Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Impressive Bill churning huge waves; New England air pollution episode underway
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 14:38 GMT le 18 août 2009 +6
Hurricane Bill has popped out an impressive eye, and continues to gather strength over the middle Atlantic. Visible and infrared satellite imagery show a well-organized, symmetric hurricane, with plenty of low-level spiral banding and upper-level outflow channels to the north and south. The spectacular appearance of the storm is evidence of the light wind shear environment that Bill finds itself in.

Wind shear is low, 5 - 10 knots, and is forecast to remain low to moderate, 5-15 knots, for the next five days. Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs) will rise steadily from 27.5°C today to 29°C on Friday. Total ocean heat content also rises today into Wednesday, and it is expected that Bill will take advantage of these favorable conditions to intensify into a major hurricane. The Hurricane Hunters make their first penetration into Bill this afternoon. The NOAA Hurricane Hunters will be continuously flying Bill for the next three days. They are flying research missions that will feed real-time radar data into an experimental version of the HWRF model to see if this data can improve the model forecasts.


Figure 1. Wave forecast for Hurricane Bill from NOAA's Wavewatch III model. Beginning Saturday (right panel) large waves from Bill are expected to affect most of the U.S. East Coast. By Sunday, the model predicts waves of 10 - 15 feet may impact the offshore waters of New England.

Water vapor satellite loops show that a trough of low pressure is diving down towards Bill, and this trough will be able to turn Bill more to the northwest over the next two days, and Bill will miss the Lesser Antilles Islands. The main impact of Bill on these islands will be high waves. Yesterday, Bill passed just north of Buoy 41041, which recorded significant wave heights of 28.8 feet. Maximum wave height is typically a factor of 1.9 greater than the significant wave height, so Bill was likely generating waves up to 55 feet high. High waves from Bill are propagating across the Atlantic towards the U.S. East Coast, and will arrive there on Saturday, according to NOAA's Wavewatch III model (Figure 1). The highest waves spawned by Bill will affect the New England coast, where waves of 10 - 15 feet in offshore waters can be expected. The waves will cause significant erosion of beaches, and possible damage to shoreline structures.

A much larger trough of low pressure is expected to develop along the U.S. East Coast late this week, turning Bill to the north. Exactly where this turn occurs is still not clear, and both Bermuda and Cape Cod, Massachusetts will be in Bill's 5-day forecast cone of uncertainty. At present, it appears that the Canadian provinces of Newfoundland or Nova Scotia are at greatest risk from a strike by Bill, but New England and Bermuda cannot relax just yet.

Elsewhere in the tropics
The remains of Tropical Storm Ana are bringing heavy rain to Haiti, Cuba, and the Bahamas today, and this activity will spread over South Florida tonight. The remains are disorganized, and are not likely to re-develop. No models are calling for any new tropical cyclones to develop in the Atlantic over the next seven days.


Figure 2. Image from NASA's Terra satellite of air pollution haze over the Northeast U.S. on Monday, August 17, 2009.

First major air pollution episode of the summer for the Northeast U.S.
New England is currently experiencing a far more deadly weather event than a direct hit by Hurricane Bill would likely bring--a large dome of high pressure. The reason? The high pressure system camped over the Northeast U.S. has brought hot temperatures, stagnant air, and the summer's first major air pollution episode.

The event started on Sunday, when a high pressure system with light winds moved over the eastern U.S., limited mixing and leading to stagnation and a buildup of pollutants. Mostly sunny skies and high temperatures also enhanced formation of ground-level ozone gas, a dangerous pollutant. Furthermore, southerly winds brought high humidity into the Northeast, which is conducive to particle pollution formation in the atmosphere. Particle pollution is the most deadly form of air pollution in the U.S. The poor air quality led to issuance of air quality advisories and action days on Monday in more than 30 cities, including New York City, NY; Newark, NJ; Providence, RI; and Portland, ME.

Today's air pollution forecast
Today, similar conditions are expected across much of the region, and Air Quality Index (AQI) levels are forecasted to remain in the Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups (Code Orange) range for many areas in the Northeast. For a complete list of action/advisory days and their locations, visit the EPA AIRNow website.

Health Tip: Cut back on strenuous outdoor exercise when air quality is expected to be poor.

How You Can Help: Choose a cleaner commute - share a ride to work or use public transportation. Bicycle or walk when possible. Combine errands and reduce trips.

Mortality from air pollution
As I discussed in a previous blog post, air pollution is a far more deadly weather hazard in the U.S. than hurricanes. Sure, hurricanes have killed an average of 150 people per year in the U.S., and the "premature deaths" caused by air pollution are only partly attributable to breathing bad air, while drowning in a hurricane's storm surge is entirely due to the hurricane. Nevertheless, a great many children die of pollution-induced asthma attacks who would not have died otherwise, and the mortality due to air pollution in the general population is in the thousands or ten of thousands each year. Outdoor air pollution in the U.S. due to particulate pollution alone was estimated by the EPA in 1997 to cause at least 20,000 premature deaths each year. A 2005 study by EPA scientists (Particulate Matter Health Risk Assessment for Selected Urban Areas) estimated that over 4,700 premature deaths occur each year in just nine cities (Detroit, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Boston, Phoenix, Seattle, and San Jose)--even if those cities all met the current federal standards for particulate matter pollution. Extrapolating these data to the entire nation puts the annual death toll in the tens of thousands--but the EPA has not calculated that total. Some studies have placed the annual pollution death toll in the U.S. at 50,000 to 100,000 (Dockery, D.W., and C.A Pope III. Acute Respiratory Effects of Particulate Air Pollution. Annual Review Public Health, 1994, vol. 15,107-32.) The death toll is much higher in other parts of the world, where air pollution standards are not as stringent. Globally, about 800,000 people per year die prematurely due to outdoor air pollution, according to a 2005 study published in the Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health. This represents about 1.2 percent of total annual global deaths.

In the debate over the costs of switching over the cleaner energy sources, the huge costs and deaths attributable to air pollution are often ignored. Sure, it will be costly to move away from fossil fuels, but let's not forget that the price per gallon we pay at the pump does not include the billions in medical costs we pay for the effects of air pollution.

I'll have an update Wednesday morning.

Jeff Masters
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2052. JupiterFL 00:45 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting Patrap:


Quote of the day!
Member Since: 10 août 2005 Posts: 0 Comments: 2146
2053. RufusBaker 00:45 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Maybe Bill will do a loop and come back and hit US like Jeane did
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2054. Mikla 00:45 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Bill has made a slight shift (10 dgrees) north in bearing. His bearing is now 303 degrees from the previous point. The prior 4 points had a bearing around 290 degrees...
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2056. PcolaDan 00:46 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting noreaster78:
Just back from stocking up in case Bill does hit NS with significant strength. I was looking at environment Canada's forecast track which puts bill right off the coast as still a hurricane as opposed to weakening rapidly as storms usually do hitting the cold maritime waters. I know I am a bit of a question machine of late but does anyone think Bill will landfall in the maritimes as still a hurricane?


Seas seem to be much warmer than normal up there. This could help BIll maintain strength.
https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/ncoda_web/ncoda.html
(could not put actual image in, probably because https:)
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2058. pearlandaggie 00:47 GMT le 19 août 2009    
2054. oh no! that isn't one of those dreaded "H" boxes on your graphic, is it? LOL
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2059. VAbeachhurricanes 00:47 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting nrtiwlnvragn:
00Z Model update




shifted west.... not good
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2060. amd 00:47 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting stormpetrol:
I swear Hurricane Bill was on WNW/NW track, looks like it is starting to go west again or is it my damn eyes, feeling the High or what and the weakness wasn't strong enough or what?


looks like a consistent 290 track (in between w and wnw for a couple of hours now)

IMHO, and I could be wrong, Bill is gaining latitude because of his rapid intensification only, not the weakness anymore.

Also, just look at the shortwave IR2 imagery, put on the latitude/longitude option, and watching the motion of Bill becomes real easy.

Link
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2061. TheDawnAwakening 00:47 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting GatorWX:
Ok, I now resent commenting earlier (about 1.5 hrs ago) on Bill's ragged appearance! He has come a long way since then and hh's are arriving at just the right time. I don't think they'll upgrade to a four yet @ 11, but thereafter, I think they will. Right now Bill looks borderline, but is certainly poised to become a very intense hurricane overnight. He very well could be a cat 5 before running out of prime conditions. Conditions are only going to become more favorable and at the rate he's going, and given the current intensity, a 920mb, 160mph storm seems more and more likely with every new satellite frame.


After looking at Bill's latest satellite imagery and the conditions in front of him, I would have to say that is quite possible.
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2062. GatorWX 00:47 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting WindynEYW:


Bring on Danny!
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2065. Patrap 00:50 GMT le 19 août 2009    
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2067. TheDawnAwakening 00:50 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Its also possible that since Bill has consolidated his eye he has made a quick NW jump and continues on a WNW or W motion and not a NW motion. The convection around his center is expanding nicely, only question remains is how his NW quad responds with convection.
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2068. whipster 00:51 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Seeing some spinning there Patrap...
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2070. AllStar17 00:52 GMT le 19 août 2009    
.
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2071. weatherman874 00:53 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Is there a possibility that the upper level low could come down to the surface?
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2072. antonio28 00:53 GMT le 19 août 2009    
I think that Bill is fealing the ULL in the caribbean and shifting in a more westward motion.
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2073. viman 00:53 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Good evening peeps, how is everyone tonite... are we playing nicely.....
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2074. STORMMASTERG 00:54 GMT le 19 août 2009    
This thing will impact bermuda in some way,also there is no chance for it to hit usa,the cold front will protect us from it.
2075. centex 00:54 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting Category5hitsNewYork:

NO it has not. It is heading at 280 which is a little north of wnw if not wnw.
NHC will say NW at 11, much closer to NW now. It;s already .5 N of 5PM location, this is double last two days when we had WNW, so it means NW. Also I clearly see close to NW over last 4 hours.
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2076. Patrap 00:54 GMT le 19 août 2009    
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2077. HurricaneKyle 00:54 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Whoa Momma! I can see this thing getting Category 4 by 11.
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2078. truecajun 00:54 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting weatherman874:
Is there a possibility that the upper level low could come down to the surface?


yes
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2079. Mikla 00:55 GMT le 19 août 2009    
The bearing is based on published NOAA data. I don't try to interpret sat images... there are far more experienced folks than I that are paid to do that. I do agree it is one data point indicating a shift and one point is not a trend.
Quoting P451:


If you've been watching satellite loops he started the day around 280 and then was as far as 315 then has since shifted back to 280. Maybe between two points it seems he's at 300 but he has made two turns today. One more northwesterly and one back to the wnw for now.

The difference now is there is no eye wobble at all. Earlier today there was and it was tough to get a fix on him.

The next 3 hours of satellite looping will tell the story.
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2081. GatorWX 00:56 GMT le 19 août 2009    
About the current motion. When storms are feeling the effects of a weakness or interaction with a trof, the said storm will wobble a bit and deviate some off track. I don't know yet if this is what Bill is doing or if his track is on the verge of adding some latitude. We'll certainly see in the morning what his motion is.
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2082. photonchaser 00:57 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting HurricaneKyle:
Whoa Momma! I can see this thing getting Category 4 by 11.
Yeah me too Bill is getting really well formed.. or at least thats what I see
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2083. KATRINABILOXIGIRL 00:58 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting Patrap:
give me a clue Pat...what do u think this is gonna do?
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2084. HIEXPRESS 00:58 GMT le 19 août 2009    
BYX - Key West, Base Reflectivity 0.50 Degree Elevation Range 248 NMI
Nothing to see here, folks. Move along.
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2085. weatherman874 00:58 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting truecajun:


yes


That would be something if it did but the gulf waters could do it with low shear
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2086. bwat 00:58 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting centex:
NHC will say NW at 11, much closer to NW now. It;s already .5 N of 5PM location, this is double last two days when we had WNW, so it means NW. Also I clearly see close to NW over last 4 hours.


agreed, very visible nw movment in last four hours once you overlay the lat/long onto the loop.
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2088. Patrap 00:59 GMT le 19 août 2009    
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2089. nmdesertrat 01:00 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Looks like Bill will be comfortably east of the next forecast point at midnight EDT (IMHO)
2090. photonchaser 01:02 GMT le 19 août 2009    
I wonder if the lesser antilies may get an outter ban, of Bill.
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2091. Patrap 01:02 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting KATRINABILOXIGIRL:
give me a clue Pat...what do u think this is gonna do?



Its doing what it looks Like its doing.

Best to keep a good eye on this one.
Its no Claudette,its a Big circulation.


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2092. AllStar17 01:02 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting P451:
This might help in current course determination.



Like your graphics P451! Do you like the ones I have made?
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2093. amd 01:03 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Link

this is from 4 hours ago, and it looks Bill is beginning to bypass the weakness. JMHO
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2094. weatherwiz 01:03 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Well the action has died for now, there should be some flare ups later during the night or morning.
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2095. whipster 01:04 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting Patrap:



Its doing what it looks Like its doing.

Best to keep a good eye on this one.
Its no Claudette,its a Big circulation.




IS that ex-Ana or something else that spun up?
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2096. KATRINABILOXIGIRL 01:04 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Quoting Patrap:



Its doing what it looks Like its doing.

Best to keep a good eye on this one.
Its no Claudette,its a Big circulation.


for now I will keep both eyes on it..thanks Pat..pretty rainy there today huh? I delivered the mail in nasty wet weather all day...not fun
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2097. Patrap 01:05 GMT le 19 août 2009    
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2098. Snowhaoleboy 01:05 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Surf will be huge from Fl to MD and enormous northward into New England. The NH and ME boys should be dusting off their guns. That little ME tourist town with the rivermouth may see 15'+ faces from this one. Like Helene in Sep '06.
2099. txalwaysprepared 01:05 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Pat - Thanks for posting those Ana shots -- I'm not taking my eye off her yet.
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2100. KEHCharleston 01:06 GMT le 19 août 2009    
SAL
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2101. AllStar17 01:06 GMT le 19 août 2009    
Pat, do you think it will have more time over water than Claudette? Also, if this were to form, do you think it would be Ana or Danny? If Danny, we could have Erika and Danny if the african wave and this AOI both develop.
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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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