Northern GOM
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- Galvestongirl
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otowntiger
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Galvestongirl wrote:is there anyway to enlarge this and it be readable.....
I had the same problem
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Stormcenter
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GalvestonDuck
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Galvestongirl wrote:is there anyway to enlarge this and it be readable.....
Roll your mouse over the text image and then leave it there for a second. There should be a small gray box with four arrows that appears down on the right-hand corner of the image. Click that to enlarge the image.
Try that next chance you get. In the meantime, I'll do this so everyone can read it.
[img]ftp://ftp.nhc.noaa.gov/pub/storm_archives/atlantic/prelimat/atl1983/alicia/prelim01.gif[/img]
[img]ftp://ftp.nhc.noaa.gov/pub/storm_archives/atlantic/prelimat/atl1983/alicia/prelim02.gif[/img]
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- jasons2k
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Steve wrote:Gulf looks semi interesting today. Some of the former 93L is around the Yucatan Channel; a complex is moving north from the Bay of Campeche (probably die out later) and some troughiness is still around the northern Gulf. It doesn't all amount to much, but hey, it's something.
Steve
Yeah, I agree with you steve, actually the setup in the GOM today is more what I expected it to look like a week ago (from about 10 days ago), it'll be interesting to see if something finally happens.
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Frank P
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Yeah, home brew is always interesting when around... radar loop continues to display the broad area of low, perhaps at the mid levels, with half over land and the other half over the GOM... hard to pinpoint the center but best guess off radar would be just off the coast south of the AL/FL line... we've gotten pummeled with rain every day for the past several days on the MS coast, today I expect the same.. large clusters of thunderstorms embedded within the broad low and remaining intact . one cluster approaching the Hattiesburg area, heading toward the coast....
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/ridge/mob_N0Z_lp.html
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/ridge/mob_N0Z_lp.html
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robjay
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Stormcenter
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South of the MS/AL border looks interesting this morning.
http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/satelli ... duration=6
http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/satelli ... duration=6
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- PTrackerLA
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I'd say the gulf looks more interesting this morning than it has for the past week. We actually have a decent blob of convection south of Mobile with hints of rotation. It also has good low level inflow from the south and west as evidenced by the low clouds streaming into the convection. If this were to stick around for another day we might just have something but of course a big limiting factor is the close proximity to land. Regardless the central gulf coast is in for more heavy rains today. I've been getting some good rains at my house this week and we haven't had to water at all! It's about dang time!
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- HouTXmetro
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Stormcenter
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Bertha had a non-tropical origin, forming from the same non-tropical surface trough of low pressure that spawned Tropical Storm Cristobal in the western North Atlantic Ocean. This trough extended from the north central Gulf of Mexico across Florida into the Atlantic on 1 August and moved little for the next two days. A broad low pressure area was first noted on 3 August. Satellite, surface, and radar observations indicated the low became better organized just east of the mouth of the Mississippi River on 4 August, and the system developed into Tropical Depression Two around 1800 UTC
Anyone remember Bertha in 2002. Something very similar to this synoptic set-up. Also, at the exact same time.
It has a chance if its low level circulation can get a little further away from land.
Anyone remember Bertha in 2002. Something very similar to this synoptic set-up. Also, at the exact same time.
It has a chance if its low level circulation can get a little further away from land.
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I remember actually going through and figuring this out on posts years ago but I believe I came up with tropical cyclone formation in the Gulf of Mexico, without the involvement of a tropical wave, an average of once every ten years.
So nobody should be surprised by its failure to happen.
And even if you consider all tropical cyclone formations of any kind (first advisory actually inside the GOM) the number per year was shockingly low; I think about once every two years on average, but I'd have to go back and check.
So nobody should be surprised by its failure to happen.
And even if you consider all tropical cyclone formations of any kind (first advisory actually inside the GOM) the number per year was shockingly low; I think about once every two years on average, but I'd have to go back and check.
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Stormcenter
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Derecho wrote:I remember actually going through and figuring this out on posts years ago but I believe I came up with tropical cyclone formation in the Gulf of Mexico, without the involvement of a tropical wave, an average of once every ten years.
So nobody should be surprised by its failure to happen.
And even if you consider all tropical cyclone formations of any kind (first advisory actually inside the GOM) the number per year was shockingly low; I think about once every two years on average, but I'd have to go back and check.
As rare (GOM development)as it may be it can and has happened.
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This trough has been stalled for almost two weeks. The precip on land going east to west, and over the GOM west to east. Might take a low to develop and clean up this stagnant pattern.
In Baton Rouge today, we nice cumulus out of the northeast with a stead movement, dryer air, and blue skies, reminicant of a tropical system to our east.
In Baton Rouge today, we nice cumulus out of the northeast with a stead movement, dryer air, and blue skies, reminicant of a tropical system to our east.
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