User:IrfanFaiz/Sandbox/Typhoon Chaba (2004)

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Typhoon Chaba
Typhoon  (JMA)
Category 5 super typhoon (SSHS)
Super Typhoon Chaba near peak intensity

Super Typhoon Chaba near peak intensity
Formed August 17, 2004
Dissipated August 31, 2004
Highest
winds
110 kt (125 mph, 200 km/h) (10-minute sustained)
155 kt (185 mph, 285 km/h) (1-minute sustained)
Lowest pressure 910 mbar (hPa)
Damage ≥$73 Million (2004) USD
Fatalities At least 7
Areas
affected
Japan
Part of the
2004 Pacific typhoon season



Typhoon Chaba (international designation: 0416, JTWC designation: 19W, and sometimes called Super Typhoon Chaba) was a powerful Category 5 typhoon that struck Southern Japan as a minimal typhoon. Chaba caused 7 deaths almost all due to floods and landslides. Chaba was one of the most intense typhoons in the 2004 Pacific typhoon season, tying with Typhoon Dianmu of the same season.

Contents

[edit] Storm history

Storm path
Storm path

A tropical depression formed east of Kwajalein on August 17 and was tracked westward. Tropical Depression 19W began to intensify rapidly. It continued to track westward along the southern periphery of a ridge, it reached Tropical Storm status on August 19 and was named "Chaba" a type of a tropical flower. On August 21, Chaba formed a dual-outflow channel and it allowed the cyclone to intensify rapidly and reach a maximum intensity of 110 kt (130 mph, 210 km/h) and a minimum pressure of 910 mbar (hPa) while being approximately 75 nautical miles northwest of Guam.

A trough caused Chaba to track to the northwest and warm waters in the regions along with a well-defined outflow structure allowed Chaba to maintain it's peak intensity for a continuous period on August 26. The trough then moved eastward and caused the ridge to strengthen and shift the track of Typhoon Chaba slowly westward for a couple of days. Another trough subsequently moved off the east coast of China causing the track to shift northward towards Kyushu on August 29. Typhoon Chaba made landfall near city of Kushikino as a weakened typhoon on the southwest coast of Kyushu at approximately midnight UTC August 30 when a weather station on the coast measured winds at 108 knots. Chaba began to accelerate northeastward across Kyushu and onto Honshu near Hikari.

Chaba crossed southwestern Honshu and entered the Sea of Japan where it began to transition into an extra-tropical system. Chaba weakened to a tropical storm, skimmed the northern edge of Honshu before crossing into Hokkaido near Shizunai and the system became extra-tropical on August 31.[1]

[edit] Impact

When Chaba came ashore, most of the damage was caused by severe floods. An 82-year old woman was found dead in a flooded home at Kurashiki. A man whose body was unable to identify was found in a car near Takamatsu. And another person was in a coma after falling off a balcony of a home at Imajo.[2]

A body of a Vietnamese sailor was found around 700 kilometres (434 miles) southwest of Tokyo. Three more crew members are missing when a freighter ran aground by the storm. A 75-year-old Japanese man was still missing from Tokushima on the southern main island of Shikoku. Many people lost their homes due to landslides and flooding caused by the typhoon. Agricultural damage was estimated up to 8 billion Yen ($73 Million (2004 USD).

Other than the destruction caused by the typhoon, some positive effects are the rainfall dropped by the typhoon to be helpful to farmers due to hot weather in Japan.[3]

[edit] See Also

List of notable tropical cyclones

[edit] Notes