- Recently, ‘Bomb cyclone’ hits eastern US, which triggers transport chaos, outages.
 - A bomb cyclone is a large, intense midlatitude storm that has low pressure at its center, weather fronts and an array of associated weather, from blizzards to severe thunderstorms to heavy precipitation.
 - Bomb cyclones put forecasters on high alert, because they can produce significant harmful impacts.
 - This can happen when a cold air mass collides with a warm air mass, such as air over warm ocean waters. The formation of this rapidly strengthening weather system is a process called bombogenesis.
 - It occurs when a midlatitude cyclone rapidly intensifies, dropping at least 24 millibars over 24 hours.
 - A millibar measures atmospheric pressure.
 - Hurricanes tend to form in tropical areas and are powered by warm seas. For this reason, they’re most common in summer or early fall, when seawater is warmest.
 - Bomb cyclones generally occur during colder months because cyclones occur due to cold and warm air meeting. During the summer, there’s generally not much cold air across the atmosphere; this means a bomb cyclone is much less likely to occur.
 - Hurricanes form in tropical waters, while bomb cyclones form over the northwestern Atlantic, northwestern Pacific and sometimes the Mediterranean Sea.
 
SOURCE: THE HINDU,THE ECONOMIC TIMES,MINT
        
        
        
        