The 2005 Atlantic Hurricane season broke record after record -- most named storms, lowest pressure measured in the Atlantic, longest-lived December hurricane -- and the list goes on. This image provides a summary of the season, with the track of each named storm marked in black. In all, 30 tropical depressions, tropical storms, and hurricanes formed in 2005 (see table at the end of the article). Of these, 26 were named storms, a status given to tropical storms and hurricanes. In this image, the storm tracks are laid on top of sea surface temperature measurements collected by the AMSR-E instru


The 2005 Atlantic Hurricane season broke record after record -- most named storms, lowest pressure measured in the Atlantic, longest-lived December hurricane -- and the list goes on. This image provides a summary of the season, with the track of each named storm marked in black. In all, 30 tropical depressions, tropical storms, and hurricanes formed in 2005 (see table at the end of the article). Of these, 26 were named storms, a status given to tropical storms and hurricanes. In this image, the storm tracks are laid on top of sea surface temperature measurements collected by the AMSR-E instrument on NASA's Aqua satellite on December 12, 2005, four days after Hurricane Epsilon dissipated. Though temperatures have cooled considerably compared to earlier in the season, a band of warm water, shown in orange, still stretches across the Atlantic from Africa to the Yucatan. Warm ocean waters provide fuel to developing storms, and it is the cooling of the ocean that ends the hurricane season. In order for a tropical cyclone to develop, sea surface temperatures need to be above 28 degrees Celsius (82 Fahrenheit), a threshold that is shown in orange in this image. Water in the Gulf of Mexico, where high temperatures fueled the season's monster storms Katrina, Rita, and Wilma, has now cooled. The relationship between sea surface temperature and storm development can be seen in the animation, which shows clouds from the GOES-12 satellite over sea surface temperatures for each day of the season, from June 1 to November 1, 2005. The action starts in mid-June with Arlene forming off the coast of Honduras and heading northward through the Gulf of Mexico. A month later, powerful Emily blazes a long trail from the Atlantic, through the Caribbean Sea, and into the Gulf. From late July to mid-August, warm ocean temperatures spread farther north, while storms Franklin, Irene, and Harvey stay out in the Atlantic, far from land. On August 24, Katrina appears southeast


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