
~12 hours apart. Should close off by tomorrow evening if not sooner at this rate.
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Hammy wrote:https://i.imgur.com/EqTxmUd.png
~12 hours apart. Should close off by tomorrow evening if not sooner at this rate.
cfisher wrote:Hammy wrote:https://i.imgur.com/EqTxmUd.png
~12 hours apart. Should close off by tomorrow evening if not sooner at this rate.
What latitude would it close up at?
EquusStorm wrote:Without scatterometer data you'd think this was a strong tropical storm. Definitely by far the best looking wave/invest of the year beating out Zombie 94L. Could still work its way down, who knows.
cfisher wrote:EquusStorm wrote:Without scatterometer data you'd think this was a strong tropical storm. Definitely by far the best looking wave/invest of the year beating out Zombie 94L. Could still work its way down, who knows.
What's stopping the MLC from working it's way down? There was some dry air but it seems to be working it out
GCANE wrote:IR Satellite analysis puts the boundary-layer vort CoC on the I in the 2nd graphic below.
From WV-satellite, I estimate the ML CoC to be NNW of that.
CIMSS shows the Anticyclone CoC to be NW of the ML CoC.
Obviously vort column is tilted to the NW.
Surface obs seems to indicate a wave axis tilted nearly north to south.
https://i.imgur.com/s1VQzc2.gif
https://i.imgur.com/gMqXThw.png
cfisher wrote:GCANE wrote:IR Satellite analysis puts the boundary-layer vort CoC on the I in the 2nd graphic below.
From WV-satellite, I estimate the ML CoC to be NNW of that.
CIMSS shows the Anticyclone CoC to be NW of the ML CoC.
Obviously vort column is tilted to the NW.
Surface obs seems to indicate a wave axis tilted nearly north to south.
https://i.imgur.com/s1VQzc2.gif
https://i.imgur.com/gMqXThw.png
We're probably just waiting on ASCAT to confirm a surface low has formed near the MLC.
Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
800 AM EDT Tue Sep 1 2020
A well-organized cluster of showers and thunderstorms associated
with a tropical wave continues to move quickly westward across the
central Caribbean Sea. Although the disturbance does not yet have a
well-defined circulation center, ship observations indicate that
tropical-storm-force winds are occurring in the northern portion of
wave to the southeast of Jamaica, which will spread near or just
south of Jamaica later this morning and into this afternoon.
Environmental conditions are expected to become a little more
conducive for development, and a tropical depression or a tropical
storm is likely to form during the next day or so before the
system reaches Central America Wednesday night. Locally heavy rains
and gusty winds are possible on Jamaica today, and interests there,
as well as in northern Nicaragua, Honduras, Belize, Guatemala, and
the Yucatan Peninsula, should monitor the progress of this system.
An Air Force Reserve reconnaissance aircraft is currently en route
to investigate the disturbance.
Potential tropical cyclone or tropical cyclone advisories will
likely be issued later today, along with watches and warnings.
Additional information on this system can be found in High Seas
Forecasts issued by the National Weather Service.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...high...80 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...high...80 percent.
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