The boardwalks are back, and so are most of the beaches, even …
In this handout satellite image provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Hurricane Sandy's huge cloud extent of up to 2,000 miles churns over the Bahamas.
Photographer: (Photo by NOAA via Getty Images)
Copyright Getty Images
Posted: 10/26/2012
Naming tropical storms has been common practice for decades, in no small part because it helps meteorologists raise awareness and helps the media and the public keep track. Popular culture might give other names to extraordinarily powerful or inconvenient storms -- tropical or not -- such as 1991's "Perfect Storm," which had Hurricane Grace as one of its ingredients, and the 2010 "Snowmageddon."
But rare is the storm that gets a name three days before it's even formed.
This is the case with "Frankenstorm," the name that news reports and social media gave to a superstorm that could happen if Hurricane Sandy -- churning Friday a couple hundred miles off Florida's east coast -- merges with a strong cold front from the west next week. Such a storm could sit over New England for days, making untold trouble for millions.
If you're wondering where "Frankenstorm" came from: The name appears to have picked up steam after meteorologists noticed the National Weather Service Hydrometeorological Prediction Center's extended forecast discussion page from Thursday afternoon.
The unusual merger of Hurricane Sandy and the cold front would happen around Wednesday -- Halloween -- "inviting perhaps a ghoulish nickname for the cyclone along the lines of 'Frankenstorm,' an allusion to Mary Shelley's Gothic creature of synthesized elements," the discussion said.
CNN and other media outlets used the name to describe a storm that could cause serious misery for the Northeast.
Sandy already has claimed nearly two dozen lives in the Caribbean, and meteorologists warn it packs the potential to slam the Northeastern United States as soon as Monday with powerful winds, pelting rain and cold temperatures.
"Forget about the category with this," said CNN meteorologist Rob Marciano. "When you have trees with leaves on them still, this kind of wind and rain on top of that, you're talking about trees that are going to come down, power lines are going to be out and the coastal flooding situation is going to be huge."
CNN meteorologist Chad Meyers added, "This could be like the 'Perfect Storm' 21 years ago."
A combination of three weather systems produced the famed "Perfect Storm" in the north Atlantic over Halloween 1991 when moisture flung north by Hurricane Grace combined with a high pressure system and a cold front, according to the weather service.
Copyright CNN
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