Current:Home > FinanceCould Milton become a Category 6 hurricane? Is that even possible? -AssetBase
Could Milton become a Category 6 hurricane? Is that even possible?
View
Date:2025-04-18 00:29:08
Milton’s race from a Category 2 to a Category 5 hurricane in just a few hours has left people wondering if the powerhouse storm could possibly become a Category 6.
The hurricane grew very strong very fast Monday after forming in the Gulf of Mexico, exploding from a 60-mph tropical storm Sunday morning to a powerhouse 180-mph Category 5 hurricane − an eye-popping increase of 130 mph in 36 hours.
The rapidly developing hurricane that shows no signs of stopping won’t technically become a Category 6 because the category doesn't exist at the moment. But it could soon reach the level of a hypothetical Category 6 experts have discussed and stir up arguments about whether the National Hurricane Center’s long-used scale for classifying hurricane wind speeds from Category 1 to 5 might need an overhaul.
Milton is already in rarefied air by surpassing 156 mph winds to become a Category 5. But if it reaches wind speeds of 192 mph, it will surpass a threshold that just five hurricanes and typhoons have reached since 1980, according to Michael Wehner, a climate scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and Jim Kossin, a retired federal scientist and science advisor at the nonprofit First Street Foundation.
Live updatesHurricane Milton grows 'explosively' stronger with 180-mph winds
The pair authored a study looking at whether the extreme storms could become the basis of a Category 6 hurricane denomination. All five of the storms occurred over the previous decade.
The scientists say some of the more intense cyclones are being supercharged by record warm waters in the world’s oceans, especially in the Gulf of Mexico and parts of Southeast Asia and the Philippines.
Kossin and Wehner said they weren’t proposing adding a Category 6 to the wind scale but were trying to “inform broader discussions” about communicating the growing risks in a warming world.
Other weather experts hope to see wind speed categories de-emphasized, saying they don’t adequately convey a hurricane’s broader potential impacts such as storm surge and inland flooding. The worst of the damage from Helene came when the storm reached the Carolinas and had already been downgraded from a hurricane to a tropical storm.
What is the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale?
The hurricane center has used the well-known scale – with wind speed ranges for each of five categories – since the 1970s. The minimum threshold for Category 5 winds is 157 mph.
Designed by engineer Herbert Saffir and adapted by former center director Robert Simpson, the scale stops at Category 5 since winds that high would “cause rupturing damages that are serious no matter how well it's engineered,” Simpson said during a 1999 interview.
The open-ended Category 5 describes anything from “a nominal Category 5 to infinity,” Kossin said. “That’s becoming more and more inadequate with time because climate change is creating more and more of these unprecedented intensities.”
More:'Category 5' was considered the worst hurricane. There's something scarier, study says.
veryGood! (23)
Related
- Small twin
- Unwinding the wage-price spiral
- Polar Bears Are Suffering from the Arctic’s Loss of Sea Ice. So Is Scientists’ Ability to Study Them
- Republicans Seize the ‘Major Questions Doctrine’ to Block Biden’s Climate Agenda
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- And Just Like That's David Eigenberg Reveals Most Surprising Supporter of Justice for Steve
- Why Andy Cohen Finds RHONJ's Teresa Giudice and Melissa Gorga Refreshing Despite Feud
- New York and New England Need More Clean Energy. Is Hydropower From Canada the Best Way to Get it?
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- David Malpass is stepping down as president of the World Bank
Ranking
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- More than 300,000 bottles of Starbucks bottled Frappuccinos have been recalled
- Conservative Justices Express Some Support for Limiting Biden’s Ability to Curtail Greenhouse Gas Emissions
- A Tesla driver was killed after smashing into a firetruck on a California highway
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- An Offshore Wind Farm on Lake Erie Moves Closer to Reality, but Will It Ever Be Built?
- When an Oil Company Profits From a Pipeline Running Beneath Tribal Land Without Consent, What’s Fair Compensation?
- Missing Sub Passenger Stockton Rush's Titanic Connection Will Give You Chills
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
And Just Like That's David Eigenberg Reveals Most Surprising Supporter of Justice for Steve
Compare the election-fraud claims Fox News aired with what its stars knew
Shopify deleted 322,000 hours of meetings. Should the rest of us be jealous?
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
HarperCollins and striking union reach tentative agreement
For the First Time, Nations Band Together in a Move Toward Ending Plastics Pollution
WHO declares aspartame possibly carcinogenic. Here's what to know about the artificial sweetener.