Thursday, September 14, 2006

opnieuw Hurricane VS ( Gordon)

MIAMI, Florida (AP) -- Tropical Storm Helene was moving quickly in the open Atlantic on Thursday, while Hurricane Gordon gained strength but posed no threat, forecasters said.
Hurricane Florence, meanwhile, brought high winds and heavy rain to Newfoundland in Canada.
Helene had top sustained winds near 40 mph, just above the 39-mph threshold for a tropical storm. The eighth-named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season formed late Wednesday night.
At 5 a.m. EDT, it was located 695 miles west of the southernmost Cape Verde Islands and moving west over warm Atlantic waters at 22 mph, forecasters said. A gradual turn toward the west-northwest was expected over the next 24 hours.
Gordon was upgraded to a Category 3 hurricane late Wednesday when its top sustained winds jumped to 120 mph, up from 110 mph earlier in the day, forecasters said.
The hurricane was moving out to sea and was no threat to land, according to the hurricane center. Gordon's clearly defined eye was centered about 550 miles east-southeast of Bermuda and moving north-northeast near 13 mph. Some gradual weakening was expected over the next 24 hours, forecasters said.
"Although Gordon's eye remains distinct, it has become smaller and a little less well-defined," said Richard Knabb, a senior hurricane specialist.
Some waves could reach Bermuda, but the British territory should not feel tropical storm force winds, forecasters said. (Watch what a forecaster says about Gordon's likely impact -- 2:04)
Florence's remains brought wind gusts of more than 100 mph and bands of rain to southern and southeastern Newfoundland, and dangerous surf was expected, according to the Canadian Hurricane Center.
Tropical storm warnings were discontinued late Wednesday as the extratropical storm pulled away from Newfoundland.
Extratropical storms get their energy from the collision of warm and cold fronts, not the steamy ocean waters that tropical systems feed on.
The Atlantic hurricane season began June 1 and ends Nov. 30. The National Hurricane Center's latest forecast for the season expects between seven and nine hurricanes.