Invest 99L E of Lesser Antilles,Comments,Sat Pics,Etc #3
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- SouthFloridawx
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Dean4Storms wrote:18Z GFDL begins the intialization with a closed off low and takes it further west again.
http://moe.met.fsu.edu/cgi-bin/gfdltc2. ... =Animation
I was just going to post something about that... it is interesting cause it wasn't even picking up on it yesterday for the most part.
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SouthFloridawx wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:18Z GFDL begins the intialization with a closed off low and takes it further west again.
http://moe.met.fsu.edu/cgi-bin/gfdltc2. ... =Animation
I was just going to post something about that... it is interesting cause it wasn't even picking up on it yesterday for the most part.
We'll just have to sit back and watch it, nobody can say for 100% certainty whether it will develop or not.
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IMO this is going to be the sacrifice wave that will cause the SAL to die down for the the wave near Africa.
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curtadams wrote:SouthFloridawx wrote:This link shows there is a low level circulation.. the pass made it perfectly over it.
http://tinyurl.com/of6r5
Plus the center is in between bouys, 41101 and 41040
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/maps/Caribbean.shtml
13.5 N and 53W apprx.
Am I missing something? I don't see anything about winds in the link, and the buoys (far apart) are showing relatively bland wind directions (SE and E). Image appearance suggests a circ but doesn't clinch it.
Good, it's not just me. All I saw was a satellite image on that link. However, QuikSCAT imagery a few hours ago shows nothing but an open wave:
http://manati.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/sto ... 0_99ds.png
Buoys, as you noted, are 300nm apart in that region. I did find a ship in the area at 00Z. Here's a surface analysis of the region:
http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/99Lc.gif
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wxman57 wrote:However, QuikSCAT imagery a few hours ago shows nothing but an open wave:
http://manati.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/sto ... 0_99ds.png
Buoys, as you noted, are 300nm apart in that region. I did find a ship in the area at 00Z. Here's a surface analysis of the region:
http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/99Lc.gif
Right, I'm saying there's a storm-relative circulation, not an earth-relative one. There is an appropriate warp to the winds although it's weak and certainly less than I expected from sats. 5-10mph or so. Definitionally it's certainly an open wave but the weak relative circulation makes it more susceptible to development than most.
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wxman57 wrote:curtadams wrote:SouthFloridawx wrote:This link shows there is a low level circulation.. the pass made it perfectly over it.
http://tinyurl.com/of6r5
Plus the center is in between bouys, 41101 and 41040
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/maps/Caribbean.shtml
13.5 N and 53W apprx.
Am I missing something? I don't see anything about winds in the link, and the buoys (far apart) are showing relatively bland wind directions (SE and E). Image appearance suggests a circ but doesn't clinch it.
Good, it's not just me. All I saw was a satellite image on that link. However, QuikSCAT imagery a few hours ago shows nothing but an open wave:
http://manati.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/sto ... 0_99ds.png
Buoys, as you noted, are 300nm apart in that region. I did find a ship in the area at 00Z. Here's a surface analysis of the region:
http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/99Lc.gif
just a satellite image??
NRL Image
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- SouthFloridawx
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...SPECIAL FEATURE...
AN ATLANTIC OCEAN TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 53W SOUTH OF 16N. A
1011 MB LOW PRESSURE CENTER IS ALONG THE WAVE NEAR 13N53W.
WIDELY SCATTERED MODERATE CONVECTION IS FROM 11N-13N BETWEEN
52W-58W. CONDITIONS ARE CURRENTLY MARGINALLY FAVORABLE FOR
DEVELOPMENT. THIS SYSTEM STILL HAS THE POTENTIAL TO BECOME A
TROPICAL DEPRESSION OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS AS IT MOVES
WEST-NORTHWEST TOWARDS THE WINDWARD ISLANDS.
AN ATLANTIC OCEAN TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 53W SOUTH OF 16N. A
1011 MB LOW PRESSURE CENTER IS ALONG THE WAVE NEAR 13N53W.
WIDELY SCATTERED MODERATE CONVECTION IS FROM 11N-13N BETWEEN
52W-58W. CONDITIONS ARE CURRENTLY MARGINALLY FAVORABLE FOR
DEVELOPMENT. THIS SYSTEM STILL HAS THE POTENTIAL TO BECOME A
TROPICAL DEPRESSION OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS AS IT MOVES
WEST-NORTHWEST TOWARDS THE WINDWARD ISLANDS.
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- wxman57
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Aric Dunn wrote:just a satellite image??
That's correct, the link you just re-posted goes to a satellite image. There are no surface winds on that image. That web site DOES have some satellite image with CLOUD winds, but those clouds aren't at the surface.
Come on, guys, wishing this thing to develop won't work. Time to go watch a movie. Keep looking for swirls through the night.
NRL Image
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There's some manic-depressive behavior here - dead to already Chris and back again. I wouldn't read too much into it.storms in NC wrote:Thanks. I was looking for a new loop. I couldn't see much on the floaters any more. By George I think you may tbe right. But everyone saying it was dead

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