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      • Matthew developed concentric eyewalls which is common in intense hurricanes. The Global Precipitation Measurement mission or GPM core satellite captured an image of those double eyewalls. An eyewall consists of powerful thunderstorms in the area immediately outside the eye of a hurricane. Those storms have very heavy rainfall and strong winds.
      phys.org › news › 2016-10-nasa-hurricane-matthew-eyewalls
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  2. On Oct. 6 at 3:06 p.m. EDT, GPM showed that Matthew was undergoing an eyewall replacement cycle and the concentric rings of precipitation were apparent. The inner ring is the original eyewall,...

  3. Such concentric or dual eyewall structures can temporarily reduce the strength of the storm. At the time of writing Hurricane Matthew was still at Category 4 but its winds at 8 p.m. EDT...

  4. Oct 7, 2016 · An incredible new video released by NASA details the ever-changing form of Hurricane Matthew as it barrels toward the east coast.

  5. Oct 7, 2016 · Matthew developed concentric eyewalls which is common in intense hurricanes. The Global Precipitation Measurement mission or GPM core satellite captured an image of those double eyewalls....

  6. The simulations show that the major rainbands will grow such that the arms will overlap, and then it spiral into itself to form a concentric eyewall. The inner eyewall dissipates, leaving a hurricane with a singular large eye with no rainbands.

  7. Sep 1, 2021 · Hurricane Matthew (2016) was observed by ground-based polarimetric radars in Miami (KAMX), Melbourne (KMLB), and Jacksonville, Florida (KJAX), and a NOAA P3 airborne tail Doppler radar near the coast of the southeastern United States during an eyewall replacement cycle (ERC).

  8. Oct 12, 2016 · Matthew developed concentric eyewalls which is common in intense hurricanes. The Global Precipitation Measurement mission or GPM core satellite captured an image of those double eyewalls. This animation of GPM data shows Hurricane Matthew from Oct. 4 through 6, 2016.

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