ATL: Remnants of PAULA - Discussion

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andrewsurvivor
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1341 Postby andrewsurvivor » Wed Oct 13, 2010 6:51 pm

That's what makes it all so fascinating!
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#1342 Postby AdamFirst » Wed Oct 13, 2010 6:52 pm

One of the most unique storms I've ever seen.

It can't be much bigger than Cyclone Tracy, can it?
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1343 Postby TheBurn » Wed Oct 13, 2010 6:58 pm

Image

Image
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#1344 Postby Cyclone1 » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:03 pm

This hurricane is remarkably small.
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1345 Postby hurricaneCW » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:05 pm

I'm surprised none of these Caribbean systems have impacted the U.S. Normally if you get a big storm forming in mid October in the Caribbean, it generally heads NE and most likely slams into Florida. The pattern looks more like mid November than mid October, very odd in a la nina year.
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1346 Postby Cyclone1 » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:09 pm

hurricaneCW wrote:I'm surprised none of these Caribbean systems have impacted the U.S. Normally if you get a big storm forming in mid October in the Caribbean, it generally heads NE and most likely slams into Florida. The pattern looks more like mid November than mid October, very odd in a la nina year.


Yeah, I noticed how Novembery these storms seemed. Nicole, Otto, and Paula all feel like late November cyclones.
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#1347 Postby KWT » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:13 pm

Paula looks like its really suffering now, I suspect it'll be a TS some point in the next 6-12hrs based on what I'm seeing, could see it be a TD within 24-36hrs quite easily as well though that probably is a little too quick unless the thing gets decoupled...
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1348 Postby andrewsurvivor » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:15 pm

Interesting season in general. Hopefully we learn something. 30 years watching storms and never saw a storm form so quick then end up so small. Now let's hope everyone in Cuba is ok.
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1349 Postby hurricaneCW » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:21 pm

Paula really just looks like a very large thunderstorm or a strong thunderstorm complex. When she was less than 60 miles from Cozumel, they were reporting only 12-15 mph winds which is crazy for what was a 100 mph hurricane at the time. If Paula was an average hurricane, than parts of the Yucatan and now Cuba would easily be seeing TS sustained winds with western Cuba likely seeing hurricane gusts.

If Paula was the size of Igor, then most of the Yucatan peninsula and half of Cuba would be seeing hurricane force winds. It's always interesting to put storms in perspective and see how they would size up to other storms in that location.
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#1350 Postby KWT » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:23 pm

Yeah HCW I wonder just what is happening wind wise inside Paula, the presentation really is degrading, esp when you compare it to this time yesterday, the difference really is quite marked and now it does just look like some thunderstorms firing up in an increasingly high shear zone.
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Re:

#1351 Postby HURAKAN » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:26 pm

AdamFirst wrote:One of the most unique storms I've ever seen.

It can't be much bigger than Cyclone Tracy, can it?


Tropical Storm Marco (2008) had gale force wind that only extended out 19 km [12 miles] from its center of circulation (NHC Tropical Cyclone Report). That beats the old record holder, Tropical Cyclone Tracy which had gale force winds extending 50 km [30 mi] from its eye when it struck Darwin, Australia, on 24 December,1974 (Bureau of Meteorology 1977).


Link - http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/tcfaq/E5.html
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1352 Postby plasticup » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:28 pm

I have never understood these claims of "smallest storm." Surely every storm, when it is strengthening, has a moment when only one tiny portion of the system is above TS strength.
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#1353 Postby KWT » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:32 pm

True to a degree, the difference between Marco and Tracy is clearly that one was a tight TS that was strengthening, the other was a totally mature powerful hurricane like an even smaller version of the 1935 keys storm, its not really a fair comprasion to make!
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1354 Postby hurricaneCW » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:41 pm

Microcanes are very interesting for me. Storms like TC Tracy are almost like large tornadoes. I never understood how these storms can have such tiny circulations, I mean gale winds of only 30 miles across for a well developed TC is amazing. Several hurricanes have eyes that are 30 miles across or so. So technically you could put Paula, Marco, or Tracy into say Wilma's eye. How amazing is that.

The most interesting aspect is also the intensity. We've seen how these tiny storms have the ability to go from a TS to Cat 2,3 hurricanes in less than a day and than back to a TS less than a day later. Sometimes that could happen all in one day.
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1355 Postby Macrocane » Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:54 pm

Yep you could put microcanes like Paula in the eyes of macrocanes like Igor :lol:
What I found really amazing is the fact that it had little model support and it was able to become a respactable hurricane.
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#1356 Postby brunota2003 » Wed Oct 13, 2010 8:22 pm

You could fit both Tracy and Marco into the eye of Hurricane Ophelia at the same time.
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#1357 Postby GCANE » Wed Oct 13, 2010 8:52 pm

Vortex wrote:Keep an eye to the south withinin 5 days may be "the real" deal as depicted by models...Not sure if this is part of it ot not....


I think your right Vortex.

Anti-cyclone is still there and lots of moisture and unstable air.

There have been documented cases were the outflow from one TC will spark another TC on the order of 5 days or so.

I read a paper recently how '05 Rita was a product from Ophelia's UL "wake".
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1358 Postby Ptarmigan » Wed Oct 13, 2010 9:19 pm

hurricaneCW wrote:Microcanes are very interesting for me. Storms like TC Tracy are almost like large tornadoes. I never understood how these storms can have such tiny circulations, I mean gale winds of only 30 miles across for a well developed TC is amazing. Several hurricanes have eyes that are 30 miles across or so. So technically you could put Paula, Marco, or Tracy into say Wilma's eye. How amazing is that.

The most interesting aspect is also the intensity. We've seen how these tiny storms have the ability to go from a TS to Cat 2,3 hurricanes in less than a day and than back to a TS less than a day later. Sometimes that could happen all in one day.


It is interesting to see those small hurricanes. They are common throughout the world. I seem to notice them more often off the coast of Australia. I think in some basins they are more common due to monsoonal troughs spinning up thunderstorms. Paula, Marco, and Tracy are small and yes they could fit into Isabel, Ike, or Katrina's eye.
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Re: ATL: PAULA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1359 Postby Ptarmigan » Wed Oct 13, 2010 9:21 pm

Macrocane wrote:Yep you could put microcanes like Paula in the eyes of macrocanes like Igor :lol:
What I found really amazing is the fact that it had little model support and it was able to become a respactable hurricane.


I noticed computer models are that good with small microcanes. They seem to be better with large macrocanes.
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#1360 Postby gatorcane » Wed Oct 13, 2010 9:24 pm

Don't forget that the ecmwf got this right way in advance. The gfs also did quite well.

Both models never showed a threat to Florida except the the gfs 12 day forecast which is not believable anyway :roll:

Both models showed a western Cuba threat and a very sheared small system.
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