NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3021 Postby WaveBreaking » Sat Nov 15, 2025 5:28 pm

Some images I grabbed from the GOES-19 satellite using NOAA CLASS data and McIDAS-V during/near its peak intensity

Image

Image
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3022 Postby cycloneye » Sat Nov 15, 2025 5:48 pm

Yes!! On monday, Josh will release preliminary data. Can't wait.

 https://x.com/iCyclone/status/1989825156639035639

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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion: Josh Morgerman releases his chase report

#3023 Postby cycloneye » Mon Nov 17, 2025 3:52 pm

And here it is, the Josh report of his chase of Melissa in Jamaica.

 https://x.com/iCyclone/status/1990510838663336169



@iCyclone
And here's my report on #Hurricane #MELISSA in #Jamaica. Please note this is purely meteorological & it's quite technical—so casual readers focused on the human impact won't find it interesting. Meteorologists & weather nerds, on the other hand, will find this rare look deep inside the core of one of the strongest known hurricane landfalls fascinating. Main points:

* My location was well inside the RMW (radius of maximum winds) & got totally raked by the eyewall’s inner right-front quadrant.

* The SE edge of the eye apparently grazed my location, temporarily bringing reduced wind speeds, improved visibility, and a marked shift in wind direction.

* My minimum pressure was 926.0 mb. While this might seem high, the report discusses how it actually makes sense, given recon data & the fact that I was probably a few miles from the absolute center.

* MELISSA's winds were absolutely ferocious—the most intense I've witnessed in 84 hurricanes. And the resultant damage was spectacular. This was a truly rare specimen.

This is a preliminary version of this report which I rushed to completion because of time-sensitive requests for the data. In the next couple of weeks, I'll be releasing an expanded version with plentiful damage pics.

My next focus: the video! I am hoping to get that out in the next 1-2 weeks.


Link to whole report= [b] https://static1.squarespace.com/static/ ... SA2025.pdf


[/b]
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion: Breaking= Josh Morgerman releases his chase report

#3024 Postby CrazyC83 » Mon Nov 17, 2025 4:08 pm

Based on all that data, I wonder if the pressure actually dropped before landfall, despite the slightly warmer cloud tops - perhaps the push of momentum? The Recon in the same spot measured about 935 mb and he measured 926 mb, although that may be too inconclusive.

Another scenario is that the RMW was starting to expand due to the famous eyewall melds (one was likely ongoing at its peak), so it may have raised the central pressure but started to spread it out. I would personally lean towards that scenario and trust the satellite imagery. After all, Melissa's 892 mb pressure was the lowest on record for an Atlantic storm with an eye of 15 nmi or larger (previous record was Rita) - all the others in extreme intensity territory had pinholes. That makes me think that 897 mb (+/- 5 mb) was the most likely landfall pressure. That would also support the landfall intensity being 5 kt (maybe 10 kt) lower than the peak.

It is worth noting that he probably got the eyewall about 20-30 minutes before the actual landfall, since that was a bit further up the coast, likely at 1715Z between New Hope and Auchindown.

I also calculated using the Schloemer equation, starting with my 897 mb assessment, and it comes out at 926 using the RMW of 8 nm, the distance of 6 nm and the OCI of 1008 mb.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3025 Postby CronkPSU » Thu Nov 20, 2025 6:25 pm

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/hurricane-melissa-record-breaking-winds-dropsonde-data-confirms/

"NOAA researchers contacted the NSF NCAR to confirm that it was the highest wind speed ever recorded by a dropsonde.

"NOAA looped us in when they saw the high wind speed and asked, 'Are these numbers any good?'" said Holger Vömel, an NSF NCAR senior scientist who works with the organization's Dropsonde Program.

To verify the data, Vömel and other researchers reviewed the numbers with a quality control software. They also confirmed that the reported 252 mile wind gust would have been physically possible, and that it tracked with the hurricane's behavior, as well as previous storm patterns. The review confirmed that the wind gust measurement was accurate.

The previous fastest wind gust recorded by a dropsonde was in 2010, when Typhoon Megi unleashed a 248 mile per hour blast while over the western Pacific Ocean. During Hurricane Katrina, researchers thought they had recorded an even stronger gust, but the data had substantial issues, the NSF NCAR said. "
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3026 Postby mrbagyo » Thu Nov 20, 2025 9:39 pm

CronkPSU wrote:https://www.cbsnews.com/news/hurricane-melissa-record-breaking-winds-dropsonde-data-confirms/

"NOAA researchers contacted the NSF NCAR to confirm that it was the highest wind speed ever recorded by a dropsonde.

"NOAA looped us in when they saw the high wind speed and asked, 'Are these numbers any good?'" said Holger Vömel, an NSF NCAR senior scientist who works with the organization's Dropsonde Program.

To verify the data, Vömel and other researchers reviewed the numbers with a quality control software. They also confirmed that the reported 252 mile wind gust would have been physically possible, and that it tracked with the hurricane's behavior, as well as previous storm patterns. The review confirmed that the wind gust measurement was accurate.

The previous fastest wind gust recorded by a dropsonde was in 2010, when Typhoon Megi unleashed a 248 mile per hour blast while over the western Pacific Ocean. During Hurricane Katrina, researchers thought they had recorded an even stronger gust, but the data had substantial issues, the NSF NCAR said. "


Does that "gust" meet WMO's definition of wind gust (3 second average wind speed) or is it just instantaneous wind speed?
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3027 Postby Team Ghost » Sat Nov 22, 2025 7:25 pm

Reports indicate that drinking water has been contaminated in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa, leading to an outbreak of leptospirosis.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/21/us/j ... lissa.html
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3028 Postby WaveBreaking » Sun Nov 23, 2025 12:37 am

WaveBreaking wrote:Some images I grabbed from the GOES-19 satellite using NOAA CLASS data and McIDAS-V during/near its peak intensity

https://i.imgur.com/7Q1Gsof.png

https://i.imgur.com/XvQ5C6s.png

Got the color table wrong on the IR one so the values were blown out of proportion. Here's the corrected image.

Image
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3029 Postby cycloneye » Sun Nov 23, 2025 6:20 pm

Josh Morgerman analisis of the landfall.

Image

 https://x.com/iCyclone/status/1992727637635014892

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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3030 Postby cycloneye » Mon Dec 01, 2025 7:44 pm

It will take years to recover completly and he is going back.

 https://x.com/iCyclone/status/1995622350059176250

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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3031 Postby cycloneye » Wed Dec 03, 2025 9:50 am

Josh final report. The video is comming very soon.

 https://x.com/iCyclone/status/1996176765753147735



Hyperlink to final report
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3032 Postby CrazyC83 » Wed Dec 03, 2025 3:59 pm

I took a second look at the BT based on the data. A few changes in timing, track and intensity are warranted, largely based on Josh's data.

AL132025, MELISSA, xx,
20251020, 1200, , LO, 13.5N, 66.5W, 30, 1008,
20251020, 1800, , LO, 13.7N, 67.7W, 35, 1006,
20251021, 0000, , LO, 13.9N, 68.9W, 35, 1005,
20251021, 0600, , LO, 14.1N, 70.1W, 40, 1004,
20251021, 1200, , LO, 14.1N, 71.3W, 40, 1003,
20251021, 1800, , LO, 14.1N, 72.5W, 40, 1002,
20251022, 0000, , TS, 14.1N, 73.2W, 45, 1002,
20251022, 0600, , TS, 14.2N, 73.4W, 45, 1001,
20251022, 1200, , TS, 14.3N, 73.6W, 45, 1000,
20251022, 1800, , TS, 14.4N, 73.9W, 40, 1002,
20251023, 0000, , TS, 14.6N, 74.3W, 40, 1004,
20251023, 0600, , TS, 14.8N, 74.6W, 35, 1005,
20251023, 1200, , TS, 15.2N, 75.0W, 35, 1005,
20251023, 1800, , TS, 15.5N, 75.3W, 40, 1002,
20251024, 0000, , TS, 15.7N, 75.6W, 40, 1001,
20251024, 0600, , TS, 16.0N, 75.3W, 40, 1001,
20251024, 1200, , TS, 15.8N, 74.9W, 45, 1000,
20251024, 1800, , TS, 15.8N, 74.5W, 50, 996,
20251025, 0000, , TS, 16.1N, 74.7W, 55, 993,
20251025, 0600, , TS, 16.3N, 74.9W, 60, 986,
20251025, 1200, , HU, 16.4N, 75.1W, 65, 983,
20251025, 1800, , HU, 16.5N, 75.3W, 70, 977,
20251026, 0000, , HU, 16.4N, 75.7W, 85, 970,
20251026, 0600, , HU, 16.3N, 76.0W, 100, 957,
20251026, 1200, , HU, 16.4N, 76.4W, 110, 952,
20251026, 1800, , HU, 16.4N, 76.9W, 120, 944,
20251027, 0000, , HU, 16.4N, 77.3W, 130, 932,
20251027, 0600, , HU, 16.3N, 77.7W, 135, 922,
20251027, 1200, , HU, 16.4N, 78.0W, 145, 913,
20251027, 1800, , HU, 16.4N, 78.3W, 155, 906,
20251028, 0000, , HU, 16.5N, 78.6W, 155, 905,
20251028, 0600, , HU, 16.9N, 78.4W, 160, 899,
20251028, 1200, , HU, 17.5N, 78.2W, 170, 890,
20251028, 1730, L, HU, 18.1N, 78.0W, 155, 901,
20251028, 1800, , HU, 18.2N, 77.9W, 140, 908,
20251029, 2130, R, HU, 18.6N, 77.4W, 95, 955,
20251029, 0000, , HU, 18.9N, 77.2W, 100, 953,
20251029, 0600, , HU, 19.8N, 76.3W, 105, 951,
20251029, 0715, L, HU, 20.0N, 76.1W, 105, 950,
20251029, 1200, , HU, 20.9N, 75.8W, 75, 972,
20251029, 1800, , HU, 22.1N, 75.3W, 80, 974,
20251029, 2130, L, HU, 22.5N, 75.0W, 85, 971,
20251030, 0000, , HU, 23.5N, 74.8W, 90, 970,
20251030, 0215, L, HU, 24.0N, 74.5W, 90, 969,
20251030, 0600, , HU, 24.9N, 73.8W, 95, 966,
20251030, 1200, , HU, 26.6N, 72.8W, 100, 964,
20251030, 1800, , HU, 28.8N, 71.0W, 90, 968,
20251031, 0000, , HU, 31.3N, 68.9W, 80, 970,
20251031, 0600, , HU, 34.4N, 65.5W, 75, 972,
20251031, 1200, , HU, 37.5N, 62.1W, 70, 972,
20251031, 1800, , EX, 40.6N, 58.6W, 70, 972,
20151101, 0000, , EX, 44.1N, 55.2W, 65, 973,
20151101, 0600, , EX, 47.4N, 49.0W, 60, 975,
20151101, 1200, , EX, 49.8N, 44.5W, 55, 979,
20151101, 1800, , EX, 51.0N, 42.0W, 50, 983,

The first big change is in the period at peak intensity and near landfall in Jamaica. The landfall time is delayed 30 minutes to 1730Z based on a blend of radar and satellite analysis (leaning towards radar but understanding there was a bit of angle differences) and the timing of the calm winds and pressure minima, which support a later landfall time.

Additionally, the thought that Melissa peaked before Recon arrived is validated by the readings and trends from the limited Recon data. As a result, a new minimum pressure estimate of 890 mb is analyzed at 1200Z (which fits in at synoptic time). Based on weakening up to landfall and timing differences, the landfall pressure is adjusted upwards to 901 mb, and the intensity revised downward slightly to 155 kt.

Departure time from Jamaica is also moved up to 2130Z, although the intensity at that time - 95 kt - is unchanged. (That is considerably lower than the NHC operational 115-120 kt then - this assessment assumes slight strengthening before Cuba where the 105 kt intensity appears accurate, as opposed to weakening).

An intensity of 100 kt is also added at 1200Z October 30 near the Bahamas, when readings seemed to suggest T5.5 and Recon was showing a final peak before rapid weakening.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3033 Postby ljmac75 » Wed Dec 03, 2025 7:54 pm

Josh has really been busy, looks like he met with an NHC guy. (Probably to lobby for Melissa being upgraded to 190 mph. At a non-synoptic point labelled "eyewall hitting Crawford." (This is a joke, he does good work)

https://x.com/iCyclone/status/1994602362087063644
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3034 Postby ncforecaster89 » Mon Dec 08, 2025 4:26 pm

With more data becoming accessible (e.g., coming across Grand Cayman radar imagery) and having had more time available to delve deeper into the analysis, I’m making a couple notable adjustments to my previous landfall estimates.

1) After reviewing the radar imagery from both Grand Cayman and Cuba, I’m now thinking landfall occurred around 1730z or thirty minutes later than the current operational estimate.

2) In addition, these radar images strongly suggest that the geometric center of the eye was somewhere in the range of 4-5 n mi from Josh’s chase location at time of his lowest pressure reading of 926 mb. Specifically, the GC radar looks to be just a little closer than the Cuban radar depiction…with GC in the range of 4.0 to 4.25 n mi from there while the Pilar radar is more on the order of 4.75-5.0 n mi. Given these figures, I’d settle on a distance of 4.5 n mi. This actually makes much more sense as Josh describes actually being *inside the eye* with calming conditions and “winds well below hurricane force.”

Here’s what I get by running the scholemer equation:

Pressure: 926 mb
Distance: 4.5 n mi
RMW: 8 n mi
OCI: 1006 mb
Estimated CP: 910 mb

This revision much better matches the data Josh obtained. Given he found himself definitively inside the eye (as opposed to the edge of the eye/eyewall), there’s simply not going to be too great a disparity between his pressure measurement and Melissa’s central pressure. It’s the relaxed pressure gradient inside the eye that results in the calmer conditions, obviously.

It’s also important to note that the general rule of thumb used by forecasters in determining a central pressure estimate from a peripheral pressure reading (inside the eye) is to subtract 1 mb for every 10 kt of wind. By that standard, we’d get an estimate closer to 920 mb…assuming a 60 kt sustained wind speed. That said, I’m certainly not suggesting the pressure had actually risen to that degree, but it does help one to better understand that the aforementioned 910 mb scholemer equation derived estimate isn’t at all unreasonable.

Being that I prefer to err on the higher end of such intensity estimates, I’d go with the following for landfall:

1730z:
155 kt
906 mb

Objectively, I’m not sure how we could possibly conceive a higher MSW or a lower central pressure estimate based on Josh’s observations from *inside the eye*. In reality, one could easily argue for a MSW of 150 kt and 915 mb. I’ll also note that my 906 mb estimate matches the exact extrapolated filling rate seen between the last two RECON passes through the eye…and that was prior to the substantial satellite degradation that followed, thereafter. Moreover, it’s also possible that the RMW could’ve expanded to 9 n mi. Regardless, I chose to give Melissa *every* benefit of the doubt…although I still have a difficult time reconciling a 20 mb pressure differential between that presumed CP and Josh’s reading from *inside the eye*.

There’s no change to my original peak intensity estimate of 165 kt/890 mb at 1230z…although 165 kt/892 mb at 13z could’ve realistically been the peak. Thus, I’m confident it was 165 kt/890-892 mb somewhere between 12-13z.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3035 Postby ljmac75 » Mon Dec 08, 2025 6:05 pm

This is completely random but on one of the icyclone facebook posts (the one with his analysis of the landfall timing) there's a comment thread with some pictures by people who went through the eye, I don't know if there's a way to share a link to some random FB comments but they're there in the replies to a comment with 21 replies. I don't know how to explain this any better. A guy named "Joseph Wright" got a pretty good stadium effect pic.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3036 Postby ncforecaster89 » Mon Dec 08, 2025 8:50 pm

ljmac75 wrote:This is completely random but on one of the icyclone facebook posts (the one with his analysis of the landfall timing) there's a comment thread with some pictures by people who went through the eye, I don't know if there's a way to share a link to some random FB comments but they're there in the replies to a comment with 21 replies. I don't know how to explain this any better. A guy named "Joseph Wright" got a pretty good stadium effect pic.


Hi Ljmac,

Thank you for sharing those details. Two things quickly come to mind. One, that wouldn’t be at all surprising nor does it have much correlation with these presumed intensity estimates…given we’re talking about a Cat 5 tempest. Secondly, it’s difficult to take such images at face value, nowadays, given AI and people posting images from other storms.

Either way, I’m always going to prioritize the objective meteorological data over things such as eye clarity on the ground or associated damage left in the aftermath of such monsters.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3037 Postby ljmac75 » Mon Dec 08, 2025 8:59 pm

ncforecaster89 wrote:
ljmac75 wrote:This is completely random but on one of the icyclone facebook posts (the one with his analysis of the landfall timing) there's a comment thread with some pictures by people who went through the eye, I don't know if there's a way to share a link to some random FB comments but they're there in the replies to a comment with 21 replies. I don't know how to explain this any better. A guy named "Joseph Wright" got a pretty good stadium effect pic.


Hi Ljmac,

Thank you for sharing those details. Two things quickly come to mind. One, that wouldn’t be at all surprising nor does it have much correlation with these presumed intensity estimates…given we’re talking about a Cat 5 tempest. Secondly, it’s difficult to take such images at face value, nowadays, given AI and people posting images from other storms.

Either way, I’m always going to prioritize the objective meteorological data over things such as eye clarity on the ground or associated damage left in the aftermath of such monsters.

This has nothing to do with the intensity estimate, I just remember people wondering if anyone got some good pictures of the eye on the ground. Maybe that was on a different site.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3038 Postby ncforecaster89 » Mon Dec 08, 2025 10:28 pm

ljmac75 wrote:
ncforecaster89 wrote:
ljmac75 wrote:This is completely random but on one of the icyclone facebook posts (the one with his analysis of the landfall timing) there's a comment thread with some pictures by people who went through the eye, I don't know if there's a way to share a link to some random FB comments but they're there in the replies to a comment with 21 replies. I don't know how to explain this any better. A guy named "Joseph Wright" got a pretty good stadium effect pic.


Hi Ljmac,

Thank you for sharing those details. Two things quickly come to mind. One, that wouldn’t be at all surprising nor does it have much correlation with these presumed intensity estimates…given we’re talking about a Cat 5 tempest. Secondly, it’s difficult to take such images at face value, nowadays, given AI and people posting images from other storms.

Either way, I’m always going to prioritize the objective meteorological data over things such as eye clarity on the ground or associated damage left in the aftermath of such monsters.

This has nothing to do with the intensity estimate, I just remember people wondering if anyone got some good pictures of the eye on the ground. Maybe that was on a different site.


Gotcha! Sorry for the misunderstanding. Going to check out Josh’s FB to see if I can find the eye pics you mentioned. Be cool to see, obviously. Thanks again for bringing that to our attention. I generally only check twitter and hardly ever use any other social media platforms.
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Re: NATL: MELISSA - Aftermath - Discussion

#3039 Postby ljmac75 » Thu Dec 11, 2025 5:54 pm

I was going through some Melissa stuff on the HRD data site and I noticed something in the Air Force recon mission summary report for the first Melissa flight on October 28 (file is here https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/ftp/hrd/data/ ... U1.SUM.txt):

"Finally, the drop pallet crashed after our 2nd fix in the eye and deleted our inbound eyewall drop and 2 previous center drops."

I'm not sure anyone has brought this up yet, them losing data from 3 dropsondes to a computer crash. Melissa was trying her hardest to stop recon from getting the info. Someone call up the lost media wiki and tell them we've got a case for them (this is a joke, woe betide anyone who visits the lost media wiki).
More seriously I wonder if they got any of the data before the crash happened, might explain why the 13z update went for 896 as the pressure.
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