#37 Postby northjaxpro » Thu Jul 02, 2020 5:52 pm
Saturday will be the crucial tell all day sbout any TC potential in Apalachee Bay.
The next area of vorticity currently traversing through the Lower Mississppi River Valley will reach the MS/ AL coast region by tommorow morning.
The next in a series of vortices, currently moving out of the Southern Plains region, ia traversing rapidly S/SE, and that will emerge.near Louisana/MS coast by Saturday.morning. We will see a pretty good convective complex develop in the Northeast GOM/ Apalachee Bay region this weekend as the broad area of bundled energy tries to coalesce into a dominant Low Pressure area there.
THE single most critical element will be how far away from the coast into Apalachee Bay can either of these vortices can traverse down to find just enough time and very warm sea surface temps to attempt to organize in a very short window. I think the window of development in Apalachee Bay will be from 12Z Saturday - 18Z Sunday. This would give only about 24-30 hours best in my analysis to try to develop in this particular reguon before it moves onshore the Big Bend of Florida late Sunday afternoon/early evening.
So time is not on its side, but this time of year, under the right circumstances, 30 hours is enough time for a vort to find a sweet spot of light shear and very warm ssts to spin up quickly.
This makes for interesting monitoring of the synoptic details this weekend that is for sure.
Last edited by
northjaxpro on Thu Jul 02, 2020 6:15 pm, edited 5 times in total.
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NEVER, EVER SAY NEVER in the tropics and weather in general, and most importantly, with life itself!!
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