Brand New Eastern Atlantic Wave Near 10N/20W Off Africa

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MiamiensisWx

Brand New Eastern Atlantic Wave Near 10N/20W Off Africa

#1 Postby MiamiensisWx » Wed Oct 12, 2005 12:34 pm

There is a new wave in the eastern Atlantic with fairly strong convection. It may not develop, but it looks fairly healthy right now. Here it is...
Image
Image

So far, it looks good on both infra-red and visible imagery.

Thoughts and comments are welcome!
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DESTRUCTION5
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#2 Postby DESTRUCTION5 » Wed Oct 12, 2005 12:38 pm

Won't look like that at 30 W..Trust me...
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#3 Postby Swimdude » Wed Oct 12, 2005 12:39 pm

Yup we've been watching this one since yesterday I believe. I'm surprised it hasn't fizzled yet!
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MiamiensisWx

#4 Postby MiamiensisWx » Wed Oct 12, 2005 12:41 pm

I'm referring to the strong and convective wave near 10N/20W behind the weaker convection at 30W.
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chadtm80

#5 Postby chadtm80 » Wed Oct 12, 2005 12:44 pm

Floyd has been saying watch that area for a few days now.. But I agree with comment above.. Will die out by 30
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#6 Postby caribepr » Wed Oct 12, 2005 2:06 pm

How nice it will be to throw off my junkie tendencies and NOT watch this tomorrow (well, I'll be in planes all day, so I can't - enforced withdrawal). But I can already feel some of the relief that comes with not watching what is going on...it will or won't happen, without my eyes. Hope it does fizzle though!! 8-)
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#7 Postby Steve H. » Wed Oct 12, 2005 2:21 pm

CapeVerdeWave, I thought you proclaimed R.I.P CV Season the other day :?:
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#8 Postby Weatherfreak14 » Wed Oct 12, 2005 2:35 pm

These storms are cpming off nicely. Good think this didn't happen in september we would have had a super storm. :lol:
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krysof

#9 Postby krysof » Wed Oct 12, 2005 2:37 pm

Weatherfreak14 wrote:These storms are cpming off nicely. Good think this didn't happen in september we would have had a super storm. :lol:


according to shear maps, the one in the caribbean has the best chance for development
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MiamiensisWx

#10 Postby MiamiensisWx » Wed Oct 12, 2005 2:45 pm

Steve H. wrote:CapeVerdeWave, I thought you proclaimed R.I.P CV Season the other day :?:


I think that was CHRISTY's thread title... I didn't say that...
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#11 Postby Dr. Jonah Rainwater » Wed Oct 12, 2005 3:48 pm

I don't know when that big trough is supposed to lift. But until it does, all of these promising young waves are doomed as soon as they leave shore on these suicide missions.
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#12 Postby cycloneye » Wed Oct 12, 2005 7:13 pm

FAR EAST ATLANTIC TROPICAL WAVE ALONG 20W S OF 14N MOVING W 10
KT. THE LAST FEW VISIBLE IMAGES FROM METEOSAT-8 PORTRAY A
LOW-AMPLITUDE CIRCULATION EMBEDDED WITHIN THE ITCZ...AND A
CONVECTIVE FLARE-UP IN THE VICINITY JUSTIFIES THIS POSITION. IT
SHOULD BE NOTED THAT THE WAVELENGTH BETWEEN THE ATLC TROPICAL
WAVES HAS SHORTENED CONSIDERABLY...AND THE NEXT WAVE IS ONLY
ABOUT 500 NM TO THE W OF THIS WAVE. SCATTERED MODERATE/ISOLATED
STRONG CONVECTION FROM 4N-10N BETWEEN 19W-27W.


8 PM Discussion about this wave.

It has to deal with the dry air and the upper low in front although far from the wave near 16n-49w.
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MiamiensisWx

#13 Postby MiamiensisWx » Wed Oct 12, 2005 8:06 pm

*BUMP*
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#14 Postby cycloneye » Wed Oct 12, 2005 8:09 pm

CapeVerdeWave wrote:*BUMP*


It was not necessary to bump thread as it was at first page almost at the top as my replie was less than one hour earlier than the bump.
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MiamiensisWx

#15 Postby MiamiensisWx » Wed Oct 12, 2005 8:14 pm

cycloneye wrote:It was not necessary to bump thread as it was at first page almost at the top as my replie was less than one hour earlier than the bump.


Sorry...
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