Hurricane Beryl Has Been Downgraded to a Tropical Storm. Here ’s Where it’s Headed

Hurricane Beryl was downgraded to a tropical storm Saturday morning, after being named the first hurricane of this year’s Atlantic hurricane season on Friday. The path of the relatively tiny Tropical Storm Beryl is currently tracking westwards through the Atlantic in the general direction of Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic and Haiti. It is expected to reach the Lesser Antilles by Sunday night or Monday, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHS). Here are the 11 AM AST July 7 Key Messages for Tropical Storm #Beryl. More information at https://t.co/RX183IoxPZ pic.twitter.com/TyhnkH3s1x — NHC Atlantic Ops (@NHC_Atlantic) July 7, 2018 Tropical storms are less severe than hurricanes, with wind gusts between 39 and 73 miles per hour; a hurricane, by contrast, includes maximum sustained wind gusts between 74 and 95 miles per hour, according to AccuWeather. Though Beryl is not forecast to be at hurricane strength when it reaches the Lesser Antilles, the NHS said some islands can expect “direct impacts from wind and rainfall.” The NHC is also warning that changes to Beryl’s intensity will be “difficult to predict” due to its very small size. “Confidence in the official intensity forecast is also lower than normal,” the Center warned. “Rapid changes in intensity, both up and down, that are difficult to predict are possible during the next couple days.” It may not look like it, but #Beryl is the first ...
Source: TIME: Science - Category: Science Authors: Tags: Uncategorized 2018 hurricane season onetime weather Source Type: news