Jim Hughes wrote:Hyperstorm,
This is not the thread for any long discussion so I will only say that I mentioned it as a possibility just like the NHC discussion. I also mentioned dry air in my first comments .
Ophelia was a weak hurricane and she was over the same area for quite a while. People tend to think every area off of the southeast coast is the Gulfstream just because the SSTs are warmer than average.
It meanders constantly and can move as much as 100 miles especially in the fall....northwards. This area is also the southern end ...close to where things pull together in helping make the Gulfstream like the Florida current.
She's moving and this will help her in my opinion even with all the dry air and all. Time will tell. As far as the reasoning behind convection building intensely if the SST's had been upwelling....I am sure you know that I look at things differently than you.
Jim
Jim...
I've seen hurricanes upwell waters and believe me, the first signs of that are the weakening of convection near the center revealing a circulation with scattered patches of moderate convection in the storm (similar to when a hurricane is just starting to move over cooler waters in the Eastern Pacific).
The Gulf Stream is a current of warm air that is constantly fed by the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico. Even if a hurricane were to upwell the waters underneath, the current would immediately replace it with the warmer waters, offsetting any upwelling.
As you said, everybody seems to have a different degree of thinking. The forecaster for the 11pm advisory talked about upwelling totally different (occuring away from the Gulf Stream) than the one who did the forecast at 5am.
But let me tell you...I have yet to see upwelling occur in the Gulf Stream with a tropical storm...