




IT LOOKS PURELY EXTRATROPICAL, BUT STILL, IT LOOKS VERY INTERESTING IN THE VAST MEDITERRANIAN SEA.
Moderator: S2k Moderators
senorpepr wrote:I've been following that system for a while now. It's the parent low of an occluded frontal boundary. This front is expected to bring a bit of rainshowers and thinderstorms to parts of SW Asia, along with some duststorms with the increased winds associated with it.
Javlin wrote:Looks neat for sure.I would say extratropical just by the lack of any real banding in up close to the center,if that is a correct assumption.Lets hope this is the correlation to 95 we get in anyway.
TheEuropean wrote:Javlin wrote:Looks neat for sure.I would say extratropical just by the lack of any real banding in up close to the center,if that is a correct assumption.Lets hope this is the correlation to 95 we get in anyway.
I would say at least subtropical: There was an eye in the center of the ring of convection, there was a strong vertical temperature gradient and there was no frontal zone near the system. It became a relative warm core system - all in all it was subtropical or even tropical, but over water with about 16°C.
senorpepr wrote:I'm going to disagree with TheEuropean. While there was a little bit of convection near the low, the air temperatures between 925-700mb was hardly anything similar to a subtropical cyclone much less a tropical cyclone--very little in terms of warm-core features. Furthermore, it is still connected to an occluded front.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 66 guests