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Thread: INVEST 99L Located off Africa

  1. #1
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    Exclamation INVEST 99L Located off Africa

    8pm NHC

    YET ANOTHER STRONG TROPICAL WAVE IS ABOUT TO MOVE OFF THE WEST COAST
    OF AFRICA AND IS PRODUCING A BROAD AREA OF SHOWERS AND
    THUNDERSTORMS OVER THE ADJACENT WATERS. SOME SLOW DEVELOPMENT OF
    THIS SYSTEM IS POSSIBLE AS IT MOVES WESTWARD NEAR 10 MPH OVER THE
    NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS. THERE IS A LOW CHANCE...10 PERCENT...OF THIS
    SYSTEM BECOMING A TROPICAL CYCLONE DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS.
    Welcome to CV September!!!

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  3. #2
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    Exclamation New invest off the coast of Africa...



    ZCZC MIATWOAT ALL
    TTAA00 KNHC DDHHMM
    TROPICAL WEATHER OUTLOOK
    NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL
    800 PM EDT WED SEP 1 2010

    FOR THE NORTH ATLANTIC...CARIBBEAN SEA AND THE GULF OF MEXICO...

    THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER IS ISSUING ADVISORIES ON HURRICANE
    EARL...LOCATED ABOUT 565 MILES SOUTH-SOUTHEAST OF CAPE HATTERAS
    NORTH CAROLINA. ADVISORIES ARE ALSO BEING ISSUED ON TROPICAL STORM
    FIONA...LOCATED ABOUT 140 MILES NORTH OF ANGUILLA IN THE NORTHERN
    LEEWARD ISLANDS...AND ON RECENTLY UPGRADED TROPICAL STORM
    GASTON...LOCATED ABOUT 895 MILES WEST-SOUTHWEST OF THE CAPE VERDE
    ISLANDS.

    1. YET ANOTHER STRONG TROPICAL WAVE IS ABOUT TO MOVE OFF THE WEST COAST
    OF AFRICA AND IS PRODUCING A BROAD AREA OF SHOWERS AND
    THUNDERSTORMS OVER THE ADJACENT WATERS. SOME SLOW DEVELOPMENT OF
    THIS SYSTEM IS POSSIBLE AS IT MOVES WESTWARD NEAR 10 MPH OVER THE
    NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS. THERE IS A LOW CHANCE...10 PERCENT...OF THIS
    SYSTEM BECOMING A TROPICAL CYCLONE DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS.

    ELSEWHERE...TROPICAL CYCLONE FORMATION IS NOT EXPECTED DURING THE
    NEXT 48 HOURS.

    PUBLIC ADVISORIES ON TROPICAL STORM GASTON ARE ISSUED UNDER WMO
    HEADER WTNT34 KNHC AND UNDER AWIPS HEADER MIATCPAT4.
    FORECAST/ADVISORIES ON TROPICAL STORM GASTON ARE ISSUED UNDER WMO
    HEADER WTNT24 KNHC AND UNDER AWIPS HEADER MIATCMAT4.

    $$
    FORECASTER BERG
    NNNN
    Last edited by LSU TIGERS; 09-01-2010 at 08:23 PM.

  4. #3
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    Seriously? Wow......

  5. #4
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    That train keeps rolling... One after the other off Cape Verde.

  6. #5

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    That wave looks more vigorous than Gaston. My Guess is Hermine by Sunday.

  7. #6

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    Quote Originally Posted by OPHarbor View Post
    That wave looks more vigorous than Gaston. My Guess is Hermine by Sunday.
    I agree.

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    This is one I am watching very closely... like since it was in East Africa. Would suit me fine if it petered out and had to pass on the name to another storm... but I'm betting this storm will be Hermine and a major PITA...

  9. #8
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    5AM

    Atlantic Graphical TWO Area 2 closeup

    Return to Atlantic Graphical TWO
    2. A TROPICAL WAVE LOCATED BETWEEN THE WEST COAST OF AFRICA AND THECAPE VERDE ISLANDS IS PRODUCING A LARGE AREA OF DISORGANIZEDCLOUDINESS AND SHOWERS. ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS APPEAR MARGINALLYCONDUCIVE FOR SOME SLOW DEVELOPMENT OF THIS SYSTEM DURING THE NEXTCOUPLE OF DAYS AS IT MOVES WESTWARD NEAR 10 MPH. THERE IS A LOWCHANCE...10 PERCENT...OF THIS SYSTEM BECOMING A TROPICAL CYCLONEDURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS.
    "The ultimate judge of your swing is the flight of the ball." - Ben Hogan

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  12. #11
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    ....

    735

    WHXX01 KWBC 031433

    CHGHUR

    TROPICAL CYCLONE GUIDANCE MESSAGE

    NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL

    1433 UTC FRI SEP 3 2010



    DISCLAIMER...NUMERICAL MODELS ARE SUBJECT TO LARGE ERRORS.

    PLEASE REFER TO NHC OFFICIAL FORECASTS FOR TROPICAL CYCLONE

    AND SUBTROPICAL CYCLONE INFORMATION.



    ATLANTIC OBJECTIVE AIDS FOR



    DISTURBANCE INVEST (AL992010) 20100903 1200 UTC



    ...00 HRS... ...12 HRS... ...24 HRS. .. ...36 HRS...

    100903 1200 100904 0000 100904 1200 100905 0000



    LAT LON LAT LON LAT LON LAT LON

    BAMS 14.3N 18.6W 15.2N 19.8W 15.9N 20.9W 16.7N 21.8W

    BAMD 14.3N 18.6W 15.3N 19.9W 15.9N 21.3W 16.4N 22.4W

    BAMM 14.3N 18.6W 15.5N 19.6W 16.2N 20.5W 17.0N 21.1W

    LBAR 14.3N 18.6W 15.6N 19.9W 16.9N 21.4W 18.2N 23.0W

    SHIP 25KTS 29KTS 35KTS 42KTS

    DSHP 25KTS 29KTS 35KTS 42KTS



    ...48 HRS... ...72 HRS... ...96 HRS. .. ..120 HRS...

    100905 1200 100906 1200 100907 1200 100908 1200



    LAT LON LAT LON LAT LON LAT LON

    BAMS 17.7N 22.6W 19.9N 24.7W 21.4N 28.2W 22.5N 31.9W

    BAMD 17.1N 23.3W 19.2N 24.8W 21.8N 25.8W 23.9N 25.2W

    BAMM 18.0N 21.6W 20.8N 22.7W 23.0N 24.2W 24.4N 24.9W

    LBAR 19.2N 24.7W 21.8N 27.3W 24.9N 29.1W 27.8N 29.2W

    SHIP 48KTS 56KTS 47KTS 36KTS

    DSHP 48KTS 56KTS 47KTS 36KTS



    ...INITIAL CONDITIONS...

    LATCUR = 14.3N LONCUR = 18.6W DIRCUR = 330DEG SPDCUR = 8KT

    LATM12 = 13.0N LONM12 = 17.9W DIRM12 = 331DEG SPDM12 = 8KT

    LATM24 = 11.0N LONM24 = 16.8W

    WNDCUR = 25KT RMAXWD = 25NM WNDM12 = 25KT

    CENPRS = 1007MB OUTPRS = 1011MB OUTRAD = 200NM SDEPTH = S

    RD34NE = 0NM RD34SE = 0NM RD34SW = 0NM RD34NW = 0NM



    $$




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    Jeff Masters

    arl spares North Carolina, heads for New England Posted by: JeffMasters, 3:07 PM GMT on September 03, 2010
    Hurricane Earl sideswiped North Carolina's Outer Banks early this morning, passing just 75 miles east of Cape Hatteras. Special weather statements indicate that the only road out of the barrier island chain, Highway 12, is closed. Pounding waves over 15 feet high, on top of a storm surge of 2 - 3 feet, pushed water over the highway in multiple locations. Earl's winds also piled up huge waves offshore--waves peaked at 28 feet at the Diamond Shoals buoy, and at 31 feet at a buoy 150 nm offshore of Cape Hatteras. Peak wind gusts from Earl were 74 mph at 12:30am at Oregon Inlet, and 70 mph at Nags Head and Manteo. Sustained winds of 47 mph were recorded at Oregon Inlet, but sustained winds at Cape Hatteras never reached tropical storm force--top winds there were just 36 mph, with gusts to 62 mph. Radar estimated rainfall (Figure 2) for Earl from the Cape Hatteras, North Carolina radar shows that 3 - 4 inches of rain fell across much of the Outer Banks. Overall, aside from some significant beach erosion, Earl spared North Carolina.


    Figure 1. MODIS image of Earl taken at 11:29am EDT September 2, 2010, by NASA's Terra satellite. At the time, Earl was a Category 3 hurricane with top winds of 125 mph. The storm had a somewhat lopsided shape, due to wind shear from the southwest affecting the storm. Image credit: NASA.

    Earl is now headed to the north-northeast at 18 mph. Conditions will steadily improve today over North Carolina, but deteriorate over New England. Earl's outer rain bands have now reached New York's Long Island, as seen on long range Dover radar. Satellite imagery shows that Earl is no longer the impressive hurricane it once was. The eye is no longer visible, and the hurricane appears lopsided, due upper level winds out of the southwest that are creating a moderate 10 - 20 knots of wind shear. The latest 10:02am EDT eye report from the Hurricane Hunters showed that Earl continues to weaken, with a central pressure up to 961 mb. Top surface winds measured via their SFMR instrument were just 76 mph--barely Category 1 strength.


    Figure 2. Radar estimated rainfall for Earl from the Cape Hatteras, North Carolina radar shows that 3 - 4 inches of rain fell across much of the Outer Banks.

    Forecast for Earl
    The latest set of model runs from 2am EDT (6Z) this morning show little change to Earl's track. Earl is expected to pass 20 - 50 miles southeast of Nantucket and Cape Cod, Massachusetts, at about 2am Saturday. The latest SHIPS model forecast of wind shear also shows no surprises. Wind shear will remain moderate, 10 - 20 knots today, then increase to the high range, 20 - 30 knots, on Saturday. Ocean temperatures will plunge to 20°C early Saturday morning, resulting in considerable weakening. Earl will still probably be a weak Category 1 hurricane early Saturday morning, when it will make its closest approach to New England. Earl is more likely to be a strong tropical storm early Saturday afternoon, when it is expected to make landfall in Nova Scotia or New Brunswick, Canada.


    Figure 3. Wind field analysis of Hurricane Earl from 9:30am EDT Friday, September 3, 2010. Note the 15 mph asymmetry in Earl's wind field, caused by the storm's forward motion of 18 mph to the north-northeast at the time. The highest contour had top winds of 75 kt (87 mph) surrounding the "+" on the east side of Earl--the strong right front quadrant of the storm. However, winds on the left (west) side were just 65 knots (74 mph.) The asymmetry was greater--about 20 mph--at 6:30 am EDT this morning. Image credit: NOAA/AOML/Hurricane Research Division.

    Impact of Earl on New England
    The latest track forecasts still keep Earl's eye barely offshore of New England, with the center passing 20 - 60 miles southeast of Nantucket and the extreme eastern tip of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The 11am NHC intensity forecast calls for Earl to have top winds of 75 mph at 2am Saturday, when the storm is expected to be at its closest to Massachusetts. Earl will be moving northeastward near 25 mph at that time, meaning that we will see a large difference in the winds between the weak and strong sides of this fast-moving hurricane. This difference is likely to be about 15 - 20 mph, based on the wind distribution around Earl's eye seen so far this morning. Winds analyzed on the experimental H*Wind product put out by NOAA's Hurricane Research Division at 9:30am this morning (Figure 3) showed that the winds on the weak left side of the storm were about 15 mph less than the winds in the powerful right front quadrant. Assuming Earl maintains this structure for the next day, we can expect the hurricane will have top winds of 75 mph on its strong southeast side over water when it whips by Southeast Massachusetts early Saturday morning, and winds of 55 - 60 mph in its northwest eyewall, closest to Massachusetts. If Cape Cod and Nantucket barely miss Earl's northwest eyewall, as currently forecast, top winds in those locations might only reach 45 - 50 mph. The latest NHC wind probability forecast from 11am this morning gives Nantucket a 12% chance of receiving sustained hurricane force winds of 74+ mph, and Hyannis on Cape Cod a 3% chance.

    The highest storm surge from Earl is likely to be on the south side of Cape Cod Bay, due to the northeast winds that will be piling up water in the bay. NHC is giving a 10% chance that a storm surge of 3 - 5 feet will occur in Cape Cod Bay, but it is more likely that the surge will be 2 - 3 feet. The extreme western portion of Long Island Sound at New York City could see a storm surge bringing water levels 1 - 2 feet above ground level.


    Figure 4. NHC is giving a 10% chance that the storm surge will reach heights of 3 - 5 feet in southern Cape Cod Bay. Image credit: National Hurricane Center.

    Impact of Earl on Canada
    Winds will begin to rise on the southwest coast of Nova Scotia late Friday night and early Saturday morning. By late morning Saturday, Earl is expected to make landfall somewhere between the Maine/New Brunswick border and central Nova Scotia. At that time, Earl will probably be a strong tropical storm with 55 - 60 mph winds. Earl will be moving at a very rapid 25 - 30 mph when it arrives in Canada, and regions on the right side of the eye can expect winds 15 - 20 mph greater than on the left side, due to the fast forward motion of the hurricane. Earl's impact is likely to be less than 2008's Hurricane Kyle, the last hurricane to hit Nova Scotia. Kyle hit near Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, as a Category 1 hurricane with 75 mph winds. Kyle produced a storm surge of 2.6 feet, and did $9 million in damage to Canada. The 11am EDT NHC wind probability forecast is calling for a 15% chance of hurricane-force winds in Yarmouth, and 3% in Halifax.

    Fiona
    There is not much to Tropical Storm Fiona, which satellite loops show to be a naked swirl of low clouds with just one diminishing spot of heavy thunderstorms on the southwest side of the circulation. High wind shear from Earl should continue to affect Fiona over the next two days, and be able to destroy the storm by Saturday.


    Figure 5. Afternoon satellite image of Gaston's remains (left) and the latest tropical wave to move off of Africa (right).

    Gaston may regenerate
    Tropical storm Gaston lost its battle with dry air yesterday, degenerating into a disorganized low pressure area. Recent satellite imagery shows that Gaston's remains have developed a broad surface circulation again, and a few heavy thunderstorms have begun to appear. The latest SHIPS model forecast predicts shear will remain low to moderate, 5 - 15 knots, for the next five days, so it is possible Gaston could regenerate. The large amount of dry air surrounding Gaston's remains seen on water vapor satellite loops will continue to be a major impediment to development. NHC is giving Gaston a 40% chance of regenerating into a tropical depression by Sunday. I'd put these odds a little higher, at 60%. The GFS model develops Gaston and predicts it will move though the Lesser Antilles on Wednesday. The NOGAPS and Canadian models also indicate Gaston will re-develop, but move the storm slower and show it near the northern Lesser Antilles seven days from now.

    New tropical wave
    A large tropical off the coast of Africa is moving westward at about 10 mph, and has the potential to develop into a tropical depression next week. NHC is giving the wave a 10% chance of developing by Sunday afternoon. Wind shear is currently too high, 20 - 30 knots, for the wave to develop. However, once the wave reaches a point a few hundred miles from the Cape Verdes Islands two days from now, wind shear will drop and development will be more likely.

    Next post
    I'll have an update late this afternoon.

    Jeff Masters




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  16. #15
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    Man, guess I have more to learn about steering currents. Seems like an odd direction.

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    30%

    Atlantic Graphical TWO Area 2 closeup

    Return to Atlantic Graphical TWO 2. AN AREA OF LOW PRESSURE HAS DEVELOPED ALONG A TROPICAL WAVE LOCATED
    BETWEEN THE WEST COAST OF AFRICA AND THE CAPE VERDE ISLANDS.
    SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE LOW ARE SHOWING
    SOME SIGNS OF ORGANIZATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS APPEAR
    CONDUCIVE FOR SLOW DEVELOPMENT OF THIS SYSTEM. THERE IS A MEDIUM
    CHANCE...30 PERCENT...OF THIS SYSTEM BECOMING A TROPICAL CYCLONE
    DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS AS IT MOVES NORTHWESTWARD NEAR 10 MPH.




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  19. #18

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    anything can happen with those two blobs.

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  21. #20
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    Thought this would look interesting!

    Last edited by Chris48; 09-03-2010 at 08:37 PM.
    Christopher Roderick
    B.S. Meteorology
    ChrisDRoderick@gmail.com
    Lake Mary, Fl.

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