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aspen wrote:That has got to be by far the weirdest center pass I’ve ever seen. Somehow it supports hurricane intensity lol.
aspen wrote:Central America really dodged a bullet here. If Julia wasn’t plagued by center reformations/unexpected northerly shear and got its act together faster, we’d be looking at a possible Cat 3/4 landfall instead of a Cat 1. Flooding looks to be a huge issue regardless of final landfall intensity.
cheezyWXguy wrote:aspen wrote:Central America really dodged a bullet here. If Julia wasn’t plagued by center reformations/unexpected northerly shear and got its act together faster, we’d be looking at a possible Cat 3/4 landfall instead of a Cat 1. Flooding looks to be a huge issue regardless of final landfall intensity.
Honestly it’s kind of amazing it even got this strong given how persistently broad its circulation has been. Even now the strongest winds are fairly spread out from the core. I know the tropopause is higher in the tropics and cooler as we get later in the season, but I expected the core to tighten up quite a bit more with all that deep convection.
Landy wrote:Wow, that is a very impressive burst.
https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/857022688123682837/1028480352567697428/goes16_ir_13L_202210082215.gif?width=951&height=669
Landy wrote:Raw T from ADT is about what you'd expect. Gotta love the tropopause here![]()
https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/716215692617187328/1028483811643764767/unknown.png
CrazyC83 wrote:Landy wrote:Raw T from ADT is about what you'd expect. Gotta love the tropopause here![]()
https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/716215692617187328/1028483811643764767/unknown.png
These low-latitude storms can have incredibly cold cloud tops.
aspen wrote:cheezyWXguy wrote:aspen wrote:Central America really dodged a bullet here. If Julia wasn’t plagued by center reformations/unexpected northerly shear and got its act together faster, we’d be looking at a possible Cat 3/4 landfall instead of a Cat 1. Flooding looks to be a huge issue regardless of final landfall intensity.
Honestly it’s kind of amazing it even got this strong given how persistently broad its circulation has been. Even now the strongest winds are fairly spread out from the core. I know the tropopause is higher in the tropics and cooler as we get later in the season, but I expected the core to tighten up quite a bit more with all that deep convection.
The core probably would’ve tightened up faster if it wasn’t for the mystery shear, and I’m calling that because I don’t know where it came from. I checked the GFS 200mb, 500mb, and 850mb products, and I couldn’t find the source of the shear from earlier today. What makes things weirder is how, with the exception of a few hours today and yesterday where the developing CDO was partially or entirely blown off, shear has been pretty favorable. It’s just two random instances where shear suddenly rose. The closest analog to this might be Delta’s sudden collapse from the unexpected spike in mid-level shear, but that didn’t damage the CDO, it just broke the core. I believe it lasted until Delta’s landfall, meaning it lasted longer than Julia’s two shear incidents.
Landy wrote:Raw T from ADT is about what you'd expect. Gotta love the tropopause here![]()
https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/716215692617187328/1028483811643764767/unknown.png
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