Lee became a tropical storm on September 2, 2011.
The precursor to Tropical Storm Lee started out in an area of disturbed weather over the Caribbean Sea. A low pressure system called a tropical wave then emerged from this and traveled into the Gulf of Mexico. There this system gradually became better organized until it was classified as Tropical Depression Thirteen. The depression then fed of the moist air over the Gulf, eventually becoming a strong tropical storm named Lee.
Isaac first became a tropical storm on August 21, 2012 having been upgraded from a tropical depression. Isaac remained a tropical storm until August 28 when he became a hurricane. Isaac then weakened back to a tropical storm on August 29 after striking land and then to a tropical depression on August 30.
Sandy first became a tropical storm a few hours after forming on October 22, 2012. After becoming a hurricane on October 24, Sand briefly weakened back to a tropical storm on October 27 before restrengthening.
Allison was a tropical storm and never became a Hurricane. At peak intensity Tropical Storm Allison had winds of 60 mph. A storm needs winds of at least 74 mph to be a hurricane.
Katrina was only a tropical depression for a few hours. Soon after forming, Tropical Depression 12 became Tropical Storm Katrina.
Lee became a tropical storm on September 2, 2011.
Tropical Storm Lee formed in the Gulf of Mexico.
The precursor to Tropical Storm Lee started out in an area of disturbed weather over the Caribbean Sea. A low pressure system called a tropical wave then emerged from this and traveled into the Gulf of Mexico. There this system gradually became better organized until it was classified as Tropical Depression Thirteen. The depression then fed of the moist air over the Gulf, eventually becoming a strong tropical storm named Lee.
Current forecasts show Tropical Storm Lee making landfall on the Gulf Coast on Sunday morning, September 4.
The precursor to Tropical Storm Lee started out in an area of disturbed weather over the Caribbean Sea. A low pressure system called a tropical wave then emerged from this and traveled into the Gulf of Mexico. There this system gradually became better organized until it was classified as Tropical Depression Thirteen. The depression then fed of the moist air over the Gulf, eventually becoming a strong tropical storm named Lee.
Isaac first became a tropical storm on August 21, 2012 having been upgraded from a tropical depression. Isaac remained a tropical storm until August 28 when he became a hurricane. Isaac then weakened back to a tropical storm on August 29 after striking land and then to a tropical depression on August 30.
Tropical storm Lee had peak sustained winds of 60 mph. Winds much reach at least 74 mph to be considered a hurricane. Lee formed fairly close to land and made landfall withing a week of forming. This, combined with wind shear gave the storm little opportunity to strengthen into a hurricane.
There was an L-named storm in 2017. It was Tropical Storm Lee. Lee was a rather weak tropical storm that never directly threatened land. As a result it did not receive much media attention.
No. The center of Tropical Storm Lee is passing to the west of New Orleans. However, Lee still dropped enough rain to cause some flooding within the city.
Sandy first became a tropical storm a few hours after forming on October 22, 2012. After becoming a hurricane on October 24, Sand briefly weakened back to a tropical storm on October 27 before restrengthening.
Fiona is not a hurricane, but a tropical storm. The storm became a tropical cyclone on August 30, 2010.
it started as a tropical disturbance at first, then it became a tropical depression, and a tropical storm, then a hurricane.