WV also seems to indicate a tendril of drier air sneaking in from the north as well?Air Force Met wrote:No...it's not an eye. It's a lack of convection. There is likely very little in the way of shower activity near the center and I would imagine the pressure is way up...probably near 1006-1008 mb. The inflow into the storm is getting cut off by the Yucatan and small systems have a tendency to undergo big changes in intensity...both up and down. It will have to get out into the central Gulf before it makes any move towards real strengthening.
Edit: I would also like to note there is some upper level convergence on the north side of the system...which is a real no-no in the tropics. That should change tomorrow with some speed and directional divergence. But for now...there is a lot of downward vertical motion due to this convergence coming from the ridge to the north...and that is likely also killing the convection. It's tropical forecasting 101. Converging air aloft in the tropics...sinking air at the sfc=no convection.
http://i.imgur.com/Oaaqa.gif - linked for size