ScottNAtlanta wrote:Blown Away wrote:https://i.imgur.com/BXXg5Av.gif
I had been looking at in close floaters to much, when you zoom back you can see 91L appears more like a cyclone and the NE blob appears dominant.
This has gone back and forth the last couple of days between the south and the north. The north seems to wane and the south one fires then the opposite. It is going to need to fire closer to the middle and pull both of them together. They are fighting each other right now. This also seems to be in it's own little moist pocket. If you look at the 5 day shear analysis at Univ. Wisconsin site, it has been moving in tandem between the 2 dry air masses. Right now the north looks better, but we will see if it still looks better at 6pm (est)
Actually, looking at the Univ. Wisconsin site, the southern lobe has a much more robust upper divergent flow over it...the north has very little...about the same on lower convergence
91L's own personal Civil War.
