
This run imho is very sus; it's one thing if it's another storm, but for there to be three storms like this, one of which seems to have no hard time intensifying despite being in a relatively dry environment, I sort of smell convective bias here lol
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Category5Kaiju wrote:Lol, the third system doesn't even have a pressure millibar reading on it for a bit of time and interacts with the 933 mbar system![]()
This run imho is very sus; it's one thing if it's another storm, but for there to be three storms like this, one of which seems to have no time intensifying despite being in a relatively dry environment, I sort of smell convective bias here lol
skyline385 wrote:Category5Kaiju wrote:Lol, the third system doesn't even have a pressure millibar reading on it for a bit of time and interacts with the 933 mbar system![]()
This run imho is very sus; it's one thing if it's another storm, but for there to be three storms like this, one of which seems to have no time intensifying despite being in a relatively dry environment, I sort of smell convective bias here lol
Nah that's just a bug (or shortcoming) in Levi's plotting code. And yea the GFS has been very sus with long term forecasts, overdoing the convective feedback everytime.
https://i.imgur.com/XD00V43.png
Category5Kaiju wrote:Lol, the third system doesn't even have a pressure millibar reading on it for a bit of time and interacts with the 933 mbar system![]()
This run imho is very sus; it's one thing if it's another storm, but for there to be three storms like this, one of which seems to have no hard time intensifying despite being in a relatively dry environment, I sort of smell convective bias here lol
Sciencerocks wrote:
This year is acting like a nino!!! I am floored.
Ntxw wrote:The question to ask here is what role does ENSO sub-surface play for the EPAC? We do technically have a Nina but the sub-surface has a big warm pool lurking down there. This is a bit different than traditional Ninas where a large cold pool usually dominates. Does it have any effect on the PNA? That's been running quite positive for awhile.
Yellow Evan wrote:Ntxw wrote:The question to ask here is what role does ENSO sub-surface play for the EPAC? We do technically have a Nina but the sub-surface has a big warm pool lurking down there. This is a bit different than traditional Ninas where a large cold pool usually dominates. Does it have any effect on the PNA? That's been running quite positive for awhile.
The undercurrents that carry warm water from the WPAC to the EPAC only exist by the surface AFAIK so I doubt the sun-surface pool is doing much. The PNA positivity correlates with ENSO so there’s a possible connection I guess.
Going to be 75 soon with 06E and then most models think there is another behind it.zzh wrote:The current EPAC ace is 55.6, the third most active since 1990, only trailing 2015 and 1992. It is definitely not normal.
Sciencerocks wrote:
This year is acting like a nino!!! I am floored.
aspen wrote:If Celia gets upgraded in post-season analysis and Estelle’s intensification continues, that means the EPac will have six consecutive hurricanes….in a -ENSO and -PDO year.
Something is not right with this year. In 2020 and 2021, so many EPac systems struggled to even get past 50 kt and looked like tropical roadkill. The Nina is still in place, but the EPac is somehow far less hostile.
MHC Tracking wrote:aspen wrote:If Celia gets upgraded in post-season analysis and Estelle’s intensification continues, that means the EPac will have six consecutive hurricanes….in a -ENSO and -PDO year.
Something is not right with this year. In 2020 and 2021, so many EPac systems struggled to even get past 50 kt and looked like tropical roadkill. The Nina is still in place, but the EPac is somehow far less hostile.
Pretty much no chance Celia is upped imo, ASCAT supported only 40-45 kt a little before peak, factoring in some intensification afterwards as evidenced by rising MW estimates, ~55 kt seems about right
MHC Tracking wrote:Sciencerocks wrote:
This year is acting like a nino!!! I am floored.
Does not seem to be a reliable forecast given the unrealistic refusal to correctly propagate the MJO out of the Pacific through the entirety of the run. Note the ECMWF and GEM seem to have a better handle on things here
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