1900hurricane wrote:Barring upwelling, I think there's a good chance that Joaquin could have a second peak tomorrow at a higher intensity than today's. As of right now the opening of the poleward outflow channel looks like it will be very well timed with the end of eyewall replacement. Joaquin is still firing deep convection with a ring of cold medium grey on the BD curve, so if upwelling is to affect it, it hasn't started yet.
*EDIT: Huh, NHC mentions no eyewall replacement.
I guess with shallower waters those warm temperatures start to decrease with not just upwelling but the storm itself taking up that energy. Might be making that turn soon or tomorrow, if it heads away from the Bahamas it could find more fuel before ultimately accelerating and weakening (likely between Bermuda and the Maritimes, even if we can't officially rule out a closer path to the US. If it turns now I think the ECMWF solution that many other models have caught up with will be the right).
Gotta appreciate how the NHC handles changes in tracks. Modest changes until the consensus becomes more confident for it to require a shift.