

Moderator: S2k Moderators
ElectricStorm wrote:05L ERNESTO 240819 0600 39.3N 61.1W ATL 75 972
WaveBreaking wrote:A hurricane with a pinhole eye at 40N was not on my 2024 bingo card.
https://i.imgur.com/2oSQZvq.jpeg
emeraldislenc wrote:What is the ACE for Ernesto? Just curious?
REDHurricane wrote:This might be a dumb question but I'll ask it anyway: why isn't it possible to determine wind speeds of a tropical cyclone just by analyzing satellite footage alone? We know the time interval between satellite frames and we know the amount of distance covered by any individual part of the storm, so I would think that there would be an accurate method of measuring the wind speed at the higher levels of the atmosphere and then extrapolating that to surface winds without needing the Dvorak and other satellite estimates. Is it that the satellite resolution isn't high enough to accurately measure wind speeds in the lower levels of the atmosphere? But even then would the initializations of hurricane-specific models like HAFS, HWRF, etc. not be better estimates of wind speed than the other methods? Like here, the 00z HAFS-A initialization of Ernesto seems to be reasonably accurate to me:
https://i.ibb.co/dr89pC6/hafsa-sat-IR-05-L-5.png
https://i.ibb.co/QptXk1v/1a16b16e-8dd7-4ffb-969b-82ead5aad5fb.jpg
https://i.ibb.co/PcJtK4b/hafsa-mslp-wind-05-L-5.png
So I guess my real question is, and I'm not sure if anyone will even be able to answer, why does the NHC favor certain methods of approximating wind speeds (Dvorak, etc.) over others like HAFS-A/B, HWRF, or even just directly measuring wind speeds by measuring each frame of satellite imagery?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 12 guests