NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

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michelinj
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1101 Postby michelinj » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:03 pm

Ubuntwo wrote:
aspen wrote:This is the most Cat 5-looking non-Cat 5 I’ve ever seen lol. You’d think it’s like 10 mb deeper than it actually is. Really curious as to why it exhibits the classic Cat 5 structural hallmarks despite falling short in actual intensity. This could also have implications for some of the upper-end Cat 4s with speculated Cat 5 status.

It makes sense here - this is the Caribbean in late season. Dvorak is overreliant on convective depth, so a high tropopause can cause overestimates in intensity. Eta's a great extreme example. This is the same reason open Atlantic 130kt+ systems (Sam, Fiona, Jose, Kirk etc) struggle so hard to hit T7.0. I think we've come to recognize here that eye warmth, roundness, and stability plus CDO smoothness are better indicators of extreme intensity. Melissa did briefly have a near-perfect eye, but its CDO has yet to transition past the bursting phase, at least consistently.



You said it better than I did haha!
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1102 Postby eastcoastFL » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:05 pm

BobHarlem wrote:The radar loop makes it look like it's wobbling wsw
https://i.postimg.cc/pTdTyktY/Jamaica-Radar-Melissa-recent-1.gif


I saw that on IR as well but I couldn't tell if it was just the eye contracting or something else.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1103 Postby Hurricane2022 » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:08 pm

This is Hurricane Kiko from EPAC but with colder tops :lol:
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1104 Postby ronjon » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:10 pm

Wobbling SW again.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1105 Postby Travorum » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:13 pm

There's definitely a notable wobble to the SW, the latest VDM fixed Melissa at 16.3N when the official track never drops below 16.4N. Obviously its very difficult to predict future trochoidal wobbles but this SW motion is significant and persistent enough that you have to wonder if it will have long term impacts on the future track.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1106 Postby storm_in_a_teacup » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:21 pm

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1BYZK8jVoT/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Like a black hole with a blinding white accretion disk :eek:

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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1107 Postby IsabelaWeather » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:21 pm

Travorum wrote:There's definitely a notable wobble to the SW, the latest VDM fixed Melissa at 16.3N when the official track never drops below 16.4N. Obviously its very difficult to predict future trochoidal wobbles but this SW motion is significant and persistent enough that you have to wonder if it will have long term impacts on the future track.


NHC specifically said in one of their discussions that a SW movement was probable, but opted to show a due west movement because the SW movement wouldnt likely be sustained.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1108 Postby Sciencerocks » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:22 pm

Image
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1109 Postby LarryWx » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:28 pm

MEANINGLESS_NUMBERS wrote:I know these waters are warm and deep at this time of year but I wonder if we’ll start to see upwelling before landfall.


It isn’t just upwelling that cools the waters at or near where a hurricane crosses: it also cools due to the conservation of energy (potential energy from warm water transitions to kinetic (wind) energy of the storm/heat engine), cooling from raindrops (I assume this factor is relatively minor), and cooling from cloudcover blocking the sun:

Hurricanes cool the ocean by acting like "heat engines" that transfer heat from the ocean surface to the atmosphere through evaporation.

Cooling is also caused by upwelling of cold water from below due to the suction effect of the low-pressure center of the storm.

Additional cooling may come from cold water from raindrops that remain on the ocean surface for a time.

Cloud cover may also play a role in cooling the ocean by shielding the ocean surface from direct sunlight before and slightly after the storm passage.

All these effects can combine to produce a dramatic drop in sea surface temperature over a large area in just a few days.


https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/image ... he%20storm
Last edited by LarryWx on Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1110 Postby cheezyWXguy » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:28 pm

Given the slow rate of intensification at the moment, I’m not sure that the ewrc/meld has fully completed just yet. Cdo and eye are still wobbling despite the notably cooler cloud tops and clear eye.i would imagine that completion of the cycle in such good conditions and such an optimal structure would result in at least a brief burst of faster intensification but we haven’t seen that quite yet. May still need more time to sort the last the process out.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1111 Postby hipshot » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:29 pm

IsabelaWeather wrote:
Travorum wrote:There's definitely a notable wobble to the SW, the latest VDM fixed Melissa at 16.3N when the official track never drops below 16.4N. Obviously its very difficult to predict future trochoidal wobbles but this SW motion is significant and persistent enough that you have to wonder if it will have long term impacts on the future track.


NHC specifically said in one of their discussions that a SW movement was probable, but opted to show a due west movement because the SW movement wouldnt likely be sustained.


I'm still concerned about that trough catching Melissa and pulling it NE. If it doesn't, we have a huge problem!
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1112 Postby Tekken_Guy » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:32 pm

hipshot wrote:
IsabelaWeather wrote:
Travorum wrote:There's definitely a notable wobble to the SW, the latest VDM fixed Melissa at 16.3N when the official track never drops below 16.4N. Obviously its very difficult to predict future trochoidal wobbles but this SW motion is significant and persistent enough that you have to wonder if it will have long term impacts on the future track.


NHC specifically said in one of their discussions that a SW movement was probable, but opted to show a due west movement because the SW movement wouldnt likely be sustained.


I'm still concerned about that trough catching Melissa and pulling it NE. If it doesn't, we have a huge problem!


What exactly are you referring to?
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1113 Postby BobHarlem » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:33 pm

IsabelaWeather wrote:
Travorum wrote:There's definitely a notable wobble to the SW, the latest VDM fixed Melissa at 16.3N when the official track never drops below 16.4N. Obviously its very difficult to predict future trochoidal wobbles but this SW motion is significant and persistent enough that you have to wonder if it will have long term impacts on the future track.


NHC specifically said in one of their discussions that a SW movement was probable, but opted to show a due west movement because the SW movement wouldnt likely be sustained.


The halfs models showed the sw dip (to around 16.2N -- The last recon fix was 16.3N), and they show it gaining latitude in about 3-4 hours from now, but not really going north until later tomorrow (landfall Tuesday morning). (halfs a also shows 905-910mb landfall) So that's what to look out for.
Last edited by BobHarlem on Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1114 Postby hipshot » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:38 pm

Tekken_Guy wrote:
hipshot wrote:
IsabelaWeather wrote:
NHC specifically said in one of their discussions that a SW movement was probable, but opted to show a due west movement because the SW movement wouldnt likely be sustained.


I'm still concerned about that trough catching Melissa and pulling it NE. If it doesn't, we have a huge problem!


What exactly are you referring to?

As I understand it, there is a trough coming through to the north that will pull Melissa north, up through Jamaica, eastern Cuba and
then the Bahamas and that should happen in about 36 hours our so from now. If Melissa continues south and then to the west, it might
not be able to get the pull they are all talking about. I'm just a weather nerd but I get concerned when we have this kind of storm
moving towards the gulf.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1115 Postby Tekken_Guy » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:41 pm

hipshot wrote:
Tekken_Guy wrote:
hipshot wrote:
I'm still concerned about that trough catching Melissa and pulling it NE. If it doesn't, we have a huge problem!


What exactly are you referring to?

As I understand it, there is a trough coming through to the north that will pull Melissa north, up through Jamaica, eastern Cuba and
then the Bahamas and that should happen in about 36 hours our so from now. If Melissa continues south and then to the west, it might
not be able to get the pull they are all talking about. I'm just a weather nerd but I get concerned when we have this kind of storm
moving towards the gulf.


I don’t believe that’s a trough. Just the typical late-season recurve.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1116 Postby hipshot » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:47 pm

Tekken_Guy wrote:
hipshot wrote:
Tekken_Guy wrote:
What exactly are you referring to?

As I understand it, there is a trough coming through to the north that will pull Melissa north, up through Jamaica, eastern Cuba and
then the Bahamas and that should happen in about 36 hours our so from now. If Melissa continues south and then to the west, it might
not be able to get the pull they are all talking about. I'm just a weather nerd but I get concerned when we have this kind of storm
moving towards the gulf.


I don’t believe that’s a trough. Just the typical late-season recurve.


I'm not aware of anything called a typical late-season recurve. There is always some weather pattern that causes those to happen.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1117 Postby Hurricane2022 » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:47 pm

I still can't believe this is not even a low-end C5... :eek:
Image
Last edited by Hurricane2022 on Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1118 Postby Beef Stew » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:48 pm

SE to NW pass coming up momentarily. Let’s see if she’s deepened any.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1119 Postby Travorum » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:50 pm

Beef Stew wrote:SE to NW pass coming up momentarily. Let’s see if she’s deepened any.


Not sure if they hit the exact center since FL winds never dropped below 39kts, but minimum pressure was 934mb. Peak FL winds in both N and S were 124kts.
Last edited by Travorum on Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Hurricane - Discussion

#1120 Postby Hurricane2022 » Sun Oct 26, 2025 8:51 pm

Looks like they missed the eye a bit, but the FL winds are the same. Melissa doing another pause for lunch.
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