
Watch it with this loop:

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supercane4867 wrote:Center has relocated possibly closer to under the deep convection.
supercane4867 wrote:Center has relocated possibly closer to under the deep convection.
USTropics wrote:Unfortunately Gonzalo's size was a double edged sword. It needed to remain small and within the protective pouch it created, the environment outside of that bubble was just too stable. When the pressure began to drop and the circulation increased, an increase in subsidence occurred in the inflow layer. That disrupted the mid-upper level flow, and with the upper-level moisture being tugged NW by the pressure gradient of the two stable air masses, the upper-level circulation most likely became decoupled. That left the mid-level circulation behind (which quickly dissipated), and essentially Gonzalo is having to start over again.
RT23 wrote:What are the chances this is downgraded at 11? Look like a huge struggle to maintain CoC
aspen wrote:USTropics wrote:Unfortunately Gonzalo's size was a double edged sword. It needed to remain small and within the protective pouch it created, the environment outside of that bubble was just too stable. When the pressure began to drop and the circulation increased, an increase in subsidence occurred in the inflow layer. That disrupted the mid-upper level flow, and with the upper-level moisture being tugged NW by the pressure gradient of the two stable air masses, the upper-level circulation most likely became decoupled. That left the mid-level circulation behind (which quickly dissipated), and essentially Gonzalo is having to start over again.
The biggest question is, where will the center reform? Further south and it could escape the SAL, but too far north, and it’s likely screwed.
USTropics wrote:Unfortunately Gonzalo's size was a double edged sword. It needed to remain small and within the protective pouch it created, the environment outside of that bubble was just too stable. When the pressure began to drop and the circulation increased, an increase in subsidence occurred in the inflow layer. That disrupted the mid-upper level flow, and with the upper-level moisture being tugged NW by the pressure gradient of the two stable air masses, the upper-level circulation most likely became decoupled. That left the mid-level circulation behind (which quickly dissipated), and essentially Gonzalo is having to start over again.
It's July 23rdTheStormExpert wrote:Well Gonzalo is definitely on its death bed. Unless things change fast it’s going to go poof!
Wonder if this is a sign of things to come? As SAL and mid-level dry air don’t seem to be going anywhere anytime soon. This storm definitely underperformed.
TheStormExpert wrote:Well Gonzalo is definitely on its death bed. Unless things change fast it’s going to go poof!
Wonder if this is a sign of things to come? As SAL and mid-level dry air don’t seem to be going anywhere anytime soon. This storm definitely underperformed.
TheStormExpert wrote:Well Gonzalo is definitely on its death bed. Unless things change fast it’s going to go poof!
Wonder if this is a sign of things to come? As SAL and mid-level dry air don’t seem to be going anywhere anytime soon. This storm definitely underperformed.
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