No. The severity of one hurricane does not affect the severity of the next. For example. Hurricane Katrina devastated the U.S. gulf coast in 2005. Hurricane Isaac hit the same area exactly 7 years later and was much less significant.
Every year there is an assigned list of names for the tropical storms sorted in alphabetical order. Each time a new tropical storm forms it gets the next name on the list. The storm we call Isaac was the 9th tropical storm of the 2012 Atlantic hurricane season and so it was given the 9th name on the list: Isaac.
No. Hurricanes are limited to coastal areas. The inland states cannot get hurricanes.
Hurricane Gloria (1985)
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Hurricane names are named by when the hurricane happens. Andrew was the first storm of the 192 Atlantic hurricane season so it got an "A" name. (i.e. first hurricane of season might get the name Ally and the second Barry and the third Corinne, etc.) The meteorologists at the National Hurricane Center comes up with a list of 21 names for each hurricane season. If a hurricane is really wild, the name will be taken out and replaced by another one beginning with the same letter. Names are used every 6 years (like I said, wild hurricane names are taken out). If the number of hurricanes exceeds 21, then meteorologists will need to use Greek letter names. In 2005, there were so many hurricanes that they ran out of names and used the Greek letter names such as Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Epsilon, and Zeta. Hope this helped!! :)
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Each year's list of names is repeated every 6 years, unless the name is retired.
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Rita was the fourth most intense hurricane ever recorded and the most intense tropical cyclone ever in the Gulf of Mexico. Katrina was the seventh most intense hurricane ever recorded. So, strictly in weather terms, Rita was a worse storm. However, Katrina was the costliest natural disaster and one of the five deadliest hurricanes of all time.
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Hurricanes have not always had names. In 1953 the National Hurricane Center began generating lists of names for each hurricane in a given season. Since that time all hurricanes have had names.
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Butterfly Effect
Every year there is an assigned list of names for the tropical storms sorted in alphabetical order. Each time a new tropical storm forms it gets the next name on the list. The storm we call Isaac was the 9th tropical storm of the 2012 Atlantic hurricane season and so it was given the 9th name on the list: Isaac.
No. Hurricanes are limited to coastal areas. The inland states cannot get hurricanes.
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