In case anyone missed it there are some real cold water problems.
While it is encouraging to see the impressive early July CV wave there are MUCH Bigger problems....
over the last 2 weeks a HUGE pool of very cold SSTA (sea surface temp anomalies) have developed over the western and central Atlantic ocean.
If you are a reader of Dr Dewpoint ( WSI's Joe D'Aleo) or JB then you know of the research that over the last 10 years has established a strong correlation between the Jet stream's Ridges and Trough position and large pools of cold and warm Ocean water temperatures.
In this particular case this pool of cold water will keep a trough over the central Atlantic for the rest of July--which displaces the WAR (western atlantic Ridge aka "The Bermuda High" ).
The BH is still there-- but with this large pool of cold SSTA it gets displaced to the west over---into the SE states and extends into the Midwest.
Here see for your self...
CURRENT OCEAN WATER TEMPS--- look at the ATLANTIC
http://weather.unisys.com/surface/sst_anom.html
APRIL 25TH
http://weather.unisys.com/archive/sst/s ... 040425.gif
If you are hoping expectating or forecasting any early season development that is NOT in the caribbean / Gulf of Mexico... FORGET IT! You need to re-assess things.
BIG problems with cold water in central Atlantic Ocean
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- wxman57
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Doesn't look like much of any concern to me. See the latest loop I made from early May to today:
http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/atlanticsst.gif
Temps across most of the tropical Atlantic are above normal, and that pocket of cool water in the subtropical Atlantic is already fading out.
http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/atlanticsst.gif
Temps across most of the tropical Atlantic are above normal, and that pocket of cool water in the subtropical Atlantic is already fading out.
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Anonymous
wxman57 wrote:Doesn't look like much of any concern to me. See the latest loop I made from early May to today:
http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/atlanticsst.gif
Temps across most of the tropical Atlantic are above normal, and that pocket of cool water in the subtropical Atlantic is already fading out.
Agreed...NESDIS doesn't show much in the way of cool anomalies either. It looks like other parameters are less favorable for tc formation than SSTs.
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Re: BIG problems with cold water in central Atlantic O
TR wrote:In case anyone missed it there are some real cold water problems.
While it is encouraging to see the impressive early July CV wave there are MUCH Bigger problems....
over the last 2 weeks a HUGE pool of very cold SSTA (sea surface temp anomalies) have developed over the western and central Atlantic ocean.
If you are a reader of Dr Dewpoint ( WSI's Joe D'Aleo) or JB then you know of the research that over the last 10 years has established a strong correlation between the Jet stream's Ridges and Trough position and large pools of cold and warm Ocean water temperatures.
In this particular case this pool of cold water will keep a trough over the central Atlantic for the rest of July--which displaces the WAR (western atlantic Ridge aka "The Bermuda High" ).
The BH is still there-- but with this large pool of cold SSTA it gets displaced to the west over---into the SE states and extends into the Midwest.
Here see for your self...
CURRENT OCEAN WATER TEMPS--- look at the ATLANTIC
http://weather.unisys.com/surface/sst_anom.html
APRIL 25TH
http://weather.unisys.com/archive/sst/s ... 040425.gif
If you are hoping expectating or forecasting any early season development that is NOT in the caribbean / Gulf of Mexico... FORGET IT! You need to re-assess things.
This post makes no sense to me.
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Anonymous
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TR
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TR
First its about 3 degrees C colder than Normal -- thats 5 degrees F.
For mets would say that is SIGNIFICANT...
second the the impact of the cold water extended far beyond that actual SSTA per se...
The cold water pool is going to establish a fairly deep trough over the central Atlantic ocean. IF that pool stays there into AUG *** IF*** then CV systems COULD have a serious barrier to contend with.
For mets would say that is SIGNIFICANT...
second the the impact of the cold water extended far beyond that actual SSTA per se...
The cold water pool is going to establish a fairly deep trough over the central Atlantic ocean. IF that pool stays there into AUG *** IF*** then CV systems COULD have a serious barrier to contend with.
wxman57 wrote:Doesn't look like much of any concern to me. See the latest loop I made from early May to today:
http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/atlanticsst.gif
Temps across most of the tropical Atlantic are above normal, and that pocket of cool water in the subtropical Atlantic is already fading out.
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TR wrote:Of course you maps are 7 day mean temps not ACTUAL SSTAHURAKAN wrote:SEA-SURFACE TEMPERATURES
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/gifs/atl_anal.gif
SEA-SURFACE ANOMALIES
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/gifs/atl_anom.gif
There can be SUBTLE differences in how SSTA are represented depending on which site you visit. But as far as your cold pool goes, if anything this has been confined to the Far northwest Atlantic near NF and Nova Scotia (See Sandy's graphic) and the rest of the Atlantic is running normal to in some cases WELL ABOVE normal from the coast of Spain to near the Azores by as much as +2 DEG C
WARM SSTA surround Greenland and are still prevalent across the Equatorial Atlantic. So IF you were trying to insinuate that there has been a phase change in the ATC I would have to disagree, and strongly so.
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- Aquawind
- Category 5

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Hi TR.. Take note those are maps directly from NHC.. The mean temps are a better judge of the water temps. The surface water temps are constantly fluctuating because of sunlight, winds, precip, upwelling..etc.. Even with clear skys for days and everthing constant the daylight alone causes the temps to fluctuate..so taking an actual temp reading of the whole basin at a particular time is not reasonable.. hence they use the mean.. 
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