Hurricane Season 2006: Bebinca (Western Pacific)
10.06.06
Tropical Storm Bebinca Spins in Western Pacific

Tropical Storm Bebinca formed as a tropical depression (area of low air pressure) early in the morning on Oct. 1, 2006, east of the Philippines. Over the course of the next day, the depression gradually moved north and east away
from the island chain and gained enough power to become a storm and earn a
name. Despite moving farther offshore into the Pacific, Bebinca was largely
staying over waters recently cooled by the powerful Typhoon Xangsane, which
formed in the same general area approximately a week before Bebinca. The storm
system was not expected to develop into a typhoon as of Oct. 5, according to
the University of Hawaii’s Tropical Storm Information Center.
This image shows Bebinca just as the depression was strengthening into a
tropical storm. The image depicts wind speed in color and wind direction with
small barbs. White barbs point to areas of heavy rain. The data were obtained
by NASA’s QuikSCAT satellite on Oct. 2 at 09:16 UTC (5:16 p.m. local time).
Bebinca appears to be quite asymmetrically shaped at this time, with
wind-direction barbs showing that the center of the storm has an area of
relatively calm winds, while more intense winds are located in the southwestern
portion of the storm. The center, or eye, of the storm is well-defined by wind
direction, but the wind speeds are not symmetrical. Weak winds around the
storm’s center show that the storm system does not have the classic eye and
eyewall of a typhoon, which a more intense storm would have.
QuikSCAT uses a scatterometer, which sends pulses of microwave energy through
the atmosphere to the ocean surface, and measures the energy that bounces back
from the wind-roughened surface. The energy of the microwave pulses changes
depending on wind speed and direction, giving scientists a way to monitor wind
around the world. This technique does not work over land, and hence the lack of
measurements over the Philippine Islands shown here. Credit: NASA/JPL/David Long, Brigham Young University