Kazmit wrote:Supposing this year is an active season, that would be 5 consecutive years of above-normal activity, starting in 2016. When's the last time there were at least 5 years in a row of above-normal seasons?
Never IIRC.
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Kazmit wrote:Supposing this year is an active season, that would be 5 consecutive years of above-normal activity, starting in 2016. When's the last time there were at least 5 years in a row of above-normal seasons?
Kazmit wrote:Supposing this year is an active season, that would be 5 consecutive years of above-normal activity, starting in 2016. When's the last time there were at least 5 years in a row of above-normal seasons?
ScottNAtlanta wrote:While I couldn't find 5 in a row, there were several 4 in a row, and in several cases the 5th was close to average, and not necessarily way below. While this would be a first, how many "firsts" have we seen in our lifetimes when it comes to tropical weather? Quite a few. Records are made to be broken. While looking at past years can offer some clues, the climate we are looking at now is not like the climate of 50 years ago.
AxaltaRacing24 wrote:ScottNAtlanta wrote:While I couldn't find 5 in a row, there were several 4 in a row, and in several cases the 5th was close to average, and not necessarily way below. While this would be a first, how many "firsts" have we seen in our lifetimes when it comes to tropical weather? Quite a few. Records are made to be broken. While looking at past years can offer some clues, the climate we are looking at now is not like the climate of 50 years ago.
It seems like every season since 2016 has broken several records, so it would be silly of us to doubt a 5th active year in a row in my opinion.
TheStormExpert wrote:What are everyone’s thoughts on 1933 being a potential analog season? It was very similar to 2005 in a sense of overall activity but featured only 20 storms and an ACE of 259 units which is slightly higher than 2005 but not by much. Overall in my opinion the tracks the storms took that year in 1933 seem reasonable to that of early indications of an active Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico with some activity off the U.S. East Coast but most confined to the Caribbean and Gulf. Just like in 2005 the Tropical Atlantic East of 60W featured little to no significant hurricanes as everything waited to develop closer in.
chaser1 wrote:TheStormExpert wrote:What are everyone’s thoughts on 1933 being a potential analog season? It was very similar to 2005 in a sense of overall activity but featured only 20 storms and an ACE of 259 units which is slightly higher than 2005 but not by much. Overall in my opinion the tracks the storms took that year in 1933 seem reasonable to that of early indications of an active Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico with some activity off the U.S. East Coast but most confined to the Caribbean and Gulf. Just like in 2005 the Tropical Atlantic East of 60W featured little to no significant hurricanes as everything waited to develop closer in.
I think 1933 would be a good analogue year.
aspen wrote:
What exactly does that model mean? Is it highlighting areas with conductive environments for tropical cyclone development?
cycloneye wrote:aspen wrote:
What exactly does that model mean? Is it highlighting areas with conductive environments for tropical cyclone development?
Lower MSLP.
cycloneye wrote:Webb with this bomb.
[url]https://twitter.com/webberweather/status/1251464264545689602[url]
cycloneye wrote:https://twitter.com/BigJoeBastardi/status/1251874516978012161
TheStormExpert wrote:cycloneye wrote:https://twitter.com/BigJoeBastardi/status/1251874516978012161
What exactly is he saying!?
Chris90 wrote:Alright, I mentioned in my post last night that I would post the current oceanic heat content with some comparisons to the oceanic heat content at this point in March for some other seasons which ended up being active.
NOW 2020:
https://i.imgur.com/l9QfPVC.jpg
2017:
https://i.imgur.com/XA1Kmmu.jpg
2010:
https://i.imgur.com/d9iMfdc.jpg
2005:
https://i.imgur.com/g0TgnEU.jpg
From what I can tell, 2010 seems to be about the closest match to the current heat content out in the Atlantic. I believe 2010 set a couple of record warm anomalies in the MDR region in the spring/early summer, it even beat out 2005, and the MDR was active that year, it was a very impressive season.
Now, other factors go into a season besides SST anomalies and the heat content that is available, but with heat content like this currently available, I believe it is quite possible it will continue to build, and we may end up seeing some pretty impressive warmth in the MDR during the hurricane season, and if you look at current SST anomalies, there already is.
On a quick side note, speaking of warm anomalies in the MDR, on a couple of occasions I’ve seen mention of the term Atlantic Nino. Currently along the equator between S. America and Africa, there are quite a few warm anomalies, does anyone know if this is an Atlantic Nino currently? I haven’t seen a lot of info on the subject, so I don’t know if there are any definitions for it, or qualifications that have to be met, or if this is just a loose term that hasn’t really been defined or given a lot of scientific merit.
I haven’t really set down numbers yet in my head, I’m watching other factors too and just waiting patiently to get past the spring predictability barrier, and I know that my numbers will probably change, possibly by quite a bit, once we get into May and we all start posting our numbers in the seasonal numbers thread. One idea I am starting to give more weight too though is the possibility of some pretty decent ACE generation out in the MDR this year. I think we have the potential setting up for some CV long-trackers, and with SSTs and heat content building like this in March, I think they will have a pretty high ceiling, maybe Irma or Isabel-like potential. NOTE: I am not forecasting another Irma or Isabel, just saying I think conditions may be setting up for a storm to potentially reach those kind of heights intensity-wise if all other factors come together in that storm’s favor.
I am really looking forward to when the seasonal thread opens up and everyone starts posting their thoughts and numbers, and I’m looking forward to passing the SPB. It’ll be interesting if forecasts start to flip once we get past that point.
cycloneye wrote:
Do you have the link to these Heat Content charts?
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