Hurricane Alley 2007 Hurricane Landfall Map
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Forum rules
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecasts and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K. For official information, please refer to products from the National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service.
Hurricane Alley 2007 Hurricane Landfall Map
Below is a link to their landfall forecast map:
http://www.hurricanealley.net/bizbaron/ ... hp?pid=423
Link to their forecast methodology:
http://www.hurricanealley.net/bizbaron/ ... hp?pid=424
http://www.hurricanealley.net/bizbaron/ ... hp?pid=423
Link to their forecast methodology:
http://www.hurricanealley.net/bizbaron/ ... hp?pid=424
0 likes
Personally I believe steering trends are too complex and can't be predicted in advance of the formation of storms several months away from April, May, or even July. The timing of trough and ridge progressions are critical to tropical cyclone steering. Ridges and troughs fluctuate. Patterns are constantly changing. Small features at the various atmospheric levels (low, middle, and upper layers) affect the steering and intensity of various features at many ranges of height (for example easterly waves are affected by low-level features and are steered my mean sea-level pressures at the surface). A mature tropical cyclone is steered by the middle and upper levels (500 mbar).
In 2004, a mid-level tropospheric trough dominated the northeastern United States. Upper-level ridging was displaced further east in advance of a shortwave trough. At the same time, Hurricane Charley was south of Cuba. On its heading, Charley could have cointinued further west into Mexico or northern Gulf coast, but the stalled, weakening shortwave created a broad mid-level tropospheric trough in the eastern Gulf of Mexico; thus, Charley turned northward into western Cuba and southwest Florida. If the trough had not eroded the ridging at this precise moment, the outcome would have been significantly different and Charley's course would have moved toward the west-northwest. After the eastern United States trough was displaced further inland after Charley dissipated over New England, a longwave 500 mbar ridge dominated the Southeast, steering Frances and Jeanne westward into the Treasure Coast (east-central Florida).
Patterns continually fluctuate. We can't state another region is more vulnerable than another zone due to a pattern in place at the current time. We can't predict steering in advance of the formation of storms. In addition, there are many potential setups that can put an area at risk (depending on the timing when a storm is active).
In 2004, a mid-level tropospheric trough dominated the northeastern United States. Upper-level ridging was displaced further east in advance of a shortwave trough. At the same time, Hurricane Charley was south of Cuba. On its heading, Charley could have cointinued further west into Mexico or northern Gulf coast, but the stalled, weakening shortwave created a broad mid-level tropospheric trough in the eastern Gulf of Mexico; thus, Charley turned northward into western Cuba and southwest Florida. If the trough had not eroded the ridging at this precise moment, the outcome would have been significantly different and Charley's course would have moved toward the west-northwest. After the eastern United States trough was displaced further inland after Charley dissipated over New England, a longwave 500 mbar ridge dominated the Southeast, steering Frances and Jeanne westward into the Treasure Coast (east-central Florida).
Patterns continually fluctuate. We can't state another region is more vulnerable than another zone due to a pattern in place at the current time. We can't predict steering in advance of the formation of storms. In addition, there are many potential setups that can put an area at risk (depending on the timing when a storm is active).
0 likes
- hurricanetrack
- HurricaneTrack.com
- Posts: 1781
- Joined: Tue Dec 02, 2003 10:46 pm
- Location: Wilmington, NC
- Contact:
MiamiensisWx wrote:Personally I believe steering trends are too complex and can't be predicted in advance of the formation of storms several months away from April, May, or even July. The timing of trough and ridge progressions are critical to tropical cyclone steering. Ridges and troughs fluctuate. Patterns are constantly changing. Small features at the various atmospheric levels (low, middle, and upper layers) affect the steering and intensity of various features at many ranges of height (for example easterly waves are affected by low-level features and are steered my mean sea-level pressures at the surface). A mature tropical cyclone is steered by the middle and upper levels (500 mbar).
In 2004, a mid-level tropospheric trough dominated the northeastern United States. Upper-level ridging was displaced further east in advance of a shortwave trough. At the same time, Hurricane Charley was south of Cuba. On its heading, Charley could have cointinued further west into Mexico or northern Gulf coast, but the stalled, weakening shortwave created a broad mid-level tropospheric trough in the eastern Gulf of Mexico; thus, Charley turned northward into western Cuba and southwest Florida. If the trough had not eroded the ridging at this precise moment, the outcome would have been significantly different and Charley's course would have moved toward the west-northwest. After the eastern United States trough was displaced further inland after Charley dissipated over New England, a longwave 500 mbar ridge dominated the Southeast, steering Frances and Jeanne westward into the Treasure Coast (east-central Florida).
Patterns continually fluctuate. We can't state another region is more vulnerable than another zone due to a pattern in place at the current time. We can't predict steering in advance of the formation of storms. In addition, there are many potential setups that can put an area at risk (depending on the timing when a storm is active).
Hey Daniel that's the exact reason why I don't believe in these early predictions of whose more vulnerable than others.
0 likes
- Blown Away
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 10162
- Joined: Wed May 26, 2004 6:17 am
Interesting how North Carolina has a low risk, that is a bold prediction. I think you could pretty much default at least moderate risk for North Carolina and be right most of the time. The South Carolina moderate risk tells me a close brush to SFL from the east or a crossover from SW Florida up to South Carolina, like a Charley type track. The prediction looks like alot of activity around Florida and a strong ridge pushing systems into the Caribbean/Gulf.
0 likes
- flightwxman
- Tropical Depression
- Posts: 65
- Joined: Wed Apr 18, 2007 6:45 pm
- Location: Disney's Backyard, FL
- Contact:
- flightwxman
- Tropical Depression
- Posts: 65
- Joined: Wed Apr 18, 2007 6:45 pm
- Location: Disney's Backyard, FL
- Contact:
-
- Professional-Met
- Posts: 11430
- Age: 35
- Joined: Sat Dec 24, 2005 9:00 pm
- Location: School: Florida State University (Tallahassee, FL) Home: St. Petersburg, Florida
- Contact:
- flightwxman
- Tropical Depression
- Posts: 65
- Joined: Wed Apr 18, 2007 6:45 pm
- Location: Disney's Backyard, FL
- Contact:
- Tampa Bay Hurricane
- Category 5
- Posts: 5597
- Age: 37
- Joined: Fri Jul 22, 2005 7:54 pm
- Location: St. Petersburg, FL
tgenius wrote:I don't know.. something about this map doesn't jive.. the west coast of FL has a higher risk than the east coast? So what happens if we have another Wilma or KatrinaV1? Or are they referring to direct impacts?
I'd say they mean direct impacts.
In my opinion, however, the west and east coasts of Florida have equal chances of being struck.
The highest risk should probably be SouthEast/SouthWest Florida just becuase during the 1920s-40s it was struck most frequently, at least by climatology.
0 likes
-
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 1747
- Joined: Wed Feb 26, 2003 10:53 am
- Location: Nags Head, NC
- Contact:
- Blown Away
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 10162
- Joined: Wed May 26, 2004 6:17 am
Is the "Pink" the highest or lowest risk. I'm assuming the highest risk, because I don't think you could have SFL w/ moderate risk and Bahamas low risk. The N Bahamas would get clipped by most storms crossing over from SW FL.
Last edited by Blown Away on Thu May 03, 2007 11:09 am, edited 1 time in total.
0 likes
- Tampa Bay Hurricane
- Category 5
- Posts: 5597
- Age: 37
- Joined: Fri Jul 22, 2005 7:54 pm
- Location: St. Petersburg, FL
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Cpv17, CrazyC83, facemane, gib, Hurricane2022, IsabelaWeather, islandgirl45, johngaltfla, LAF92, lilbump3000, quaqualita and 118 guests