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Aric Dunn wrote:
Surface obs, radar and SAT are now starting to show the vorticity offshore charelston (we have been talking about all day) is started to become more defined. the lowest pressures are down there, the little bit of convection that is building now has pretty easily begun pulling in NE winds which is showing up on the surface obs.
would not be surprised if we see a decent burst of convection with that area. it has all the momentum.
toad strangler wrote:Normally I would laugh at this Invest with great gusto. However, the propensity for these weak sauce systems so far in 2020 that WANT to develop regardless of negative immediate influences combined with much larger indicators abroad has me too concerned about peak season to laugh.
NXStumpy_Robothing wrote:The current dominant eddy east of Wilmington is attempting to build, as it's been slowly gaining definition on radar. It does lack sustained convection for the most part, but many models are sticking with it to become the center of 98L for now.
Doing this despite the 20kts of shear is pretty impressive. Whether this continues and consolidates the vorticity (which is still quite broad, with evident vorticity as far south as Jacksonville) is the important thing to watch in the coming hours.
Monsoonjr99 wrote:NXStumpy_Robothing wrote:The current dominant eddy east of Wilmington is attempting to build, as it's been slowly gaining definition on radar. It does lack sustained convection for the most part, but many models are sticking with it to become the center of 98L for now.
Doing this despite the 20kts of shear is pretty impressive. Whether this continues and consolidates the vorticity (which is still quite broad, with evident vorticity as far south as Jacksonville) is the important thing to watch in the coming hours.
I wonder why the models are so insistent on that northern vorticity in the higher shear becoming the dominant circulation. The convection to its east is now collapsing so a center relocation from that vortmax is seemingly less likely. Shear is lower and convection is currently more sustained further south, so why haven't any models keyed in on the southern vorticity? Is this due to baroclinic forcing helping the circulation to the north (hence why this may be subtropical)?
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