Heck is Phillipe doing ? Im not familiar wit hthis sort of transformation..
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
What the?
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eh? What are you guys talking about? I must admit this does look bizarre however.
EDIT - are you saying there is a huge amount of convection trying to wrap around one enourmous centre?
EDIT - are you saying there is a huge amount of convection trying to wrap around one enourmous centre?
Last edited by ChaserUK on Thu Sep 22, 2005 11:31 am, edited 1 time in total.
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SamSagnella
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Phillipe is most definitely undergoing a transition to a strong extratropical storm; the wind field is expanding (the strongest winds are well away from the center) and a gradual transformation to a cold-core storm should occur over the next day or so. I expect the final advisory to be issued either at 22/21z or 23/03z. As for the blob of convection on P's wrn edge, I would expect that no additional tropical cyclone development will result from it, though I suppose it's possible.
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SamSagnella wrote:Phillipe is most definitely undergoing a transition to a strong extratropical storm; the wind field is expanding (the strongest winds are well away from the center) and a gradual transformation to a cold-core storm should occur over the next day or so. I expect the final advisory to be issued either at 22/21z or 23/03z. As for the blob of convection on P's wrn edge, I would expect that no additional tropical cyclone development will result from it, though I suppose it's possible.
I think the storm is becoming sub-tropical - a hybrid which is gradually moving toward the west and may impact FL later on down the road when a high pressure system builds off the mid-atlantic. The remains of Phillipe are being absorbed into the strong ULL that was to its west. It looks like the ULL has built down to the surface - hence we have a large low that exhibits characteristics of both mid-latitude and tropical cyclones. Be interesting to watch over the next several days to see if it gradually transforms back into a tropical system.
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