The American state of Hawaii, which covers the Hawaiian Islands, is tropical but it experiences many different climates, depending on altitude and surrounding. The island of Hawaii for example hosts 4 (out of 5 in total) climate groups on a surface as small as 4,028 square miles (10,430 km2) according to the Köppen climate types: tropical, arid, temperate and polar. When counting also the Köppen sub-categories the island of Hawaii hosts 10 (out of 14 in total) climate zones. The islands receive most rainfall from the trade winds on their north and east flanks (the windward side) as a result of orographic precipitation. Coastal areas are drier, especially the south and west side or leeward sides.
The Hawaiian Islands receive most of their precipitation from
October to April. Drier conditions generally prevail from May to
September. Due to cooler waters around Hawaii, the risk of tropical cyclones is low for Hawai'i.
Temperature
Temperatures
at sea level generally range from highs of 84–88 °F (29–31 °C) during
the summer months to 79–83 °F (26–28 °C) during the winter months.
Rarely does the temperature rise above 90 °F (32 °C) or drop below 60 °F
(16 °C) at lower elevations. Temperatures are lower at higher
altitudes. During the winter, snowfall is common at the summits of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa on Hawaii Island. On Maui, the summit of Haleakalā
occasionally experiences snowfall, but snow had never been observed
below 7,500 feet (2,300 m) before February 2019, when snow was observed
at 6,200 feet (1,900 m) and fell at higher elevations in amounts large
enough to force Haleakalā National Park to close for several days. The record low temperature in Honolulu is 52 °F (11 °C) on January 20, 1969.
Temperatures of 90 °F (32 °C) and above are uncommon (with the
exception of dry, leeward areas). In the leeward areas, temperatures may
reach into the low 90s several days during the year, but temperatures
higher than these are unusual. The highest temperature ever recorded on
the islands was 100 °F (38 °C) on April 27, 1931 in Pahala.
The surface waters of the open ocean around Hawaii range from 75 °F
(24 °C) between late February and early April, to a maximum of 82 °F
(28 °C) in late September or early October. In the United States, only Florida has warmer surf temperatures.
The Pacific High, and with it the trade-wind zone, moves north
and south with changing angle of the sun, so that it reaches its
northernmost position in the summer. This brings trade winds during the
period of May through September, when they are prevalent 80 to 95
percent of the time. From October through April, the heart of the trade
winds moves south of Hawaii; thus there average wind speeds are lower
across the islands. Due to Hawaii being at the northern edge of the
tropics (mostly above 20 latitude), there are only weak wet and dry
seasons unlike many tropical climates.
Winds
Island wind
patterns are very complex. Though the trade winds are fairly constant,
their relatively uniform air flow is distorted and disrupted by
mountains, hills, and valleys. Usually winds blow upslope by day and
downslope by night. Local conditions that produce occasional violent
winds are not well understood. These are very localized, sometimes
reaching speeds of 60 to 100 mph (100 to 160 km/h) and are best known in
the settled areas of Kula and Lahaina on Maui. The Kula winds are strong downslope winds on the lower slopes of the west side of Haleakala. These winds tend to be strongest from 2,000 to 4,000 ft (600 to 1,200 m) above mean sea level.
The Lahaina winds are also downslope winds, but are somewhat different. They are also called "lehua winds" after the ʻōhiʻa lehua (Metrosideros polymorpha),
whose red blossoms fill the air when these strong winds blow. They
issue from canyons at the base of the western Maui mountains, where
steeper canyon slopes meet the more gentle piedmont
slope below. These winds only occur every 8 to 12 years. They are
extremely violent, with wind speeds of 80–100 mph (130–160 km/h) or
more.
Cloud formation
Under trade wind
conditions, there is very often a pronounced moisture discontinuity
between 4,000 and 8,000 feet (1,200 and 2,400 m). Below these heights,
the air is moist; above, it is dry. The break (a large-scale feature of
the Pacific High) is caused by a temperature inversion embedded in the
moving trade wind air. The inversion tends to suppress the vertical
movement of air and so restricts cloud development to the zone just
below the inversion. The inversion is present 50 to 70 percent of the
time; its height fluctuates from day to day, but it is usually between
5,000 and 7,000 feet (1,500 and 2,100 m). On trade wind days when the
inversion is well defined, the clouds develop below these heights with
only an occasional cloud top breaking through the inversion.
These towering clouds form along the mountains where the incoming
trade wind air converges as it moves up a valley and is forced up and
over the mountains to heights of several thousand feet. On days without
an inversion, the sky is almost cloudless (completely cloudless skies
are extremely rare). In leeward areas well screened from the trade winds
(such as the west coast of Maui), skies are clear 30 to 60 percent of
the time.
Windward areas tend to be cloudier during the summer, when the
trade winds and associated clouds are more prevalent, while leeward
areas, which are less affected by cloudy conditions associated with
trade wind cloudiness, tend to be cloudier during the winter, when storm
fronts pass through more frequently. On Maui, the cloudiest zones are
at and just below the summits of the mountains, and at elevations of
2,000 to 4,000 ft (600 to 1,200 m) on the windward sides of Haleakala.
In these locations the sky is cloudy more than 70 percent of the time.
The usual clarity of the air in the high mountains is associated with
the low moisture content of the air.
Precipitation
Hawaii
differs from many tropical locations with pronounced wet and dry
seasons, in that the wet season coincides with the winter months (rather
than the summer months more typical of other places in the tropics).
For instance, Honolulu's Köppen climate classification is the rare As wet-winter subcategory of the Tropical wet and dry climate type.
Major storms occur most frequently in October through March.
There may be as many as six or seven major storm events in a year. Such
storms bring heavy rains and can be accompanied by strong local winds.
The storms may be associated with the passage of a cold front, the leading edge of a mass of relatively cool air that is moving from west to east or from northwest to southeast.
Annual mean rainfall ranges from 188 mm (7.4 inches) on the summit of Mauna Kea to 10,271 mm (404 inches) in Big Bog. Windward slopes have greater rainfall than leeward lowlands and tall mountains.
On windward coasts, many brief showers are common, not one of which
is heavy enough to produce more than 0.01 in (0.25 mm) of rain. The
usual run of trade wind weather yields many light showers in the
lowlands, whereas torrential rains are associated with a sudden surge in
the trade winds or with a major storm. Hana has had as much as 28 in (710 mm) of rain in a single 24-hour period.
Severe thunderstorms, as defined by the National Weather Service (NWS) as tornadoes, hail 1 in (25 mm) or larger, and/or convective winds of at least 58 mph (93 km/h) occur but are relatively uncommon. Nontornadic waterspouts are more common than tornadoes produced by supercells,
which produce stronger, longer lasting tornadoes, especially with
respect to inland areas, and also produce the largest hail, such as the 2012 Hawaii hailstorm. An annual average of approximately one tornado, either emanating from supercells or by other processes, occurs.
Kona storms
are features of the winter season. The name comes from winds out of the
"kona" or usually leeward direction. Rainfall in a well-developed Kona
storm is widespread and more prolonged than in the usual cold-front
storm. Kona storm rains are usually most intense in an arc, extending
from south to east of the storm and well in advance of its center. Kona
rains last from several hours to several days. The rains may continue
steadily, but the longer lasting ones are characteristically interrupted
by intervals of lighter rain or partial clearing, as well as by intense
showers superimposed on the more moderate continuous, steady rain. An
entire winter may pass without a single well-developed Kona storm. More
often there are one or two such storms a year; sometimes four or five.
Hurricanes
The hurricane
season in the Hawaiian Islands is roughly from June through November,
when hurricanes and tropical storms are most probable in the North
Pacific. These storms tend to originate off the coast of Mexico (particularly the Baja California peninsula)
and track west or northwest towards the islands. As storms cross the
Pacific, they tend to lose strength if they bear northward and encounter
cooler water.
True hurricanes are rare in Hawai'i, thanks in part to the
comparatively cool waters around the islands as well as unfavorable
atmospheric conditions, such as enhanced wind shear; only four have
affected the islands during 63 years.
Tropical storms are more frequent. These have more modest winds, below
74 mph (119 km/h). Because tropical storms resemble Kona storms, and
because early records do not distinguish clearly between them, it has
been difficult to estimate the average frequency of tropical storms.
Every year or two a tropical storm will affect the weather in some part
of the islands. Unlike cold fronts
and Kona storms, hurricanes and tropical storms are most likely to
occur during the last half of the year, from July through December.
Three strong and destructive hurricanes are known to have made landfall
on the islands, an unnamed storm in 1871, Hurricane Dot in 1959, and Hurricane Iniki in 1992. Another hurricane, Iwa,
caused significant damage in 1982 but its center passed nearby and did
not directly make landfall. The rarity of hurricanes making landfall on
the Islands is subject to change as the climate warms. In the Pliocene
era, where CO2 levels were comparable to those we see today, the waters
around Hawai'i were much warmer, resulting in frequent hurricane strikes
in computer simulations.
Effect on trade winds
Despite being small islands within the vast Pacific Ocean, the
Hawaiian Islands have a surprising effect on ocean currents and
circulation patterns over much of the Pacific. In the Northern
Hemisphere, trade winds blow from northeast to southwest, from North and
South America toward Asia, between the equator and 30 degrees north latitude. Typically, the trade winds continue across the Pacific — unless something gets in their way, like an island.
Hawai‘i's high mountains present a substantial obstacle to the
trade winds. The elevated topography blocks the airflow, effectively
splitting the trade winds in two. This split causes a zone of weak
winds, called a "wind wake", on the leeward side of the islands.
Aerodynamic theory
indicates that an island wind wake effect should dissipate within a few
hundred kilometers and not be felt in the western Pacific. However, the
wind wake caused by the Hawaiian Islands extends 1,860 miles
(3,000 km), roughly 10 times longer than any other wake. The long wake
testifies to the strong interaction between the atmosphere and ocean,
which has strong implications for global climate research. It is also
important for understanding natural climate variations, like El Niño.
There are number of reasons why this has been observed only in
Hawai‘i. First, the ocean reacts slowly to fast-changing winds; winds
must be steady to exert force on the ocean, such as the trade winds.
Second, the high mountain topography provides a significant disturbance
to the winds. Third, the Hawaiian Islands are large in horizontal
(east-west) scale, extending over four degrees in longitude. It is this
active interaction between wind, ocean current, and temperature that
creates this uniquely long wake west of Hawaii.
The wind wake drives an eastward "counter current" that brings
warm water 5,000 miles (8,000 km) from the Asian coast. This warm water
drives further changes in wind, allowing the island effect to extend far
into the western Pacific. The counter current had been observed by oceanographers near the Hawaiian Islands years before the long wake was discovered, but they did not know what caused it.