ROCK wrote:SapphireSea wrote:The ITCZ is being displaced way too far south for the wavetrain to help generate convection on the waves. This is also why the SAL is so prelevant at this point. Not that this is season cancel, not by a longshot. The powerful ridge and high pressures down in the atlantic is going to have to weaken some for the ITCZ to migrate to it's prime spot. Notice that when Chantel was getting going, the ITCZ was unusually far north and helped her get developed in the short term.
I always thought farther south meant better rotation? understand what you are saying but this wave does have a rather large moisture pouch.....it will come across the pond and maybe do something once in the carib...
Quite the opposite, the closer to the equator the harder it is to create rotation. There have been a small handful (I believe only one or two documented) of systems in the S WPAC that have been able to form at 0 latitude. I believe this is because vorticity has to do with the Coriolis effect in the MDRs, the equation changes towards low latitudes and becomes more difficult. Also, in the Atlantic generally anything under 5 degrees N is generally hostile with varying amounts of shear, on top of vortex inhibition. Carrib looks like it's pretty hostile right now in regards to shear as it usually always is at this time. Wave train looks great, it definitely will bear watching in a couple of weeks and into mid August, but the ITCZ needs to crawl up to help crank up convection near the waves. Look at the TWO maps for the ITCZ to be around 12-15N for prime time to start.