Can We Quantify the Energy Released by Hurricanes?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on quantifying the energy released by hurricanes, focusing on the conversion of thermal energy from warm ocean water into kinetic energy. It highlights that the energy source for hurricanes involves spatial pressure differences and the Coriolis effect. The condensation of water vapor high in the atmosphere releases heat, contributing to the storm's power, which is linked to the evaporation rate of water. Strong hurricanes create numerous small water bubbles, increasing the effective water surface area and enhancing evaporation. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for calculating the total energy output of hurricanes.
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Is there a way the quantify the energy 'released' by a hurricane? Does the energy have a source so to speak?
 
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The energy source of a tornado is the same as for a solar vortex plant or (a bit less unconventionally) a solar updraft tower: during the day the air at the ground becomes less dense than the air high in the atmosphere.

For a hurricane I suppose much of the wind (following the Coriolis effect) must be powered by some spatial inhomogeneity, the pressure cell.
 
My best guess is that thermal energy from the water is being converted into kinetic energy. With class five storms, it appears that there is some kind of run away breakdown effect...some sort of resonance or something.

I'd like to know how many joules of energy are actually release in a hurricane.
 
It's the water vapor above the sea water that is sucked up by the hurricane that releases heat when it condenses high in the sky. So, the power of the hurricane is related to the evaporation rate of the water.

I've read that strong hurricanes transform the water surface into a big volume of small water bubbles. As the winds become stronger and stronger, you get more and more waves that start to break. Above a certain wind speed, there us no clearly definable water surface anymore.

The total evaporation rate is proportional the the water surface. In case of strong hurricanes, the water surface is the sum of the surfaces of all the water bubbles which is huge...
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks

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