Macrocane wrote:Maybe they're still looking for conclusive data to support tropical storm intensity, it was a very weird system, like an hybrid monsoon/tropical low so it may be a hard system to analyze.
cycloneye wrote:Is not discounted that they downgrade to TD and that is why it's taking a long time to analize.
Nicole was a rather unusual system for the Atlantic basin, with a structure somewhat
resembling that of a monsoon depression of the Indian or western Pacific Oceans. The radius of
maximum winds was quite large, at least 200 n mi from the center, although convection was
within about 90-120 n mi, which was close enough to the center to warrant a tropical or
subtropical classification. One notable difference is that while monsoon depressions can have a
cold-core structure, AMSU data suggested that Nicole was warm-core in the middle to upper
levels (Fig. 4), with the warm-core strengthening with time, more typical of a tropical cyclone.
The estimated peak intensity of this system was based on ASCAT and aircraft data. The
peak flight-level winds were 46 kt at 850 mb on 29 September at 1742 UTC, with SFMR values
of 36-39 kt around that time. ASCAT data from the previous day indicated maximum winds of
about 40 kt.
So...instead of downgrading it, they raised the intensity...definitely did not see that coming.