A low pressure seems to be developing?
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Matthew5
A low pressure seems to be developing?
The low pressure developing at around 28 north/85.5 west?http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT/gmex-vis-loop.html
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Matthew5
The Quickscat shows a board LLCC forming at around 28 north/86 west? http://manati.wwb.noaa.gov/dataimages21 ... MBas19.png
This shows the low pressure as 1008 millibars!
http://weather.unisys.com/surface/sfc_map.html
This shows the low pressure as 1008 millibars!
http://weather.unisys.com/surface/sfc_map.html
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- dixiebreeze
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Dean4Storms
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Pressure pretty much steady now here in the Panhandle, ours is at 29.88". but steady NE wind near 15-20 mph all day due to the pressure gradient. The last couple of hours have noted a low level cloud deck has moved in from the east and covers much of the beaches southward out over the GOM. If convection persists near that low overnite and especially if it grows and deepens we could see a Alex like development along this frontal boundary over the NE GOM. If something does develop and deepens rapidly it most likely would get drawn northward or eastward. I don't see it moving westward.
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Stormcenter
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Wesy my friend...
Dean4Storms wrote:Pressure pretty much steady now here in the Panhandle, ours is at 29.88". but steady NE wind near 15-20 mph all day due to the pressure gradient. The last couple of hours have noted a low level cloud deck has moved in from the east and covers much of the beaches southward out over the GOM. If convection persists near that low overnite and especially if it grows and deepens we could see a Alex like development along this frontal boundary over the NE GOM. If something does develop and deepens rapidly it most likely would get drawn northward or eastward. I don't see it moving westward.
Actually whatever, if anything, develops will move westward based on the Mobile, AL discussion this afternoon.
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- BayouVenteux
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Dean4Storms wrote:...we could see a Alex like development along this frontal boundary over the NE GOM
I don't know about that....yet, anyway. Yes, Alex was bolstered in it's early stages by a lot of baroclinic forcing, as is going at present along the frontal zone as it screeches to a halt against the Caribbean high to the south, but that's fuel...not the fire. The low would need to get going doing the work on it's own as far as the upward forcing and maintaining convection. Persistence is the key (Yeah, that's another phrase I can't stand!
Easy money says it it doesn't even get a mention in the 5:30 TWO.
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Andrew '92, Katrina '05, Gustav '08, Isaac '12, Ida '21...and countless other lesser landfalling storms whose names have been eclipsed by "The Big Ones".
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Stormcenter
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BayouVenteux wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:...we could see a Alex like development along this frontal boundary over the NE GOM
I don't know about that....yet, anyway. Yes, Alex was bolstered in it's early stages by a lot of baroclinic forcing, as is going at present along the frontal zone as it screeches to a halt against the Caribbean high to the south, but that's fuel...not the fire. The low would need to get going doing the work on it's own as far as the upward forcing and maintaining convection. Persistence is the key (Yeah, that's another phrase I can't stand!) here. When the warm/cool frontal boundary dissipates, the trough has moved away and IF we're still seeing an area maintaining convection and spin out in the Gulf, then we can start to be concerned.
Easy money says it it doesn't even get a mention in the 5:30 TWO.
You are 100% percent correct my fellow poster. The NHC didn't even mention it at 4:30 CDT it but they will tomorrow, I think.
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