Tropical Wave at Caribbean
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- gatorcane
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Jk, yes your explanation seems reasonable.
Three things, however:
1) If those thunderstorms that are backbuilding maintain overnight tonight, I think development may be possible sooner than the NHC thinks.
2) The 20-30K of shear is confined to a small wedge. If it survives that, there is little shear and the conditions will be much more favorable.
3) I've been watching this wave for the past week and it has overcome a very hostile environment several days ago and has managed to survive. It seems that waves/invests this year have proven that can fight off hostile conditions like I have not seen in the past (e.g. TD 10)
Three things, however:
1) If those thunderstorms that are backbuilding maintain overnight tonight, I think development may be possible sooner than the NHC thinks.
2) The 20-30K of shear is confined to a small wedge. If it survives that, there is little shear and the conditions will be much more favorable.
3) I've been watching this wave for the past week and it has overcome a very hostile environment several days ago and has managed to survive. It seems that waves/invests this year have proven that can fight off hostile conditions like I have not seen in the past (e.g. TD 10)
Last edited by gatorcane on Sun Oct 30, 2005 5:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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ivanhater wrote:Thunder44 wrote:ivanhater wrote:Thunder44 wrote:ivanhater wrote:it appears as if the wave axis has raced out ahead and the thunderstorms are back building
Actually I believe the wave axis is to the west of those thunderstorms. It's more in line to wear TAFB anaylised it this afternoon in their discussion.
i know, thats what i was saying
Look at my post again. I meant to say to the EAST.
hmm, im not sure about that....but i could be wrong...it wouldnt be the first time
LOL, could be. I originally called it an outflow boundary so maybe thats what it really is!

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- gatorcane
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Jk, yes your explanation seems reasonable.
Three things, however:
1) If those thunderstorms that are backbuilding maintain overnight tonight, I think development may be possible sooner than the NHC thinks.
2) The 20-30K of shear is confined to a small wedge. If it survives that, there is little shear and the conditions will be much more favorable.
3) I've been watching this wave for the past week and it has overcome a very hostile environment several days ago and has managed to survive. It seems that waves/invests this year have proven that can fight off hostile conditions like I have not seen in the past (e.g. TD 10)
Three things, however:
1) If those thunderstorms that are backbuilding maintain overnight tonight, I think development may be possible sooner than the NHC thinks.
2) The 20-30K of shear is confined to a small wedge. If it survives that, there is little shear and the conditions will be much more favorable.
3) I've been watching this wave for the past week and it has overcome a very hostile environment several days ago and has managed to survive. It seems that waves/invests this year have proven that can fight off hostile conditions like I have not seen in the past (e.g. TD 10)
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If you look at water vapor imagery you can see the wave axis.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
The convection has been running ahead of it all day long. But the wave axis seems to be catching up now this evening. It's interacting more with the ULL to it's west, causing the blowup of thunderstorms this evening. No signs of tropical cyclone formation at all.
TAFB latest surface analysis here at about 21:30z:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/tafb_latest/CAR_latest.gif
The wave axis right about is just to the east of thunderstorms or on the east side there. They also analysised a low pressure area on the southern part of the axis.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
The convection has been running ahead of it all day long. But the wave axis seems to be catching up now this evening. It's interacting more with the ULL to it's west, causing the blowup of thunderstorms this evening. No signs of tropical cyclone formation at all.
TAFB latest surface analysis here at about 21:30z:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/tafb_latest/CAR_latest.gif
The wave axis right about is just to the east of thunderstorms or on the east side there. They also analysised a low pressure area on the southern part of the axis.
Last edited by Thunder44 on Sun Oct 30, 2005 6:06 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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- Ivanhater
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jkt21787 wrote:ivanhater wrote:Thunder44 wrote:ivanhater wrote:Thunder44 wrote:ivanhater wrote:it appears as if the wave axis has raced out ahead and the thunderstorms are back building
Actually I believe the wave axis is to the west of those thunderstorms. It's more in line to wear TAFB anaylised it this afternoon in their discussion.
i know, thats what i was saying
Look at my post again. I meant to say to the EAST.
hmm, im not sure about that....but i could be wrong...it wouldnt be the first time
LOL, could be. I originally called it an outflow boundary so maybe thats what it really is!
haaa, well either way, its not good news for 92l right now, lol
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ivanhater wrote:is this even an invest anymore?
I haven't seen any model runs at all today, and as I understand it, once there are no model runs for 24 hours, the invest classification is no longer valid.
The last models ran valid for 6z. At 6z tomorrow, if models don't run again, then it will just be referred to as a wave.
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- Ivanhater
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jkt21787 wrote:ivanhater wrote:is this even an invest anymore?
I haven't seen any model runs at all today, and as I understand it, once there are no model runs for 24 hours, the invest classification is no longer valid.
The last models ran valid for 6z. At 6z tomorrow, if models don't run again, then it will just be referred to as a wave.
thats what i thought
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ivanhater wrote:jkt21787 wrote:ivanhater wrote:is this even an invest anymore?
I haven't seen any model runs at all today, and as I understand it, once there are no model runs for 24 hours, the invest classification is no longer valid.
The last models ran valid for 6z. At 6z tomorrow, if models don't run again, then it will just be referred to as a wave.
thats what i thought
It still shows up on NRL site http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/tc_pages/tc_home.html
They are no computer models being run perhaps because there is no discernible center in the low or mid-levels to follow.
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- bvigal
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as I said earlier today
Several other times when this has happened this season, the surface maps/analysis did not relocate the low for a while, there was a time lag of about 12 hours. I think some here are basically expressing the same idea.
bvigal wrote:... Seems to me that this could be another situation like SO MANY we've had this year in the exact same spot (50-60W), where the wave continues westward, while the low splits off and moves NW. And as we've learned this year, a low that separates from a wave still has plenty of potential to develop later on, north of the Caribbean. At least it improves the chance (being November and being Atlantic vs Caribbean) should it develop, that it will miss all land/islands and go fish.
Several other times when this has happened this season, the surface maps/analysis did not relocate the low for a while, there was a time lag of about 12 hours. I think some here are basically expressing the same idea.
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- cycloneye
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http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/tc_pages/tc_home.html
Click on the photo of 92L and see a new position at 00:00z 16.0n-59.0w.
Click on the photo of 92L and see a new position at 00:00z 16.0n-59.0w.
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Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
And it goes "Poof!" I know the CIMSS analysis only shows 10-20kts of shear over the area, but a loop of satellite leads me to think the shear is stronger than that. Regardless, almost all deep convection associated with 92L has falled apart over the past 4-5 hours. Remember, only a relatively small number of INVESTs "grow up" to be cyclones or depressions, and we're 0 for 2 since Beta developed (the first was the one that traversed the Leeward islands a few days ago and entered the Caribbean without organizing).
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