An active Atlantic hurricane period coming
The remnants of Tropical Depression Five are no longer a threat, done in by high wind shear and close proximity to land. However, an active period for Atlantic hurricanes is likely for the remainder of August, as the global atmosphere undergoes a major change to the circulation pattern that has dominated Northern Hemisphere weather during July and August. A large trough of low pressure is gathering strength over Europe, and is expected to push eastward. By Thursday, this trough should be able to push away the blocking ridge of high pressure that has given Russia its worst heat wave in history. The shift in circulation has already weakened the large region of sinking air that has brought dry, stable conditions to the tropical Atlantic over the past month. Vertical instability, which was unusually low since late July, has now returned to near normal levels over the tropical Atlantic (Figure 1), though it remains quite low over the rest of the North Atlantic. Instability is measured as the difference in temperature between the surface and the top of the troposphere (the highest altitude that thunderstorm tops can penetrate to.) If the surface is very warm and the top of the troposphere is cold, an unstable atmosphere results, which helps to enhance thunderstorm updrafts and promotes hurricane development. Since SSTs in the Atlantic were at record highs and upper tropospheric temperatures were several degrees cooler than average in July, enhancing instability, something else must have been going on to reduce instability. Dry air can act to reduce instability, and it appears that an unusually dry atmosphere, due to large-scale sinking over the Atlantic, was responsible for the lack of instability. Now that vertical instability has returned to near normal levels, Atlantic hurricane activity should increase to at least average levels over the next two weeks. This is particularly true since SSTs are at record highs and vertical wind shear is at average to below average levels over the tropical Atlantic.

Figure 1. Vertical instability (in °C) over the Caribbean (left) and tropical Atlantic between the Lesser Antilles Islands and coast of Africa (right) in 2010. Normal instability is the black line, and this year's instability levels are in blue. The atmosphere became much more stable than normal in both regions at the end of July. This lack of instability also extended to the Gulf of Mexico and North Atlantic Ocean between Europe and North America. However, in the past few days, vertical instability has returned to normal, thanks to a major pattern shift in the global atmosphere. Image credit: NOAA/CIRA.

Figure 2. The climatology of Atlantic hurricane activity shows a sharp rise in activity around August 18.
Analysis
August 18 historically marks the point where Atlantic hurricane activity makes a major spike upwards (Figure 2.) On average, we can expect to see two named storms and one hurricane during the last half of August. The last half of August usually sees a moistening of the atmosphere off the coast of Africa, as the the African monsoon kicks into high gear. This year is no exception (Figure 3.) The dry Saharan Air Layer (SAL) has retreated to the north, leaving a moist atmosphere conducive for tropical cyclone development off the coast of Africa.
It would not be a surprise to see atmospheric instability increase to above-average levels by early next week as the major atmospheric pattern shift progresses. Will this usher in a hyperactive period of Atlantic hurricane activity next week, with a parade of three or four simultaneous storms strung out across the Atlantic? Probably not, since the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) only marginally favors upward motion over the tropical Atlantic, and is not forecast to change much over the next ten days. The Madden-Julian oscillation is a pattern of enhanced rainfall that travels along the Equator from west to east. The pattern has a wet phase with large-scale rising air and enhanced thunderstorm activity, followed by a dry phase with large-scale sinking air and suppressed thunderstorm activity. Each cycle lasts approximately 30 - 60 days. When the Madden-Julian oscillation is in its wet phase over a hurricane-prone region, the chances for tropical storm activity are greatly increased. The bottom line: I expect we will see 2 - 3 named storms in the Atlantic by the end of August, including one hurricane. Where these storms might develop and move is difficult to say. It currently appears that the global shift in circulation will bring near-average steering currents to the Atlantic over the next ten days, with a series of troughs of low pressure capable of recurving hurricanes, moving across the Atlantic. The GFS model is indicating, though, that during the few days of August, these troughs may weaken, making recurvature of hurricanes less likely, and increasing the probability of landfalling storms.
The GFS, NOGAPS, and ECMWF currently predict that one or two tropical storms will form between Africa and the Lesser Antilles Islands during the period 4 - 10 days from now. The NOGAPS model is predicting the development of a strong tropical disturbance near the coast of Honduras late this week.

Figure 3. Saharan Air Layer (SAL) analysis shows that the dry air and dust of the SAL (orange colors) lies well to the north of the hurricane breeding grounds off the coast of Africa, near the Cape Verdes Islands. Image credit: University of Wisconsin/NOAA Hurricane Research Division.
Smoke bedeviling Moscow again
Light easterly winds over the past few hours have brought smoke from wildfires back into Moscow today. Temperatures at Moscow's Domodedovo airport hit 29°C (84°F) today, which is 11°C (20°F) above average. The latest forecast for Moscow predicts that just one more day remains for Russia's greatest heat wave in recorded history. On Thursday, a strong trough of low pressure will move through European Russia, finally bringing below average temperatures.
Jeff Masters
Reader Comments
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Excellent post Storm! I very much agree with what you said.
For FL & GA's sake, I hope those models are WRONG!!!
Link
I was on the TX,LA border, and I wasn't impressed either.
Heck just wait till the next run... LOL
Good afternoon, StSimons, my debating buddy! Is that the ECMWF? It is in agreement with the Global Forecast System.
Where are those fishcasters now? We've only had one fish storm this year so far... this one doesn't look like one.
Not too impressed with the wave in the Carribean either, but it needs to be watched.
Which one? I think they both look healthy.
That is 80-100 miles or so north of the lesser antilles.
As far as i'm concerned that is the only immediate area of concern, nhc is giving it a 10% chance, it might get going or just "fizzle" as usual who knows?
But it looks close enough to PR and Hispaniola to have an impact on the system.
But it's futher south than the pevious model runs. This could be a Gulf Storm...
Yeah I mentioned that earlier this morning when it was first classified but I assume you weren't on at the time.
Ya, they would appearance feeder bands. If the storm was that far along by then.
Also note the 2nd storm behind the GFS. It gets weaker and weaker with every passing run, indicating the storm's outflow may cut the 2nd storm's life short, meaning the GFS is showing a more intense system with every passing run.
thanks so much StormW. You are so right that there is so much we don't know yet and how it all meshes together. Very interesting. Robyn
I was noticing the lack of a significant system behind the big CV storm as compared to yesterday.
Looks like a Tropical Storm.
haha I will be very interested to see the 12Z ECMWF's take on this... to see if it's in agreement...
-Snow
Then the models probably don't know what's going on with the 2nd storm. The 12Z ECMWF should be interesting...
Of course there will be shifts until this system actually forms. We have 10-12 days of watching these systems traverse the tropical Atlantic. But, no question, it appears that the quiet times we have had lately are about to soon apruptly change for sure.
vorpal shear? Is that a cling-on term? lol
Like StSimons said, it's been varying. The 12Z ECMWF should be running very soon...
12z ECMWF 144 hours, PGI30L is the open wave north of the Lesser Antilles. The one to the east of that appears to be PGI31L.
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