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Resources

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Nomenclature and history

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KOI-69.01 was first identified as a candidate exoplanet (KIC 3544595) in 2011[1].

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Ballard et al. 2015 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Located in Draft:WASP-193b

Pacific Typhoons

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some additions with cites

Typhoons in Japan pre-1850

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  • 701–989 CE

In 701, typhoons and locust swarms devastated harvests across Japan. A typhoon in October 753 killed at least 560 people in Settsu Province. Several typhoons struck Japan and damaged rice crops in the early 770s.[1] A typhoon affected the Tōkai region, particularly the provinces of Ise, Mino, and Owari in September 775.[2] A powerful typhoon struck Settsu Province in September 817, producing storm surges in Osaka Bay, which killed 220 people.[3] A likely typhoon caused severe flooding along the Yodo River around Osaka in September 848. A typhoon struck the Kinki region in October 860.[2] A powerful typhoon rolled through central Japan in September 944.[4] A typhoon affected Nara and surrounding regions in October 962.[5] An early-season typhoon struck Kyoto in June 973.[6]

  • 989–1281 CE
  • 1281–1495 CE
  • 1495–1700 CE
  • 1700–1846 CE

Resource

  1. ^ "4月の周年災害・追補版(4)/日本の災害・防災年表" [Natural Disaster Commemorations for April (Supplement 4): Chronology of Natural Disasters and Disaster Mitigation in Japan (Volume One)]. WEB 防災情報新聞. 防災情報機構. 2018-04-05. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
  2. ^ a b "日本の災害・防災年表「気象災害/古代から江戸時代まで(中世・江戸時代編)」" [Chronology of Natural Disasters and Disaster Mitigation in Japan: Weather Disasters from Antiquity to the Edo Period (Medieval and Edo Period Edition)]. WEB 防災情報新聞. 防災情報機構. 2024-04-05. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
  3. ^ "2018年9月の周年災害/日本の災害・防災年表/上巻" [Natural Disaster Commemorations for September 2018: Chronology of Natural Disasters and Disaster Mitigation in Japan (Volume One)]. WEB 防災情報新聞. 防災情報機構. 2018-09-05. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
  4. ^ "9月の周年災害・追補版(1)/日本の災害・防災年表" [Natural Disaster Commemorations for September (Supplement 1): Chronology of Natural Disasters and Disaster Mitigation in Japan (Volume One)]. WEB 防災情報新聞. 防災情報機構. 2015-09-05. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
  5. ^ "10月の周年災害・追補版(1)/日本の災害・防災年表" [Natural Disaster Commemorations for October (Supplement 1): Chronology of Natural Disasters and Disaster Mitigation in Japan (Volume One)]. WEB 防災情報新聞. 防災情報機構. 2015-10-05. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
  6. ^ "1月の周年災害・追補版(1)/日本の災害・防災年表" [Natural Disaster Commemorations for January (Supplement 1): Chronology of Natural Disasters and Disaster Mitigation in Japan (Volume One)]. WEB 防災情報新聞. 防災情報機構. 2016-01-05. Retrieved 2024-06-21.

Typhoons in China pre-1850

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A typhoon struck Shanghai in August 1301[a] and brought severe storm surges, drowning over 17,000 people. Another typhoon in 1372 killed more than 10,000. In August 1390, a devastating typhoon inundated the coasts near Shanghai. 1,700 families were wiped out in the submerged states, 70 – 80% of the population along the Chongming coast drowned, and over 20,000 people died in Songjiang Prefecture[b] alone. A typhoon struck Shanghai in 1444, during which tides rose by over 10 feet (3 m). A typhoon in August 1461 produced 10-foot storm surges, which killed over 12,500 people. A typhoon that impacted Shanghai in 1472 also made seas rise by over 10 feet.[1]

Resource

  1. ^ Date converted from Chinese calendar (same goes for all old Chinese storms). Used website: 兩千年中西曆轉換 [Academia Sinica’s two thousand years of conversion between Chinese and Western calendars] (in Chinese; accessed 23 June 2024). Archived version: [1] (archived 23 June 2024)
  2. ^ Chinese: 松江府, present-day Shanghai; Not to be confused with Songjiang District.
  1. ^ Li Zhiming (2015-08-09). "人定胜天?台风的"打脸史"" [Can Man Conquer Nature? The History of Typhoons]. 国学 凤凰网 (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 2024-06-22. Retrieved 2024-06-23.

Typhoon Ellen (1973)

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Typhoon Ellen formed as a disturbance on July 16 in the vicinity of Okinotorishima,[a] from a trough in the convergence zone trailing to the southeast of Typhoon Billie the day before.[2] Its circulation closed up by 17 July,[2] and at 0900 JST (0000 UTC) on the following day, the JMA upgraded it to a tropical storm.[3] Due to its sluggish, erratic movements, Shikoku and Kyushu received heavy rains between July 23 and July 26. This contributed to the above-average monthly precipitation for July 1973 in southern Shikoku and eastern Kyushu, when the rest of Japan was suffering from droughts.[4]

  1. ^ Okinotorishima is located at 20°25′21″N 136°05′24″E / 20.4225°N 136.0900°E / 20.4225; 136.0900, while Ellen formed at coordinates 20°00′N 136°03′E / 20.00°N 136.05°E / 20.00; 136.05.[1]
  1. ^ "1973 Typhoon Ellen (1973197N20136)". International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  2. ^ a b Buckmaster, Albert T.; Atkinson, Gary D. (1975-01-01). 1973 Annual Typhoon Report (PDF) (Report). Guam, Mariana Islands: Fleet Weather Central/Joint Typhoon Warning Center. pp. 28–29. Retrieved 2024-06-10.
  3. ^ "台風経路図 昭和48年(1973年)" [Tropical Cyclone Tracks of Showa 48 (1973)]. Japan Meteorological Agency. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
  4. ^ "昭和48年7・8つきの高温・少雨 昭和48年(1973年) 6月~9月" [High Temperatures and Low Precipitation in July and August of 1973: Showa 48 (1973) June-September] (in Japanese). Japan Meteorological Agency. Retrieved 2024-06-10.

South Pacific tropical cyclones

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[4]

Article Ideas

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Objects of interest

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  • HD 32963 b
  • HD 48948
  • HD 184010
  • Kepler-1972
  • K2-137
  • TOI-2196
  • TOI-4010
  • TOI-4600
  • TOI-6713.01