soonertwister wrote:It's clear from the IR loop that this thing is winding up in an unexpected manner. The CDO is already there, there is no longer any doubt that closed circulation is not only there, it's vigorous.
I've learned to be cautious about the GFDL, but this time it might be more right than wrong. We are clearly looking at a possible hurricane, and it might be well before landfall.
Frankly, I'm shocked at the pace of organizational development of Adrian. It's supposed to be way too early to see this.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.htmlI do notice some dry air entraining from the north, but it doesn't look like a pervasive phenomenon at this time.
Hey Sooner...been a while but not long enough. Didn't we just go through this?
Hard to tell in IR4 if that's a CDO or a cell rotating around a broader center...but the TRMM pass from tonight showed some pretty good inflow bands to the north and south...so that means something is doing some work at the surface.
Water temps are 30C there...and the heat content of the water there is good...that band in the southern semi-circle is impressive...and the moisture envelope is more than adequate for now.
It really comes down to timing and how much development can occur before upper winds become unfavorable.
I bet we see a good Cat 1 out of this...I havent bitten on the rapid intensification idea yet...it's so hard for systems to get a well organized inner core without having a couple of bouts with a cold cover temporally interrupting the process. But then again I didn't think we'd see a TS until tomorrow morning either so what the heck do I know?
MW