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After a peak-season hibernation the likes of which have not been seen since 1939, the Atlantic basin is waking back up.
Basin-wide conditions for development are improving this week. A positive pulse from the MJO along with a climatologically consistent trend towards greater instability overall as we head into fall will conspire to enhance thunderstorm activity. Higher pressure in the subtropics appears set to weaken and/or shove away some of the TUTTs that have imparted high levels of shear and dry air over the past month. Meanwhile, the waves keep rolling off of Africa.
One of the waves to recently exit Africa is now on the cusp of becoming our next TD. This disturbance, Invest 92L, has potential to become a long-track Cape Verde-type storm, provided the basin does perform this week as forecast. Several models give 92L decent odds to become a powerful hurricane. Fortunately, very few models take it towards land, but at a minimum, Bermuda should watch.
Behind 92L another wave appears to have a good shot at development. This one is not yet Invest tagged.
Closer to home, a hybrid coastal storm off the coast of NC/VA remains too attached to its parent fronts and is under too much shear to have much more than maybe a 2% chance at a name, but those right along the coasts in this region probably agree that it "feels" like something with a name. This is expected to weaken today and track out to sea.
Invest 92L Event Related Links
Tropical Tidbits Page on system
Flhurricane Satellite Floater Animation of 92
GOES Floater
Tomer Berg Info page for 92
CyclonicWx Page for 92
Clark Evans Track Model Plot of 92
(Animated!) Model Plots in Google Earth - In Google Maps
Clark Evans Intensity Model Plot of 92 (Animated!)
Clark Evans Top 10 Analog Storms for 92
http://www.ral.ucar.edu/guidance/realtime/current/ More model runs on from RAL/Jonathan Vigh's page
NRL Info on 92 -- RAMMB Info
COD Atlantic Satellite View
Latest X/Twitter posts from Flhurricane Twitter Page
Tweets by cfhc