Ed Mahmoud wrote:Hybridstorm_November2001 wrote:This discussion has me pondering some things. Can anyone explain to me why Northern GOM land falling storms tend to be about the same maximum strength (in terms of sustained winds) cat 3, or low end cat 4, as maximum strength Southern New England/Long Island land falling storms?
http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/Landsea/12Tides.pdf Does dry air entrainment and low oceanic heat content play that huge a negative role in the maintenance of TC intensity?
I also think baroclinic factors help New England/New York storms at least partially maintain wind speed despite cold water off the coast. The 1938 storm was supposedly moving near 60 mph at landfall, which minimized time over cold water, and while a strong jet from the South no doubt disrupted the West side of the storm, it might have helped the Eastern side maintain strength.
About low oceanic heat content in the Northern GOMEX, and dry air from Texas/Mexico. I've always suspected, if a storm moves fast enough over 30ºC water, it won't have time to upwell sufficient cold water to cause rapid weakening. Ditto time to entrain dry air. So a Cat 4 or Cat 5 moving in at 20 mph or faster is more dangerous than one moving at 10 mph.
It would seem that the Northern Gulf will support at least Category 2 on its own, as only landfall seemed to stop Humberto from becoming a Cat 2 last year.
I think the most the northern Gulf can support while strengthening at landfall is Category 3, although the sides of the Gulf can support a strengthening Cat 5 if the storm is very compact (like Charley if he had more time over water).
Looking at the definite major hurricanes in the northern Gulf since 1950, the only one that seemed to make landfall while strengthening was Eloise. I'm not sure the size of that one (probably small), but it was fast-moving. Elena and Alicia seemed to be holding their intensity up to landfall as well, but might have been weakening a bit. All the others (Audrey, Carla, Hilda, Betsy, Alma, Camille, Carmen, Frederic, Kate, Andrew, Opal, Lili, Ivan, Dennis, Katrina, Rita) were clearly weakening at landfall.
As for the 1938 storm, yes it did make landfall as a solid Cat 3 (I think 110 kt), but it was weakening up to landfall (it was a Cat 5 in the open water).