Eye (cyclone)
The eye is an area of calm weather in the center of strong tropical cyclones. The cyclone's lowest barometric pressure occurs in the eye. It is usually circular and ranges between 30 and 65 km (20 to 40 mi) in diameter, though smaller and larger eyes can occur.
In case of a cyclone it is the place where all the winds coming inside in a spiral motion converge. In an anticyclone it is the part from where all winds move out from.
The region surrounding the eye is the eyewall, where the worst weather is seen in a cyclone. These have strong winds, lots of rain and lots of cloud. There are also outer bands, which surround the cyclone, which forms the greatest part of the storm. These have winds so strong they can even form other tornadoes.
Eye (cyclone) Media
Hurricane Florence, seen from the International Space Station, showing a well-defined eye at the center of the storm
Cross section of a mature tropical cyclone
Hurricane Wilma with a pinhole eye
The eye of Hurricane Katrina viewed from a hurricane hunter aircraft
Tropical cyclones form when the energy released by condensation of moisture in rising air causes a positive feedback loop over warm ocean waters.
Typically, eyes are easy to spot using weather radar. This radar image of Hurricane Ian clearly shows the eye near Fort Myers, Florida.
A satellite photo of Cyclone Emnati exhibiting an outer and inner eyewall while undergoing an eyewall replacement cycle
View of Typhoon Maysak's eye from the International Space Station displaying a pronounced stadium effect
NASA's DC-8 research aircraft flying through the eyewall and into the eye