Time to breathe.
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du1st
Time to breathe.
Looks like we can breath now. I think the shear and dry air was more than people thought and I told yall 05 is no 04.(ofcourse it is not done till it's done.) I'll be taking a break in a week school starts soon. See ya soon.
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Re: Time to breathe.
du1st wrote:Looks like we can breath now. I think the shear and dry air was more than people thought and I told yall 05 is no 04.(ofcourse it is not done till it's done.) I'll be taking a break in a week school starts soon. See ya soon.
Bye
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- senorpepr
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Okay... I'm going to repost this from one of my stat posts...
senorpepr wrote:Regardless, not much to talk about this past week. We dropped Harvey while Irene persisted throughout the week. No additional NS, but with Irene, one new H. Therefore, with a "lull" (as compared to July), the overall numbers have dropped.
Even with the numbers dropping somewhat because of the fairly quiet last week, this is pretty typical of the early-half of August.
Since the 1995-present era of above-normal activity (excluding 1997), August 1-14 yields 1.44 named storms. August 15-31 yields 3.11 - an increase of 215.972%. If you apply that to this year's 2 named storms in early August, another 4 or 5 named storms in the next few weeks wouldn't be farfetched. We may be seeing Maria or Nate moving into September.
In addition, I've pinpointed the amount of storms pre- and post-August 15 from 1995 to 2004. Then, I've added 2005's nine named storms to those post-August 15 amounts. If this year is anything like the past decade in terms of post-August 15 activity, we are certainly looking toward 18-22 named storms by the year's end. Of course, that number will be adjusted if there is a lower- or higher-than-normal "heart" of the season.Code: Select all
A= Storms prior to Aug 15
B= Storm Aug 15 and after
C= 2005 YTD + year's storms Aug 15 and after
A B C
1995 07 12 21
1996 03 10 19
1997 05 03 12
1998 01 13 22
1999 01 11 20
2000 02 13 22
2001 03 12 21
2002 03 09 18
2003 05 11 20
2004 05 10 19
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- wxmann_91
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artist wrote:How is the shear in the Caribbean right now?
(Can't post picture as it is too big) Shear maps:
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real-time/atlantic/winds/wg8shr.html
For this one, look at the orange lines with arrows, showing the direction upper-level winds are moving. I look at those lines with this map more often, as closely-clustered groups of them signal stronger directional shear.
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real-time/atlantic/winds/wg8sht.html
For this one, this will show you the trends on where speed shear is decreasing and increasing.
Both speed (change of wind speed with height) and directional (change of wind direction with height) shear hinders TC development.
As you can see, shear not favorable. Over the Atlantic, the main features causing widespread unfavorable shear are:
1) ULL in the eastern GOM (shear over GOM and west Carib.)
2) Anticyclone over Irene (shear over much of western Atlantic)
3) an upper trough over the central Atl (shear over much of central and eastern Atlantic, eastern Carib., and remnants of TD 10)
This type of pattern has actually been fairly stagnant over the last few weeks, preventing anything from strengthening into a major hurricane.
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If anybody sees that I'm wrong, please tell me that because I've been telling everybody that for the last few weeks!
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- wxmann_91
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artist wrote:thanks - have a ? though - doesn't that second link you posted show decreasing shear in the Caribbean and Gulf?
You're welcome.
And yes the shear is decreasing across the Carib., but light green still exists, which, if you look at the key, means 20 kt shear. If you look at the other shear map, it indicates strong westerly shear and as I said, a ULL over the GOM suppresing TC development there.
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- ConvergenceZone
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WeatherEmperor
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