Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog |
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| Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 20:59 GMT le 25 août 2011 | +28 |
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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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Dry air wrapping around the core.
Yeah, perhaps it's time for a new way of deciding Hurricane catagories.
Since 1869, there have been six hurricanes hitting New England as Cat 2 or Cat 3 (never been higher than that). Counting this as the seventh, it is roughly a hit of that intensity every twenty years. It's been twenty years since Bob.
Of course, probability isn't a factor in long term landfall estimates. Now, some set ups can cause more of a bias toward East Coast threats as opposed to the Gulf, for example, over a longer period of time than a year. It's not like earthquakes (or volcanoes, to an extent) where an area can be due for one as it's a measure of pressure over time.
It's already near 500 miles wide now.
In theory it could, but Irene is far enough from the coast for that to be too large of an effect. Also, the Gulf Stream is west of the eye, which will enhance the development of thunderstorms in the western semicircle of Irene.
(Last image before Irene's clouds began to block the satellite and make the pictures useless)
We have a closed eye wall now?
500mb heights and a guess at 500mb contours indicated. No surprises on track here if close to correct-north.
Similar posted interpretations yesterday and early this morning seemed to hold true, fwiw.
click to enlarge
NOAA National Data Bouy Center Canaveral East Bouy will be a good one to watch for Irene's surface impacts for the next 12 hours.....
Or, it could be the Northeast version of Don. But, I suspect it will be neither.
I am amazed that Katrina is everyone's benchmark, as if that had never happened before. But, before Katrina, there was Andrew. Before Andrew, Camille; and, before Camille, Donna. Before Donna, 1938 New England; and, before 1938, there was 1935's Labor Day. Before that, there was Galveston. It's not like we haven't had these types of events before.
SHORT TERM FORECAST
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MELBOURNE FL
542 PM EDT THU AUG 25 2011
COASTAL VOLUSIA-FLAGLER BEACH TO VOLUSIA-
BREVARD COUNTY LINE 20 NM TO 60 NM OFFSHORE-FLAGLER BEACH TO VOLUSIA-BREVARD COUNTY LINE OUT TO 20 NM-INDIAN RIVER-INLAND VOLUSIA-MARTIN-NORTHERN BREVARD-NORTHERN LAKE-OKEECHOBEE-ORANGE-OSCEOLA-SEBASTIAN INLET TO JUPITER INLET 20 NM TO 60 NM OFFSHORE-SEBASTIAN INLET TO JUPITER INLET OUT TO 20 NM-SEMINOLE-SOUTHERN BREVARD-SOUTHERN LAKE-ST. LUCIE-VOLUSIA-BREVARD COUNTY LINE TO SEBASTIAN INLET 20 NM TO 60 NM OFFSHORE-VOLUSIA-BREVARD COUNTY LINE TO SEBASTIAN INLET OUT TO 20 NM-
542 PM EDT THU AUG 25 2011
.NOW...SEVERAL OUTER RAINBANDS FROM HURRICANE IRENE WILL CONTINUE TO PUSH INTO THE COAST THROUGH 7 PM THIS EVENING. THESE RAINBANDS WILL REACH INTO THE INTERIOR PORTIONS OF THE AREA INCLUDING THE ORLANDO METRO...INTERIOR VOLUSIA COUNTY...AND OKEECHOBEE COUNTY. ADDITIONAL STRONG SHOWERS AND POSSIBLY A THUNDERSTORM WITH OCCASIONAL LIGHTNING STRIKES WILL BE POSSIBLE THROUGHOUT THE AREA OUTSIDE OF ANY ORGANIZED RAINBANDS. ANY RAINBANDS THAT MOVE THROUGH WILL CONTAIN TORRENTIAL RAINFALL AND WIND GUSTS BETWEEN 40 AND 50 MPH.
$$
Glad we have this trio and the folks flying into Irene. I had the opportunity to get inside Kermit and talk to a team of hurricane hunters when they were here on their tour before hurricane season. True professionals and really nice people.
Irene has never really had a large eye that was visible on satellite. The dry air entrainment into the core and just enough southwesterly shear have caused enough disruption to cover the eye.
I was looking at what left of the trees from the tornado in MA, and the blue tarps still on some homes today.
This is not good for us at all.
Well, if the eye is clearing out, then... :P
PINHOLE EYE!!!!!!!!!!!
That aint good..
I think unless she goes out to sea and doesn't hit the mainland U.S. it is a guarantee she will be retired and one of if not the costliest hurricanes in history.
Yes, I saw it from the Earthcam - PB Cam. Looked pretty hairy.
Link
Of course it was, since there was no Ike last year.
Coordinates: 27.6333N 76.55W
Acft. Static Air Press: 751.8 mb (~ 22.20 inHg)
Acft. Geopotential Hgt: 2,301 meters (~ 7,549 feet)
Flt. Lvl. Wind (30s): From 147 at 110 knots (From the SSE at ~ 126.5 mph)
Flight level winds picking up. Still don't support cat 3 surface winds, however. SFMR surface estimate was only at 83.6MPH for this observation as well.
At least we're ahead of the game on utility crews coming in from as far away as Tennessee. At least they will have extra crews around... remember the outages of 2008 and 2009? Just ice storm and a Nor'easter but I had no power over a week each time.
I saw Pike crews out and about down here in FL, so they're probably headed that way..
That eye is 30 miles wide, that ain't no pinhole.
Or the year before...
Like Alex - Pressures in the 940s mb, but winds only at Category 2. Winds will catch up overnight though, as Irene has no limit.
how strong u think irene will get?
LOL.
I think they're headed for New Jersey. The TN crews are headed to New Hampshire/Mass.
Don't worry, just messing with you.
Could be. Picking a height to delineate a break is a bit iffy. But wv might indicate a portion of the edge of the western ridge. Gotta be there somewhere
Link
Ike had a greater hurricane windforce radii, 120 miles to 80 with Irene, though.
I'm thinking [low-end] category 4 status.
Well I was gonna check the microwave, but look what happens at the end? Ain't that swell?
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