Science News: Google DeepMind has developed a new AI tool called GraphCast, which can predict the landing spot of hurricanes earlier than current forecasting method
for apalachicola. and it is not significant. so that water is going to move very far inland. it will be catastrophic. people who stayed in this area, it s not very different densely populated. it s very, rule it s beautiful, wildlife areas. they have springs. there you can paddleboard with manatees. it is a very enjoyable community. the power will go out. you will have the storm surge across the region. it s going to be very very difficult post hurricane landfall. so category two right now. and you can see right there. goes from 2 to 4. i atlanta. maybe around atm. so somewhere in the. the national hurricane center says that we might see this as a category four. as it strengthens. right before it makes landfall. but. i want to point out another thing, here s georgia. around here is seven. we have brunswick.
this is a hurricane landfall that we haven t seen in portions of this this sort of big bend coast of florida where we ve seen idalia come on coast this morning. we are expected to see 10 to 15 maybe 16 feet of inundation in the region. it s bringing hurricane-force winds far inland into georgia and now into expected to reach coastal south carolina and georgia overnight or late tonight late this evening and into tonight. okay you give me a sense of when this event will be over. as you said, once this hurricane hits land, it starts to significantly decrease in speed and intensity, but this is still a category 1, i think you said, storm at this point which is incredible. it s been on land for quite some time. when will we see the end of this storm and the cleanup start to be able to begin.
southeast coast, too. there s the map showing the close up of the path then to the right is the best chance of that really historic, never had a hurricane landfall that area let alone a storm surge, anything close to this. winds, one thing people are wondering. how much power are we going to lose. we have millions of people that live in pinellas. maximum winds look to be 40 to 60. did that with ian last year. we re going to get power outages but i don t think it s going to be widespread. more scattered. once we get further north, that is that center, the core of the hurricane. when that comes onshore and moves inland over areas like perry and cross city, this is where the areas that if we re going to have people losing power for a week or two, this is where it could occur. again, further to the south, it won t be as bad. then for the coastal locations and the carolinas, our friends from savannah to charleston, coastal areas up to myrtle beach