Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

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wxman57
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Re:

#121 Postby wxman57 » Mon Oct 19, 2009 8:30 am

Derek Ortt wrote:one thing to remember, you often need a pressure of ~1000mb to have a TD in this part of the basin this time of year


I was curious so I looked back at some saved analysis charts for a few storms. I have an analysis chart from the day Wilma developed and pressures in the region are 1005-1007mb. Well, here it is:

Wilma Developing - same area:
Image

Oh, found one from before Paloma developed, too. 1010mb:
Image

I see similar pressures in the region for Michelle (2001) but didn't save a chart before it became a hurricane.
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#122 Postby Derek Ortt » Mon Oct 19, 2009 8:48 am

on the first advisories of those two storms, as 25KT TDs, the pressures were already 1004mb. Wilma only became a minimal TS at 1000mb

Models may need to show lower pressures before we get excited about TC formation
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Re:

#123 Postby wxman57 » Mon Oct 19, 2009 8:59 am

Derek Ortt wrote:on the first advisories of those two storms, as 25KT TDs, the pressures were already 1004mb. Wilma only became a minimal TS at 1000mb

Models may need to show lower pressures before we get excited about TC formation


Oh, I'm looking at the environmental pressures in the region prior to formation, not the initial central pressure of any depression/storm. The environment in the Caribbean now is similar, pressure-wise, to the conditions prior to past October/November developments. Look at the ambient pressure around Paloma as it began to develop - 1010-1011MB all around the low. And I'd wager that 3-4 days before Wilma or Paloma developed, the pressures across the western Caribbean were even higher than what we're seeing out there now. The GFS and Euro forecasts of 1007 mb central pressures will be off, of course, as they're not good at predicting such things. Once (if) a low starts to form, its pressure will drop very quickly to much lower than the ambient environmental pressure of the region.
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#124 Postby Evil Jeremy » Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:02 am

Convection waning this morning. Its still there, but lessening.
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#125 Postby wxman57 » Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:26 am

Pressure around 1009MB in the SW Caribbean now. Some evidence of a broad low. Convection disorganized. At least 2-3 days away from a TD, if it develops.

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#126 Postby HURAKAN » Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:28 am

Classic late season development in the Caribbean. It takes time but usually something forms.
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#127 Postby Sanibel » Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:33 am

Cold dome on top:


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#128 Postby Evil Jeremy » Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:37 am

I would not say that this is invest worthy at this point (though this has more potential than many of this year's invests) but it should be a Code Yellow.
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Re:

#129 Postby wxman57 » Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:44 am

Evil Jeremy wrote:I would not say that this is invest worthy at this point (though this has more potential than many of this year's invests) but it should be a Code Yellow.


Code yellow is for potential development within 48 hours. Development, in this case, may be in the 72-96 hour range. So maybe a code yellow would be appropriate in another 24-36 hrs.
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Re: Re:

#130 Postby Evil Jeremy » Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:47 am

wxman57 wrote:
Evil Jeremy wrote:I would not say that this is invest worthy at this point (though this has more potential than many of this year's invests) but it should be a Code Yellow.


Code yellow is for potential development within 48 hours. Development, in this case, may be in the 72-96 hour range. So maybe a code yellow would be appropriate in another 24-36 hrs.


There have been Code Yellows though that have said "development is not expected within the next 48 hours", and not just for systems dieing out, but systems that could potentially develop down the road.
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#131 Postby Sanibel » Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:52 am

I would guess the negative conditions are still there and will eat into it.


Perhaps it is close enough to Rick's category 5 favorability zone to form?
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#132 Postby HURAKAN » Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:56 am

Image

They're smelling something!!
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Re: Re:

#133 Postby wxman57 » Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:02 am

Evil Jeremy wrote:
wxman57 wrote:
Evil Jeremy wrote:I would not say that this is invest worthy at this point (though this has more potential than many of this year's invests) but it should be a Code Yellow.


Code yellow is for potential development within 48 hours. Development, in this case, may be in the 72-96 hour range. So maybe a code yellow would be appropriate in another 24-36 hrs.


There have been Code Yellows though that have said "development is not expected within the next 48 hours", and not just for systems dieing out, but systems that could potentially develop down the road.


There's a difference between development "not expected" and development "not possible" in the next 48 hours. Every code yellow means that development is not expected, as chances are much greater that it won't develop (70+% chance it won't develop). The yellow, orange and red classifications are for potential development within 48 hours. They say nothing about development beyond 48 hours. So if the chances are close to zero for the next 48 hours, it doesn't warrant a yellow.
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#134 Postby Blown Away » Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:12 am

I guess if we are hanging our hat on the few models that show development a Code Yellow is not warranted, because the models don't show anything within the next 48 hours. I still think this area should be Code Yellow. :D
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#135 Postby wxman57 » Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:17 am

Blown_away wrote:I guess if we are hanging our hat on the few models that show development a Code Yellow is not warranted, because the models don't show anything within the next 48 hours. I still think this area should be Code Yellow. :D


If you think that this system should be "code yellow", then you've already calculated the probability of it developing within 48 hours. So, what do you estimate are the chances that this will be upgraded to a TD by noon Wednesday? (anyone else here may reply).

Not a trick question, just an honest inquiry. What is the 48hr probability of this becoming a TD?
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#136 Postby Ivanhater » Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:22 am

00Z Canadian

Image

Nogaps

Image
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#137 Postby wxman57 » Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:25 am

I have the GFS in through 180 hrs now. It develops a low in the SW Caribbean on Saturday and moves it due west into southern Nicaragua around noon on Monday. Here's the map from Sunday afternoon:

21Z Sunday:
Image

18Z Monday:
Image
Last edited by wxman57 on Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#138 Postby AtlanticWind » Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:27 am

wxman57 wrote:
Blown_away wrote:I guess if we are hanging our hat on the few models that show development a Code Yellow is not warranted, because the models don't show anything within the next 48 hours. I still think this area should be Code Yellow. :D


If you think that this system should be "code yellow", then you've already calculated the probability of it developing within 48 hours. So, what do you estimate are the chances that this will be upgraded to a TD by noon Wednesday? (anyone else here may reply).

Not a trick question, just an honest inquiry. What is the 48hr probability of this becoming a TD?

I would put this in the 5 to 10 percent range in the next 48 hours .and maybe 5o percent in the next 5 days , should that warant a code yellow? I dont know its kind of subjective.
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#139 Postby Derek Ortt » Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:32 am

seems like it is developing a Katrina 1999
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Re: Hurricane in Western Caribbean?

#140 Postby wxman57 » Mon Oct 19, 2009 11:33 am

AtlanticWind wrote:I would put this in the 5 to 10 percent range in the next 48 hours .and maybe 5o percent in the next 5 days , should that warant a code yellow? I dont know its kind of subjective.


Yes, it is subjective. There probably is a lower limit to the code yellow probability, but I don't know what it is. Would a 10% chance warrant yellow? 5%? 1%? 0.1%?

I would agree that the chances are not zero of this being classified as a TD within the next 48 hours. My estimate would be less than 5%, maybe 2%. Does that warrant a yellow, just a 2% chance?
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