![]() | This user participates in WikiProject Aviation. |
![]() | This user participates in WikiProject Tropical cyclones. |
![]() | This user participates in the Non-tropical storms task force. |
![]() | This user likes tracking tropical cyclones. |
![]() |
This user is really fascinated by the weather. |
![]() | This user is interested in severe weather. |
![]() | This user is a participant in WikiProject Weather |
Interesting weather and space images
edit-
A possible subtropical cyclone in the Black Sea on September 27, 2005.
-
Radar scan of the 2021 Western Kentucky tornado lifting debris from the town of Mayfield 30,000 feet into the atmosphere.
-
Storm Dennis, the most intense European windstorm of the 21st century, on February 15, 2020.
-
Track of Tropical Storm Five of the 1952 Atlantic hurricane season, the northernmost forming Atlantic tropical cyclone.
-
A house that was wiped off its foundation after the extremely violent 2011 Hackleburg–Phil Campbell tornado.
-
Subtropical Cyclone Katie near Easter Island on May 2, 2015.
-
One of the first photos of the Andromeda Galaxy, taken in 1899 by Issac Roberts.
-
Satellite image of the 2022 Hunga Tonga–Hunga Haʻapai eruption and the extratropical remnants of Cyclone Cody.
-
Radar loop of the most prolific December tornado outbreak on record on December 15, 2021.
-
Cryovolcanoes spewing out ice at the south pole of Enceladus.
-
Hurricane Dorian approaching Canada as powerful extratropical cyclone on September 7, 2019.
-
A record-breaking bomb cyclone off the coast of the Pacific Northwest on October 24, 2021.
-
Subtropical Storm One at peak intensity on January 16, 2023.
-
C/2022 E3 (ZTF), a long-period comet, on January 27, 2023.
-
A waterspout inside of Tropical Storm Colin on June 6, 2016.
-
Track of Cyclone Freddy, the longest-lived tropical cyclone on record.
-
A potential subtropical storm of the coast of Morroco on February 17, 2002.
-
The 1904, Moscow tornado, one of the deadliest Russian tornadoes on record.
-
2023 CX1 entering Earth's atmosphere over France on February 13, 2023.
-
Subtropical Storm Raoni off the coast of Argentina on June 28, 2021
My best works
edit- Weather of 2023 ( / High ) – Started article and contributed significantly to it by adding weather events as they go
- Template:10 deadliest tornadoes worldwide and Template:F5 and EF5 tornadoes ( ) – Started them and my contributions are most of the template content
- List of costliest tropical cyclones ( / Low ) – Started article and most of the article is my contribution, had to delete "some" but I still have the original still exists here
- Weather of 1985 ( / Low ) – Started article and added all events
- October 2022 Southern Ocean cyclone ( / Top ) – Created article for the most intense extratropical cyclone ever
- In-flight fire ( / Mid ) – Needed article for far too long
- 1966 Air New Zealand DC-8 crash ( / Low ) – Technically, I didn't create this article, but I pushed it into B-class
- Rocky Mountain Airways Flight 217 ( ) – The "Mircale On Buffalo Pass" finally has its own article
- 2017 Teterboro Learjet crash ( ) – Long article about a reckless accident that (thankfully) didn't kill any people on the ground
- Olympic Airways Flight 3838 ( ) – Perhaps the deadliest aviation accident that didn't result in a write-off
Aviation accident and incident articles needing report updates
edit-
- Delta Connection Flight 4819 — When [preliminary/final report] is released
- Bering Air Flight 445 — When [preliminary/final report] is released
- Med Jets Flight 056 — When [preliminary/final report] is released
- 2025 Potomac River mid-air collision — When [preliminary/final report] is released
-
- Jeju Air Flight 2216 — When [final report] is released
- Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 8243 — When [final report] is released
- Swiftair Flight 5960 — When [preliminary/final report] is released
- Total Linhas Aéreas Flight 5682 — When [preliminary/final report] is released
- Voepass Flight 2283 — When [final report] is released
- 2024 Saurya Airlines Bombardier CRJ200 crash — When [final report] is released
- Gazpromavia Flight 9608 — When [final report] is released
- 2024 Chikangawa Dornier 228 crash — When [final report] is released
- 2024 Alaska Air Fuel Douglas C-54 crash — When [final report] is released
- LATAM Airlines Flight 800 — When [final report] is released
- Air Serbia Flight 324 — When [final report] is released
- Hop-A-Jet Flight 823 — When [final report] is released
- Northwestern Air Flight 738 — When [final report] is released
- Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 — When [final report] is released
- 2024 Haneda Airport runway collision — When [final report] is released
-
- Ural Airlines Flight 1383 — When [final report] is released
- 2023 Elmina Beechcraft 390 crash — Final Report
- 2023 Virginia plane crash — When [final report] is released
- Yeti Airlines Flight 691 — Final Report
-
- LATAM Airlines Perú Flight 2213 — Final Report
- 2022 Dallas air show mid-air collision — Final Report
- Precision Air Flight 494 — Final Report
- Korean Air Flight 631 — When [final report] is released
- 2022 Baltic Sea Cessna Citation crash — When [final report] is released
- Meridian Flight 3032 — When [final report] is released
- Tibet Airlines Flight 9833 — Final Report
- DHL de Guatemala Flight 7216 — Final Report
- China Eastern Airlines Flight 5735 — When [final report] is released
-
- Ural Airlines Flight 178 — [Final Report] Final Report (translated) (might need a discussion about whether the leaked report is reliable?)
- 2019 Laser Aéreo Douglas DC-3 crash — Final Report
- EgyptAir Flight 804 — Final Report (ECAA), Final Report (BEA)
- Iran Air Flight 277 — Final Report Final Report (translated)
Random Tropical Cyclone (
) editCyclonic Storm Gulab (/ɡuːˈləb/) and Severe Cyclonic Storm Shaheen (/ʃəˈhiːn/) were two tropical cyclones that caused considerable damage to South and West Asia during the 2021 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. Gulab impacted India and Pakistan, while Shaheen impacted Iran, Oman and the United Arab Emirates. Gulab was the third named storm of the 2021 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, as well as the fourth named storm of the season after its reformation in the Arabian Sea as Shaheen. The cyclone's origins can be traced back to a low-pressure area situated over the Bay of Bengal on 24 September. The Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) named this new cyclone Gulab. On 26 September, Gulab made landfall in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh and Karachi, Pakistan. Following landfall, Gulab weakened inland, degenerating into a remnant low on 28 September. The system continued moving westward, emerging over the Arabian Sea on 29 September, before regenerating into a depression early on 30 September. Early on 1 October, the system restrengthened into a Cyclonic Storm, which was named Shaheen. The system gradually strengthened as it entered the Gulf of Oman. While slowly moving westward, the storm turned southwestward, subsequently making an extremely rare landfall in Oman on 3 October as a Category 1-equivalent cyclone. Shaheen then rapidly weakened, before dissipating the next day.
The name Gulab was contributed by Pakistan, meaning 'rose' in Urdu. The name Shaheen, provided by Qatar, means 'falcon' in Arabic. The system overall brought heavy rain and strong winds throughout India, Pakistan and the Middle East. Water-related damage was extensive, while communications were disrupted as winds downed many power lines. Hundreds of roads were closed in India. Heavy rainfall occurred in Karachi, Pakistan. Shaheen delivered extreme rainfall to Oman, causing flooding across a wide area of the country's northeastern governorates. Muscat saw particularly heavy flooding, which submerged cars and other low-lying objects. (Full article...)