ATL: LAURA - Post-Tropical - Discussion

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DestinHurricane
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1001 Postby DestinHurricane » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:21 am

Have 2 hurricanes ever made landfall within 24 hours of each other? This could be history in the making.
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1002 Postby fci » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:24 am

Seems like it might be time to re-read about Fujiwhara Effect.
According to the 11:00 AM Discussions; Laura and Marco would be at 27.0-83.4 and 28.0-94.0 at 120 hours. That is about 800 miles apart and both in the GOM.
All kinds of theories on the effects on each other when within 900 miles of each other.
If they get close, do they orbit?
If they get really close (so highly unlikely) do they merge?
Or, does the one to the East (13) get shunted to the North from its West heading?
This situation would be rather unprecedented, especially near landmasses; but this is 2020 where nothing seems to make much sense........
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1003 Postby drewschmaltz » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:25 am

Wow, I can't wait to watch the forecasts develop for thirteen and fourteen. So dynamic.
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1004 Postby CronkPSU » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:27 am

fci wrote:Seems like it might be time to re-read about Fujiwhara Effect.
According to the 11:00 AM Discussions; Laura and Marco would be at 27.0-83.4 and 28.0-94.0 at 120 hours. That is about 800 miles apart and both in the GOM.
All kinds of theories on the effects on each other when within 900 miles of each other.
If they get close, do they orbit?
If they get really close (so highly unlikely) do they merge?
Or, does the one to the East (13) get shunted to the North from its West heading?
This situation would be rather unprecedented, especially near landmasses; but this is 2020 where nothing seems to make much sense........


Beat me to the F word...lol
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1005 Postby eastcoastFL » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:30 am

DestinHurricane wrote:
SFLcane wrote:Interesting they did not shift track northward tcvn is north of them likely due to models flip flopping to much. If nothing changes I expect a northern shift in track.


It did shift north. " This is
slightly north of the previous advisory, and not far from the GFS
ensemble mean."


Landfall is key largo through black water sound and then across extreme sw Florida. Puts homestead and Miami in the north east quad.
Last edited by eastcoastFL on Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:34 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1006 Postby SFLcane » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:31 am

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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1007 Postby chaser1 » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:31 am

drewschmaltz wrote:Wow, I can't wait to watch the forecasts develop for thirteen and fourteen. So dynamic.


Yep, this is quickly evolving from Tropical cyclone stuff.... into Tropical cyclone stuff on crack. Oh yeah, AND Nana will probably be off the shelf well before sniffing Sept 1st yet.
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1008 Postby sma10 » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:33 am

chaser1 wrote:I am anxiously awaiting data to continue to pour into all dynamic and global models over the course of today and tonight. I have to believe that TD14 will play a greater influence on the environment over the N. Caribbean, Greater Antilles, and the GOM. While nuanced differences might slightly allow TD13 to gain slight latitude on approach to S. Florida.... my greater concern might be the improved mid level Relative Humidly over/near the Florida Straits as a result of all the pumped in moisture streaming north and northeast from TD14's broader envelope. This may filter out a great deal of SAL conditions presently forecast to hamper TD13 from deepening further. RI may really be on the table for TD13 if upper conditions permit.


Agreed. And at a certain point these systems will only be about 600 miles apart. In the tropical world, that's pretty close
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1009 Postby Weatherboy1 » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:39 am

It's obviously still some time away from any potential impact on land. But the models are remarkably tightly clustered through Day 3.5/4 on TD 13. Increases my confidence substantially that this will be a close call for Florida … though too early to say if recurve east of/straight over peninsula going to happen - or if it could pass over the Keys/through strait and into the Gulf instead.
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1010 Postby ScottNAtlanta » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:40 am

fci wrote:Seems like it might be time to re-read about Fujiwhara Effect.
According to the 11:00 AM Discussions; Laura and Marco would be at 27.0-83.4 and 28.0-94.0 at 120 hours. That is about 800 miles apart and both in the GOM.
All kinds of theories on the effects on each other when within 900 miles of each other.
If they get close, do they orbit?
If they get really close (so highly unlikely) do they merge?
Or, does the one to the East (13) get shunted to the North from its West heading?
This situation would be rather unprecedented, especially near landmasses; but this is 2020 where nothing seems to make much sense........


Or does 13 slow down due to the interaction. It cant plow straight into high pressure. It will probably cause it to slow down
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1011 Postby Aric Dunn » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:43 am

Extratropical94 wrote:
An earlier SSMIS overpass was very
helpful in locating the center of what appears to be a small
circulation. A very recent ASCAT overpass has also revealed a
small circulation that is weak on the southeastern side, but with
winds near tropical storm strength to the north of the center.


Interesting section. If they are talking about the recent METOP-B pass, then I don't really agree with the statement of the pass revealing a circulation near 16N 52W. Only a few northerly winds, and most of them are flagged. Will have to wait for recon..

https://i.imgur.com/vmQKdzY.jpg


Assuming it is because of the ambiguities again. the sudden right angle shift in the SW quad clearly does not quite work in a physical sense.

and if you look at the ambiguities you can close of the circ.
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1012 Postby wxman57 » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:51 am

Red crosshairs are at 16N/52W. I'm not seeing anything there on satellite or in the scatterometer data. Not sure what NHC is looking at. This system doesn't look to be approaching TS strength. I suppose it COULD have TS winds as an open wave. The wave axis appears to be west of that buoy.

Image
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1013 Postby NDG » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:53 am

Aric Dunn wrote:
Extratropical94 wrote:
An earlier SSMIS overpass was very
helpful in locating the center of what appears to be a small
circulation. A very recent ASCAT overpass has also revealed a
small circulation that is weak on the southeastern side, but with
winds near tropical storm strength to the north of the center.


Interesting section. If they are talking about the recent METOP-B pass, then I don't really agree with the statement of the pass revealing a circulation near 16N 52W. Only a few northerly winds, and most of them are flagged. Will have to wait for recon..

https://i.imgur.com/vmQKdzY.jpg


Assuming it is because of the ambiguities again. the sudden right angle shift in the SW quad clearly does not quite work in a physical sense.

and if you look at the ambiguities you can close of the circ.


And with the system moving WNW that fast, ASCAT will have trouble finding much NW & westerly winds on the SW & southern quadrants, and to make it worst to catch them the LLC is still fairly close to the ITCZ.

Image
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1014 Postby ScottNAtlanta » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:54 am

Looks like the LLC on the northern end is racing west. If that continues it is going to outrun the mid level convection
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1015 Postby DestinHurricane » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:57 am

What is hindering 13 right now? Conditions look pretty favorable.
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1016 Postby Sanibel » Thu Aug 20, 2020 10:58 am

The models are probably keeping 13 down in intensity because of the proximity of the now-forming Marco...

13 has a well-formed surface rotation...
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1017 Postby wxman57 » Thu Aug 20, 2020 11:00 am

DestinHurricane wrote:What is hindering 13 right now? Conditions look pretty favorable.


It's ingesting quite a bit of dry air.
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1018 Postby HurricaneEnzo » Thu Aug 20, 2020 11:00 am

DestinHurricane wrote:What is hindering 13 right now? Conditions look pretty favorable.


SAL, fast movement.
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1019 Postby wxman57 » Thu Aug 20, 2020 11:03 am

High-res visible indicates maybe a swirl near 16.5N/52.4W. Tiny
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Re: ATL: THIRTEEN - Tropical Depression - Discussion

#1020 Postby Evil Jeremy » Thu Aug 20, 2020 11:04 am

wxman57 wrote:High-res visible indicates maybe a swirl near 16.5N/52.4W. Tiny


A swirl for ants.
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