

Moderator: S2k Moderators
HURAKAN wrote:It may look like a subtropical system, but I would think that given the location, time of the year, coverage of the convection and time it has lasted, it's far from tropical. I had a conversation with a hurricane expert, I reserve to say the name for obvious reasons, and that person expressed how difficult it was sometimes to distinguish between a non-tropical cyclone and a subtropical cyclone in these cases. Some of these systems have characteristics that make them look like a tropical or subtropical cyclone, including tight cores in strong ones, but they're still non-tropical cyclones.
If I had to bet with this system, I would bet it's still non-tropical. Satellite images can be very misleading sometimes.
Hurricane Jed wrote:Kinda like the medicanes that form in the Mediterranean or polar lows?
HURAKAN wrote:Hurricane Jed wrote:Kinda like the medicanes that form in the Mediterranean or polar lows?
Polar lows are non-tropical, no question about that, but yes, they usually have a tight core and can have the appearance of tropical cyclones. I think some of the Medicanes may have been tropical or subtropical. I would love to see someone fund some research on the Medicanes.
DanieleItalyRm wrote:I think, if this system moved front coast of south Carolina, would be called subtropical system.
You remember unnamed January 2010?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hYjzOawj ... r_embedded
or Invest92 Jun 2009?
http://forum.meteonetwork.it/meteorolog ... zorre.html
Users browsing this forum: duilaslol and 29 guests