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🎨 AI Weather & Natural Disaster Infographic 🎯 infographic 📅 2026-05-26

Earthquake Diagram Style Infographic on How Hurricanes Form

Editorial science infographic in a calm, minimal flat style explaining how hurricanes form through 6 clear stages over warm tropical ocean water. This earthquake diagram style visual features arrows, pressure patterns, cloud bands, cross-sections, and labeled atmospheric interactions for educational brand content.

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Minimal flat infographic showing 6 numbered stages of hurricane formation over a warm ocean with arrows, labels, icons, eye and rainbands.
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Resolution1024 × 1024 px
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Ratio1024x1024
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File size194 KB
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StyleAI Weather & Natural Disaster Infographic
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Use caseinfographic
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Generated2026-05-26
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LanguageEnglish (EN)
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SEO targetearthquake diagram
Full generation prompt Click to expand
Weather / safety infographic titled "How Hurricanes Form". Archetype: FORMATION DIAGRAM. Editorial science-education illustration, minimal flat style, earth science earth tones palette, scientifically accurate, calm and non-sensational. Show a clean step-by-step formation sequence for a hurricane over warm tropical ocean, with simple cross-sections, arrows, pressure patterns, cloud bands, and ocean-atmosphere interaction. Include 6 numbered stages, each with a short heading in English, a one-line caption in English, and a scientific cue icon: 1) Warm Ocean — Sea surface above the hurricane threshold adds heat and moisture (icon: thermometer over waves). 2) Rising Moist Air — Warm, humid air rises and begins clustering into storms (icon: upward arrow with cloud). 3) Low Pressure Develops — Surface pressure drops as more air converges inward (icon: isobar swirl). 4) Thunderstorms Organize — Condensing water releases latent heat and strengthens circulation (icon: cumulonimbus cloud with droplet). 5) Rotation Increases — Coriolis effect curves inflow into a rotating tropical system away from the equator (icon: spiral arrow over globe). 6) Eye and Rainbands Form — A mature hurricane develops an eye, eyewall, and spiral rainbands over very warm water (icon: cyclone symbol). Add clear labels for ocean surface, warm moist air, condensation, latent heat, low pressure center, eyewall, eye, spiral rainbands, upper-level outflow, and Coriolis effect. Include a small side panel labeled in English with key conditions: warm ocean water, moist unstable air, low vertical wind shear, sufficient distance from equator. No earthquake imagery, no Richter or category explainer framing, no safety panic framing. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no graphic disaster gore, no real death photos, no watermarks. Scientifically accurate, no graphic disaster gore, no real death photos, no panic framing. Safety steps must be conservative and aligned with major civil-defense guidance.