Science and technology | Hurricanes hardly happen

Ophelia’s strange path

An unusual storm in the eastern Atlantic

IRELAND is not renowned for its great weather. It takes a lot of rain to create those forty shades of green. But it is not the kind of place you would expect to be affected by a hurricane. That, though, is what is happening today, as former Hurricane Ophelia batters the island, causing all schools to close and, so far, killing three people. Over the next 24 hours it is expected to hit parts of Scotland as well.

Like many Atlantic storms, Ophelia formed south-west of the Azores, where areas of low pressure often occur. Most such systems, though, are blown west towards the Caribbean. Ophelia barely moved for a week after its formation, and was then blown north. This is unusual, though not unprecedented. The remnants of Hurricane Gordon affected Ireland and Britain in 2006, disrupting play at the Ryder Cup golf tournament.

More from Science and technology

China has become a scientific superpower

From plant biology to superconductor physics the country is at the cutting edge

Like people, elephants call each other by name

And anthropoexceptionalism takes another tumble


Elon Musk’s Starship makes a test flight without exploding

Crucially, the upper stage of the giant rocket survived atmospheric re-entry


More from Science and technology

China has become a scientific superpower

From plant biology to superconductor physics the country is at the cutting edge

Like people, elephants call each other by name

And anthropoexceptionalism takes another tumble


Elon Musk’s Starship makes a test flight without exploding

Crucially, the upper stage of the giant rocket survived atmospheric re-entry


Zany ideas to slow polar melting are gathering momentum

Giant curtains to keep warm water away from glaciers strike some as too risky

The quest to build robots that look and behave like humans

The engineering challenges involved are fiendish, but worth tackling