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Thread: TD Karl

  1. #21
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    Wow...116 MPH in 120 hrs!
    http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/...00000499419036

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  3. #22
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    Jeff Masters:

    Flooding, tornadoes for TX, OK; dangerous 92L forms; 4th hottest summer for U.S.


    Updated: 8:41 AM CDT on September 09, 2010
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    Dangerous flash flooding is occurring in Eastern Oklahoma this morning, where rainfall rates as heavy as three inches per hour from the remains of Tropical Storm Hermine are occurring. A large area of Eastern Oklahoma received 3 - 6 inches of rain last night and this morning, with radar-estimated rainfall amounts as high as fifteen inches (Figure 2.) Yesterday, Hermine killed two people in Texas, who were attempting to cross flood waters in their vehicles. Hermine dropped 6 - 8 inches of rain in the Dallas/Fort Worth area, creating moderate to major flooding along the Trinity River in Dallas. Two tornadoes touched down near Dallas, and NOAA's Storm Prediction Center logged a total of eight tornado reports in Oklahoma and Texas from Hermine. The latest rainfall totals from NOAA's Hydrometeorological Prediction Center show 15.62" fell in Georgetown, Texas, with fifteen locations in Texas receiving over ten inches of rain. Big city rainfall totals included 7.57" at Austin, 6.73" at San Antonio, 6.52" at Dallas, and 7.20" at Fort Worth.


    Figure 1. Radar estimated rainfall for the Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas area from Hermine shows a large area of 6+ inches of rain, with maximum amounts of ten inches.

    Figure 2. Radar estimated rainfall for eastern Oklahoma, where up to fifteen inches of rain fell last night and this morning.

    Potentially dangerous Lesser Antilles tropical disturbance 92L forms
    A tropical disturbance (92L) has developed over the extreme southeastern Caribbean just north of the coast of South America, over the southernmost Lesser Antilles Islands. Surface observations indicate that pressures have been slowly falling at a number of stations, and satellite loops show a modest region of heavy thunderstorm activity is building. A strong flow of upper level easterly winds is creating a moderate 10 - 20 knots of wind shear, and the waters are plenty warm for development. Water vapor satellite loops show a large area of dry air lies over the northern Caribbean, but this dry air should not interfere with development over the next two days.

    The disturbance is slowly drifting westward, but steering currents favor a more northwest motion Friday and Saturday. Lower shear lies over the Central Caribbean, away from the coast of South America, so any northward component of motion will allow for more significant development. There is drier air to the north, but 92L is steadily moistening the atmosphere in the Caribbean, so dry air may not be a problem for it. There is substantial model support for development. The disturbance is in a dangerous location for development, and gives me the greatest concern of any Atlantic disturbance so far this year. The models predict that by Saturday, 92L will bring heavy rains to Puerto Rico. These rains will then spread to the Dominican Republic on Sunday, and Haiti, Jamaica, and eastern Cuba on Monday. The longer range track of 92L is uncertain, and will strongly depend on where the storm drifts during the next two days. The ECMWF and GFS models predict a more southerly path through the Western Caribbean towards Belize and Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, and the NOGAPS and Canadian models predict a more northerly path along the length of Cuba towards Florida. NHC is giving 92L a 40% chance of developing into a tropical depression by Saturday. Stay tuned.


    Figure 3. Morning satellite image of the potentially dangerous disturbance in the Southeast Caribbean.

    Igor
    Tropical Storm Igor is barely hanging on in the face of 20 - 25 knots of winds shear, courtesy of strong upper-level winds out of the east. The shear has exposed Igor's low level circulation to view, and the storm has just one small spot of heavy thunderstorms near its center. Once Igor gets another 200 miles away from Africa, the shear should decline to the moderate range, 10 - 20 knots, and allow steady strengthening to occur. Waters are warm, 28°C, and the Saharan Air Layer (SAL) is well north of Igor, so the storm should intensity once the shear drops. The models are pretty unanimous about developing Igor into a hurricane 3 - 5 days from now. Igor will track west to west-northwest over the next week, with long range forecasts from the GFS and ECMWF models putting the storm several hundred miles northeast of the Lesser Antilles Islands a week from now. Climatology shows that about 20% of all tropical cyclones that have existed at Igor's current position have gone on to hit the U.S. East Coast; these odds are 10% for the U.S. Gulf Coast, 5% for Puerto Rico, and 10% for Canada. The forecast steering pattern for the coming two weeks from the GFS model shows a continuation of the pattern we've seen all hurricane season, with regular strong troughs of low pressure moving off the U.S. East Coast. This pattern favors Igor eventually recurving out to sea without affecting any land areas, and the odds of Igor hitting land are lower than climatology.

    Elsewhere in the tropics
    The GFS, NOGAPS, and ECMWF models predict the development of a new tropical wave off the coast of Africa 4 - 6 days from now.
    "The ultimate judge of your swing is the flight of the ball." - Ben Hogan

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    "The ultimate judge of your swing is the flight of the ball." - Ben Hogan

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    12z Early Cycle NHC model tracks
    Invest92
    Statistical/Simple Models (CLIPER,BAMs,LBAR,other Statistical Models)







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  6. #25
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    One of our local Meteorologist, James Brown just gave the weather and said this is the remnant of Gaston.

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    Quote Originally Posted by moni911 View Post
    One of our local Meteorologist, James Brown just gave the weather and said this is the remnant of Gaston.
    That would be incorrect info




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  8. #27
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    Is it too soon to get storms to curve to the NE like Wilma did in 2005? Or is that more of a timeframe of late Oct.

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    2pm

    Atlantic Graphical TWO Area 1 closeup

    Return to Atlantic Graphical TWO 1. SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ASSOCIATED WITH A WEAK AREA OF LOW PRESSURE LOCATED NEAR THE WINDWARD ISLANDS HAVE CHANGED LITTLE DURING THE LAST SEVERAL HOURS. THIS SYSTEM CONTINUES TO SHOW SIGNS OF ORGANIZATION...AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS APPEAR FAVORABLE FOR SOME GRADUAL DEVELOPMENT AS THE LOW MOVES SLOWLY WESTWARD. THERE IS A MEDIUM CHANCE...40 PERCENT...OF THIS SYSTEM BECOMING A TROPICAL CYCLONE DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS.




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  10. #29
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    Well, everyone wanted a non-fish storm..

  11. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by HoumaLA_WXguy View Post
    Well, everyone wanted a non-fish storm..
    We have had so very few fish storms so I don't understand why I keep seeing the word fish posted so often on this site and other weather sites




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  12. #31
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  13. #32
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  14. #33
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    JB

    THURSDAY

    If it's not Igor, it will be the next one behind it.

    A tandem, probably a trio, of tropical cyclones will have originated in the African wave train over the next 10-15 days and two, perhaps three, will come out of a more westward and southward source region discussed in yesterday's post. One of each is evident now, the African origin with Igor, the storm to be named probably before the weekend is through in the Caribbean, now organizing east of the southern Windwards.

    The overall pattern in 10-20 days is almost textbook for U.S. hits. The question is how does this come about. If Igor misses the connection with the trough near 60 west in 7-10 days, it will be the first threat for the East coast... but as I will show on the Long Ranger, in the longer term, the pattern says come to the U.S. in the means with the classic positive over southeastern Canada and negatives through the Gulf and into the southwest Atlantic. The last time that occurred we had Earl miss 50-100 miles east and a fast-rallying Hermine hit. The ante is upped here given the overall pattern being more favored for the Caribbean lighting up faster out of the second source. What could happen is the Caribbean system misses south, Igor misses east and then the following two close the gap in between. The reason the following two should not simply do the same as the front two is because the pattern evolves differently. Let's remember Earl got all the way back to 75.2; the original target recurve was quite a bit farther east with Fiona farther west. What usually happens here is it may take a while to get a handle on which one will do it, but one of them usually does. In the pattern backing up, and you saw this with Dennis and Floyd, Edouard and Fran, the second may be the one to come farther west. This time though, we are dealing with a much more pregnant situation since the Caribbean is starting to open for business. The Hatch-it Job folks are on this as they have changed from mellow yellow to orange you getting more concerned?

    Igor is looking better as the other low to the northeast is pulling it up toward it and it is coming down toward Igor. Soon, it will combine and turn due west and start to intensify.. A Fujiwara effect in the eastern Atlantic... though I guess by where it is, it would be a Fujiverde.

    In front of Igor are two swirls, one up near 22 north and 40 west and the other near 16 north and 42 west, while another strong wave is over Africa ready to follow Igor once he starts west.

    Thanks for reading. Ciao for now.




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  18. #37
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    Quote Originally Posted by moni911 View Post
    One of our local Meteorologist, James Brown just gave the weather and said this is the remnant of Gaston.




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    Recon

    WEATHER RECONNAISSANCE FLIGHTS
    CARCAH, NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER, MIAMI, FL.
    1130 AM EDT THU 09 SEPTEMBER 2010
    SUBJECT: TROPICAL CYCLONE PLAN OF THE DAY (TCPOD)
    VALID 10/1100Z TO 11/1100Z SEPTEMBER 2010
    TCPOD NUMBER.....10-101

    I. ATLANTIC REQUIREMENTS
    1. NEGATIVE RECONNAISSANCE REQUIREMENTS.
    2. SUCCEEDING DAY OUTLOOK: PSBL LOW LEVEL INVEST
    NEAR 14.0N AND 64.0W FOR 11/1800Z.
    3. REMARKS: THE NSF/NCAR G-V WILL FLY 2 A DAY RESEARCH MISSIONS
    DEPARTING AT 10/0900Z AND 1700Z INTO THE SAME AREA.




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  21. #40
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    Quote Originally Posted by ROLLTIDE View Post
    We have had so very few fish storms so I don't understand why I keep seeing the word fish posted so often on this site and other weather sites
    We've had several fish storms.. Personally, I wish they would all recurve..

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