chaser1 wrote:Teban54 wrote:Are the pink pixels on IR showing the developing eyewall?
https://i.postimg.cc/QCR2N1v9/goes16-ir-10-L-202308290127.gif
I had mistakenly thought the same thing. At least with this particular storm, it appears that these uber-cold cloud tops merely represent the highest/coldest tops essentially being exhausted out to the southeast in part due to the westerly shear hampering the storm. Whats interesting to me is, while this itself does not necessarily represent true forward motion of the storm, it does perhaps point to the location of the mid to upper level tilted well to the right of the LLC. Whats interesting to me is that I would perceive that greater northeast tilt to at least induce the LLC to pull itself under and it is that function that may be responsible for the slighr east of north motion we have been noticing. Honestly if I were folks in Tampa, i'd probably be rooting for this storm to get its act together as quick as possible. I can only see any ongoing misalignment as a result of (upper OR undercutting) shear as a potential cause for Idalia's track to "lean" more to the right. The last thing that the broad Tampa Bay region want to see is any track that might bring a major hurricane wind and storm surge threat closer to their coastline.
My question is would a stronger storm that is tracking closer to the inside line turn northeast sooner when the trough digs in. That is the worry.