About Jeff Masters
Cat 6 lead authors: WU cofounder Dr. Jeff Masters (right), who flew w/NOAA Hurricane Hunters 1986-1990, & WU meteorologist Bob Henson, @bhensonweather
By: Dr. Jeff Masters , 2:40 PM GMT on August 15, 2013
The tropical wave in the Western Caribbean near the Yucatan Peninsula (92L) is growing more organized this morning, after an evening when it lost most of its heavy thunderstorm activity. Satellite loops show a modest-sized area of heavy thunderstorms that are increasing in intensity and areal coverage, but there are a no signs of a surface circulation. Winds at surface stations in the Western Caribbean also do not show a surface circulation. The highest surface wind reports this Thursday morning were at Western Caribbean buoy 42056 about 140 miles east southeast of Cozumel, which had east winds of 25 mph, gusting to 34 mph, at 10 am EDT. Wind shear is a moderate 10 - 20 knots over the the wave, which should allow slow development today until its west-northwest movement at 10 - 15 mph carries it over the Yucatan Peninsula Thursday afternoon. Four hurricane hunter flights were scheduled to fly into 92L today--an Air Force mission tasked to provide a center fix early this afternoon, two NOAA P-3 missions aimed at collecting real-time radar data to feed into the HWRF model, and a flight by the NOAA jet to collect dropsonde data around the periphery of 92L. However, all of these flights were cancelled, given that 92L did not organize as much as much as it could have.
Figure 1. MODIS satellite image of Invest 92L taken at 12:30 pm EDT Thursday August 15, 2013. Image credit: NASA.
Forecast for 92L
92L will trek across the Yucatan Peninsula Thursday evening and arrive in the Southern Gulf of Mexico on Friday, when it will have the opportunity to strengthen. The 06Z Thursday SHIPS model forecast predicts that 92L will remain in an area of low to moderate wind shear through Saturday, and ocean temperatures will be a favorable 29 - 30°C. The topography of the Southern Gulf of Mexico's Bay of Campeche can aid in getting a storm spinning more readily, but 92L may be far enough north that this influence will be negligible. Given all these factors, 92L should be able to become at least a tropical depression by Saturday, A trough of low pressure over the northern Gulf of Mexico will dip down by Saturday evening over the Central Gulf of Mexico, potentially increasing wind shear to a high 20 - 30 knots, stalling any further intensification. This trough may also be able to pull the storm northwards to a landfall between Eastern Louisiana and the Florida Panhandle, as the 00Z Thursday run of the European model is suggesting. This would bring a plenty of tropical moisture into the Southeast U.S., resulting in a large area of 4+" of rain. However, the other models show a more westerly track for 92L, with landfalls possible in Texas or Mexico south of the Texas border, and there is high uncertainty where 92L may go once it enters the Gulf of Mexico. In their 8 am EDT Wednesday Tropical Weather Outlook, NHC gave 92L a 50% of developing by Saturday, and a 60% chance of developing by Tuesday.
Figure 2. MODIS satellite image of Tropical Storm Erin taken at 10:30 am EDT Thursday August 15, 2013. At the time, Erin had maximum sustained winds of 40 mph. Image credit: NASA.
Tropical Storm Erin
The season's fifth named storm of the year, Tropical Storm Erin, has formed over the far Eastern Atlantic off the coast of Africa. Erin is over warm waters of 27°C and is under a moderate 10 - 15 knots of wind shear, which should allow continued development today and Friday. Erin is a small storm, as seen on satellite loops. The 12Z Thursday SHIPS model forecast predicts that wind shear will be low to moderate for the next five days, which favors development. However, the waters beneath Erin will steadily cool to a marginal 26°C by Friday, and the atmosphere will steadily get drier, as the storm encounters the Saharan Air Layer (SAL), discouraging development. Erin's west-northwest motion will cut the storm off on Sunday from a moist source of air to its south--the semi-permanent band of tropical thunderstorms called the ITCZ (Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone.) The storm should weaken beginning on Sunday, which would result in Erin turning more to the west as the east-to-west blowing surface trade winds begin to dominate the steering of the shallower storm. We may see a situation like occurred for Tropical Storm Dorian in late July--intensification to a 60 mph tropical storm, followed by a slow decay and dissipation. The latest run of the GFS model calls for Erin to dissipate well before reaching the Lesser Antilles Islands.
Typhoon Utor dissipates
Typhoon Utor has dissipated after hitting Southeast China about 150 miles southwest of Hong Kong on Wednesday as a Category 1 storm with 90 mph winds. The typhoon is being blamed for 1 death in China, and sank a 21-person cargo ship off the coast. In the Philippines, where Utor hit as a Category 4 storm with 140 mph winds on Monday, 8 deaths are being blamed on the storm, and damage is estimated at $20 million.
Jeff Masters
The views of the author are his/her own and do not necessarily represent the position of The Weather Company or its parent, IBM.
Cat 6 lead authors: WU cofounder Dr. Jeff Masters (right), who flew w/NOAA Hurricane Hunters 1986-1990, & WU meteorologist Bob Henson, @bhensonweather
792. TropicalAnalystwx13
791. 2xRitaEvacuee
Since '05 :)
790. seminolesfan
The problem is, in this instance, the poster in question likes to dig up this one tough forecast a prominent poster missed(in good company, no less) LAST YEAR.
Then proceeds to make a 'wildcat' forecast on the current AOI while 'talking major trash' about dissenting forecasts.
Then this frequent poster takes a leave of absence to 'avoid the repercussions' of the 'trash' talking.
Leaving the Kitchen once it Gets Hot, in other words...
789. LargoFl
788. sar2401
I know, but it would make me feel bad if I was one of those refugees.
786. RitaEvac
785. robert88
784. Gearsts
783. ncstorm
Hold your breath and tell me what Erin is going to do :)
782. RGVtropicalWx13
Agreed. May have another shot once it gets back over the gulf.
781. DocNDswamp
As for Louisiana rushing preparations report, just usual mindful precautionary efforts that I see, minimal at that... Although I wouldn't be surprised if 92L has served as a wake up call for some who put off getting supplies, preparing for what may lie ahead as tropical season peak arrives. Been others since, but best example I recall of LA residents really hitting the panic button / "rushing to complete preps" was Aug '92 when horrifying pics and reports from Homestead came in, with us next in direct path of that bad boy!
I haven't seen it yet locally, but if there is any run on the gas stations today across SE LA perhaps some of it out of direct concern for 92L... the rest probably in anticipation fuel commodity speculators may seize the opportunity to play up any potential Gulf storm threat and spike the price up... like they predictably do.
Later!
780. LargoFl
779. MississippiWx
I'm only wrong when I'm breathing.
778. Gearsts
777. nrtiwlnvragn
776. Patrap
775. SuperStorm093
774. PalmBeachWeather
773. KEEPEROFTHEGATE (Mod)
772. ncstorm
771. RitaEvac
Some common sense involved, a tropical wave isn't gonna get picked up by a trough
770. seminolesfan
That may be relevant to the conversation at hand. ;)
And he has a Met degree according to one post(of HIS) I saw a few days back.
Seems a bit overzealous and excitable for all the mets I have known on a personal level. JMO, though...
769. Walshy
768. weatherrx
767. Patrap
766. SuperStorm093
765. Patrap
Yeah, first Tampa, then on to JAX maybe?
; )
764. A4Guy
You cannot compare this to Charley....which was a Cat 4 storm, by the way...but that aside...Charley was approaching Florida almost parallel to the cost, so the slightest of wobbles on a storm approaching at such an oblique angle has a very,v ery big impact on where the stom lands. Very different from a storm approaching a costline at a more perpendicular angle, where small wobbles are not as magnified.
763. tropicallydepressed
762. LargoFl
761. centex
760. hurricanes2018
759. LargoFl
758. CaribBoy
Hopefully the GFS is wrong. Yesterday it brought ERIN into the Leewards, and now it shows a fish... so the future may be wayyy different compared with what the GFS has on today's 12Z run :-)
757. yankees440
In other words, looking as though Levi was spot on with his forecast
756. Patrap
City lights are oh so bright, as we go sliding... sliding... sliding through.
755. barbamz
The (any?) circulation of 92L doesn't look very alarming. Click to enlarge.
Meanwhile strange things happen in Germany ;)
All Hands on Deck: Bavarian Search for Vicious Turtle Continues
Spiegel English, August 15:
No one knows where it is, or even whether it exists at all. The Bavarian village of Irsee is ramping up efforts to find an alligator snapping turtle that is believed to have severed a young boy's Achilles tendon at a local lake last week. ...
754. RitaEvac
753. VR46L
Depends what you mean ....
752. MississippiWx
You mean the Cat 2 that shoots the gap and makes landfall along the Panhandle forecast? ;-)
751. TropicalAnalystwx13
750. justsouthofnola
Link
749. LargoFl
748. RitaEvac
747. RGVtropicalWx13
746. seminolesfan
I know. I just wondered why he's not being his usual talkative self.
Forecasters remorse is a tough pill to swallow.
He likes to bring up Debbie from last year on Levi quite frequently. I'm sure he will be back with short term memory issues shortly. ;)
745. Envoirment
It's alligned with the mid-upper levels
It's currently in a low shear environment and thunderstorms continue to develop in and around the system. Although it's a bit messy at the moment and has some dry air moving in from the east.
744. Patrap
LoL
743. SuperStorm093
I see one little TS that will recurve before doing anything and a crappy invest that dropped to 50% and looks to not be doing much? Just wondering. The Atlantic isnt heating up, we have 1 storm out there and its not going to be doing anything big.
742. hurricanes2018