Air Force Met wrote:SacrydDreamz wrote:That is not an eye... nor will it be the eye.
Wrong...it is the beginning of an eye.
Thank you!
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Hyperstorm wrote:I wanted to say a few things about this thread:
1) I never thought the title of this thread would create this much controversy. I should have rephrased it: An eye-like feature popped...Hurricane soon.
2) Although I am not a professional meteorologist and do make mistakes, I don't consider myself an amateur in this area of the tropics. I do know what I talk about from years of monitoring the tropical picture.
3) I don't understand why some people don't use facts to support their ideas. Sentences like "this is not an eye, it will never become one" are just plain weak, I would say.
I never said the "eye" or "hole in the center of circulation" was a permanent feature. I said that it could be obscured by higher cloud tops later on, stating the fact that even if it becomes obscure it can still remain an "eye". I have seen many tropical systems with eyewalls developing and are not yet hurricanes, but very close. I never said that it was already a hurricane, but that it should become one shortly meaning soon. Recon has find an open eyewall on the SE. If it says Open SE, it needs to have an eyewall in the first place. If it has an eye---wall, it needs to have an "eye", thus it wouldn't be called such. Even if it wasn't a true eye, it surely had an eyewall, I said.
I hope this has clarified what many people have stated already. I'm sorry for any confusion it may have caused.


Air Force Met wrote:The GHCC coordinates of the area matched with the center as given by recon perfectly. The point this morning was that an eye was forming...not fully developed. An eye that is open to the SE is still an eye...that it why it is put in the L section of the VORTEX. Even if it is ragged...or open...it is still an eye and is classified as such...even if it is not a perfect Gilbert type pinpoint.
As far as it filling in as convection fired...that point was even addressed. That happens all the time on satellite...especially IR shots where the resolution is less than on vis. It was predicted that the eye would fill on with overcast clouds when new convection fired and that is exactly what happened.
The recon reported an eyewall before this new convection fired. But again...the point was the eye was beginning to form. Was the clear area on satellite a pure eye...no. Was it transient and would not be part of the eye at all? No. Did it show, along with radar, that an eyewall was beginning to take shape...yes. Did recon verify was was being said about that feature...yes.
You are not going to get a pure eye presentation on satellite until a storm reaches at least weak cat 2 status...that is when it begins to be distinguished on IR.
However...the definition of an eye is NOT what you see on satellite. That is the layperson's definition. The real definition is an area of reletively calmer winds surrounded by an eyewall...whether that eyewall be partial or full. Satellite has nothing to do with the real definition, it only verifies the existence of the eye.
So...in strictest definition and form...what was seen on vis this morning and radar was the precurser to what was verified by recon this afternoon and evening...and that was an eye.
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