerate treatments for heart disease

One gene makes the difference: research team achieves breakthrough in breeding winter-hardy faba beans

Predicting brain health with a smartwatch

How boron helps to produce key proteins for new cancer therapies

Writing the catalog of plasma membrane repair proteins

A comprehensive review charts how psychiatry could finally diagnose what it actually treats

Thousands of genetic variants shape epilepsy risk, and most remain hidden

First comprehensive sex-specific atlas of GLP-1 in the mouse brain reveals why blockbuster weight-loss drugs may work differently in females and males

When rats run, their gut bacteria rewrite the chemical conversation with the brain

Movies reconstructed from mouse brain activity

Subglacial weathering may have slowed Earth's escape from snowball Earth

Simple test could transform time to endometriosis diagnosis

Why ‘being squeezed’ helps breast cancer cells to thrive

[Press-News.org] NASA sees super typhoon affecting Philippines and Taiwan, headed to China