Atlantic is mostly quiet again for now
Days since last Hurricane Landfall —
US Any:
545 (Milton),
US Major:
545 (Milton),
FL Any:
545 (Milton),
FL Major:
545 (Milton)
berrywr
Weather Analyst
Reged:
Posts: 387
Loc: Opelika, AL
|
|
The longwave trough has continued to progress to the east and is now along the 78W longitude extending to 25N latitude where it becomes inverted into the cyclone from that point southward. This is the primary reason for the east shift in H+00 to H+48 in the solution in addition to a 588 (decameter) upper ridge which earlier was centered over Jackson, MS to a position now at 27N 92W south of the coast of LA. The small upper low along the longwave trough has deepened slightly and moved north to central NC with height falls to its east and height rises to its west suggesting two things; one, the longwave trough is deamplifying with time and two, the trough is progressing eastward. The upper ridge over the GOM is progged to retrogress to the Inter-Mountain West and build, the longwave trough will continue to deamplify and the Bermuda ridge is expected to build west; this upcoming short term period suggest a NW movement through 48 hours and then a slight nudge to the west as per . It remains unclear if Issac will make landfall along the extreme SE FL coast and move inland before exiting along the SW to W coast at this time. I see no scenarios where Issac is likely to be a major hurricane; at best a minimum hurricane to a strong tropical storm; it does pose a major flooding threat to parts of the northern Gulf coast and most certainly a drought buster for parts of Georgia in dire need of rainfall if this track verifies; overall no major changes in this package other than the possibility of a landfall along the SE coast.
-------------------- Sincerely,
Bill Berry
"Survived Trigonometry and Calculus I"
|
|
0 registered and 5 anonymous users are browsing this forum.
Moderator:
Print Topic
|
Forum Permissions
You cannot start new topics
You cannot reply to topics
HTML is disabled
UBBCode is enabled
|
Rating:
Topic views: 3962
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note: This is
NOT an official page. It is run by weather hobbyists and should not be used as a replacement for official sources.
CFHC's main servers are currently located at
Hostdime.com in Orlando, FL.
Image Server Network thanks to Mike Potts and Amazon Web Services. If you have static file hosting space that allows dns aliasing contact us to help out! Some Maps Provided by:
Great thanks to all who
donated and everyone who uses the site as well.
Site designed for 800x600+ resolution
When in doubt, take the word of the
National Hurricane Center