Sunday, September 29, 2024

Hurricane Kirk (2024)

Storm Active: September 29-October 7

Around September 25, a large tropical wave entered the Atlantic. After passing through the Cape Verde islands, the disturbance began more organized; it was classified Tropical Depression Twelve on September 29. The next day, it strengthened into Tropical Storm Kirk. The storm was moving west at first, but soon began to arc very gradually toward the north. Kirk was a sprawling storm and was a little disheveled on satellite imagery due to some wind shear, but it nevertheless intensified steadily. On October 1, it became a hurricane. Kirk was located at 40.1° W when it reached hurricane strength, far surpassing the previous record easternmost tropical Atlantic hurricane formation in October (a record previously shared by Jose of 1999 and Tammy of 2023). That record stood for all of three days until it was again far surpassed by Hurricane Leslie.

Kirk didn't stop there, however. The large hurricane deepened much further over the following days, especially during a rapid burst of intensification beginning on the evening of October 2, when the eye quickly cleared on satellite imagery and became a major hurricane. The following afternoon, it reached category 4, and late on October 3, Kirk achieved a powerful peak intensity of 145 mph winds and a central pressure of 934 mb. The next day, the storm's steady northwest heading brought it into an area of higher shear from an upper-level low to the northwest. A gradual weakening trend began. The storm turned north and began to accelerate as it felt the tug of the mid-latitude westerlies.

Even as the core lost its definition and the peak winds decreased, Kirk's windfield grew as it gained latitude, pushing large waves to coasts all around the Atlantic. It lost major hurricane status on October 6 and turned northeast. Increasingly hostile upper-level winds soon began extratropical transition. The storm became post-tropical during the morning of October 7. What was left of Kirk eventually brought rain and strong winds to parts of western Europe a few days later.



The image above shows Kirk as a category 4 hurricane over the open Atlantic on September 4.


Despite being a large hurricane, Kirk did not directly affect land as a tropical cyclone.

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