Center of Ivan
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- Sean in New Orleans
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Center of Ivan
I believe that the center of Ivan is now viewable on New Orleans short range radar view. Correct me if I'm wrong. Looks like the center is making a move towards Louisiana, if this is, indeed, the center of circulation. It's rather hard to see the center, tonight, on the visible satellite. http://www.srh.noaa.gov/radar/loop/DS.p ... klix.shtml
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- Sean in New Orleans
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- southerngale
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- Sean in New Orleans
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I've confirmed that this is the center of Ivan through analyzing the latest advisory on Ivan. This center is clearly moving towards the NW, maybe even NNW and could make landfall in SW Terrebonne Parish by morning. I can't see how this system goes to Texas, at all, unless we see a dramatic curve to the left.
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- yoda
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Sean in New Orleans wrote:I've confirmed that this is the center of Ivan through analyzing the latest advisory on Ivan. This center is clearly moving towards the NW, maybe even NNW and could make landfall in SW Terrebonne Parish by morning. I can't see how this system goes to Texas, at all, unless we see a dramatic curve to the left.
You mean Matthew right?
Just playin... I know its Ivan.. much to my chagrin.
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- Sean in New Orleans
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- Sean in New Orleans
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Oh, I believe it's Ivan--that's why it has the name. It's the same circulation of clouds that left the coast of Africa and did a circle in the Eastern US. It went mid-level, but, it's still the exact same clouds swirling around, hence, no name change. I agree with the assessment on the name.
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- yoda
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Sean in New Orleans wrote:Oh, I believe it's Ivan--that's why it has the name. It's the same circulation of clouds that left the coast of Africa and did a circle in the Eastern US. It went mid-level, but, it's still the exact same clouds swirling around, hence, no name change. I agree with the assessment on the name.
Ok.. IMO its not... but lets not beat a dead horse.
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- southerngale
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Sean in New Orleans wrote:southerngale wrote:I think it's further away from the coast than that. I don't think the center is showing up on that radar.
It is the center. At 1:00AM the center was located at 27.7N and 90.8W..this correlates to the present view of the center on radar.
Ok. It looks like what you pointed out was too far north from what the coordinates are. I could have sworn the center was south of all the convection.
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- Sean in New Orleans
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southerngale wrote:I think it's further away from the coast than that. I don't think the center is showing up on that radar.
I did too---I had to really analyze it for a few minutes. When I saw it I was kinda surprised how close the center already is to the coast--but, it's definitly the center and we can watch it on close radar now..
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sustained winds 44mph gusts to 52mph
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=spll1
anemometer height 40 meters
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=spll1
anemometer height 40 meters
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PurdueWx80
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Matthew5
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- PTrackerLA
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Matthew5
Looking at wind shear maps it looks to be moving from just 6 hours ago 25 knot shear. To over the next 24 hours to a area of 5 to 10 knots at most. That area of convection on the northern quad is a sign of this system, could very well be starting to pull the convection closer to the LLCC. Which the shear has blown off for the last few days. What else tells me that this system is starting to get oreganized is the ship report of 1005 millibar pressure. With 38 knots on one of the buoys/Ship reports...Also to note is the western Gulf of Mexico is more then warm enough to support a very powerful storm. So we need to keep a very close eye on our friend Ivan opps I mean Matthew!

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