Hurricane Florence, currently a Category 4 storm, may strengthen to a Category 5 hurricane before weakening again on its approach toward the North or South Carolina coastlines.
But regardless of the wind speeds when the hurricane makes landfall — expected on Thursday (Sept. 13) — it will bring with it massive amounts of moisture and hazards for anyone in its path, meteorologists say.
According to the National Hurricane's Center (NHC) 5 a.m. forecast, Hurricane Florence currently has sustained winds of up to 130 mph (209 km/h) and is expected to get stronger before weakening slightly on Thursday. To reach Category 5 status, the storm will have to blow sustained winds above 157 mph (253 km/h). [Hurricane Florence: Photos of a Monster Storm]
The current intensification is being driven by warm, moist air and a favorable atmosphere, said Joel Cline, a tropical program coordinator at the NHC. It's a continuation of the rapid strengthening seen yesterday, when the hurricane moved out of destabilizing air currents and into conditions ripe for a monster storm.
But once Florence moved away from that trough and the relatively dry air around it, the situation changed. Without shear, the storm could stack up vertically and start hoovering up moist air.
"When that happens, you have a very efficient machine," Cline told Live Science.
Today, Florence is still sitting over warm, moist waters, which are fueling its howling winds. As the storm approaches the East Coast of the United States, it will start drawing drier air from over land, Cline said. That will tend to weaken Florence, but the NHC forecasts that the storm will be "an extremely dangerous major hurricane through landfall."
Even without the extreme wind speeds of a Category 5 storm, though, Hurricane Florence is likely to be a serious and life-threatening storm, Cline said. The NHC forecasts storm surges of between 2 and 12 feet (0.6 to 3.7 meters) along the East Coast; the size of the storm surge can vary greatly depending on whether the storm hits at high tide and the geography of the area where it makes landfall, Cline said. The storm will likely dump between 20 and 30 inches (50 to 76 centimeters) of rain over its track, causing serious flooding. This could be exacerbated by a slowing or stalling of the storm as it reaches the coast.
The hazards are likely to extend far from the coast, Cline said. As the hurricane's warm, moist air piles up against the Appalachian Mountains, that moist air will be driven upward, where it will condense and fall as rain. What rain falls inland will end up as floodwaters rushing back toward the sea.
"That's a big deal," Cline said. "You have to be worried about mudslides, and you have to be worried about localized impacts well inland."
Original article on Live Science.