somethingfunny wrote:The NNE jog that spares Bermuda is caused by a 996mb low suddenly appearing where there was a 1027mb high just 24 hours earlier, off the coast of Nova Scotia. Take that 0z ECMWF run with a grain of salt...
That surface low develops because of a strong short-wave trough that the ECMWF has progressing off the northeastern U.S. coast. In other words, I'm not sure the "cause" of Katia's forecast northward turn is because of that newly-developed low as much as it is because of the upper-level trough along the eastern U.S. coast (which itself is helping to develop that secondary low. The next result doesn't really change, though. Personally, it doesn't look very dubious to me, but I'm not going to put too much confidence is the presence of what's a pretty short wavelength trough in a 6-day forecast. Instead, I'll speak briefly on the situation at a little larger scale.
The 00z GFS (like previous runs of the GFS) also shows a trough (actually, a series of troughs that progress eastward) along the east coast of the U.S. -- Katia is seen on the far right side of the image below. Now, the GFS is a bit faster with Katia, but the point remains consistent:

I think the only chance Katia really has to make a run at the U.S. is if it stays as far south as possible (e.g. just N of Puerto Rico and/or Hispaniola) -- the closer it gets to the strong westerlies aloft, the better chance it has a recurving (or perhaps affecting the Canadian maritimes). In the 00z GFS forecast (above), even if it plows westward, it would experience some appreciable shear that would likely weaken the cyclone. There are occasionally some model runs that show Katia staying quite far south, where Katia is more removed from the effects of the troughs moving through the eastern U.S. and western Atlantic. Again, though, there may be issues with stronger wind shear at these low latitudes near the coastline.
Now, we're still looking 160-200+ hours into the future, and the models (CMC, GFS, and ECMWF) are handling the various troughs in the eastern U.S. and northwestern Atlantic differently. These details, however, are expected since we're looking at a forecast so far into the future. The signal remains that there will likely be series of troughs (most of the models show 2-3 shortwave troughs moving through the area in the area through the next 7-9 days) across the eastern U.S. coast.