Eye Wall Replacement Cycle

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Cookiely
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Eye Wall Replacement Cycle

#1 Postby Cookiely » Sun Jun 05, 2005 8:18 pm

Can this be forecast? Does it happen on a regular basis during a hurricane? Why does it happen? Does the hurricane always get stronger after replacement?
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#2 Postby Brent » Sun Jun 05, 2005 8:19 pm

Can't be forecasted, but they can be expected, especially with major hurricanes. Hurricanes will typically weaken during them and then re-strengthen, but not always. Not sure why it happens, it's just something all major hurricanes do.
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#3 Postby Anonymous » Sun Jun 05, 2005 8:24 pm

Not sure either but I remember that term being stressed over and over last year when we thought a system was weakenning--and of course it would come back sometimes stronger than before. Maybe all the convection "chokes" it a bit and it has to stop and take a breather and regroup.

Wasnt charley in an ERC when he came ashore?
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#4 Postby Cookiely » Sun Jun 05, 2005 8:24 pm

Brent wrote:Can't be forecasted, but they can be expected, especially with major hurricanes. Hurricanes will typically weaken during them and then re-strengthen, but not always. Not sure why it happens, it's just something all major hurricanes do.

Thanks Brent.
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#5 Postby Derek Ortt » Sun Jun 05, 2005 8:29 pm

not with any accuracy at all. We tried it last year and looked like idiots doing so (when Ivan was 145KT just east of Cayman, we forecasted 155KT at Cayman, but it completed the cycle earlier than expected and weakened to 130-135KT before reaching Cayman)
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#6 Postby Cookiely » Sun Jun 05, 2005 9:59 pm

Derek Ortt wrote:not with any accuracy at all. We tried it last year and looked like idiots doing so (when Ivan was 145KT just east of Cayman, we forecasted 155KT at Cayman, but it completed the cycle earlier than expected and weakened to 130-135KT before reaching Cayman)

Let me get this straight. After a cycle it can get stronger or weaker? and there is no way to determine which one it will be?
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#7 Postby Derek Ortt » Sun Jun 05, 2005 11:17 pm

when the inner eye collapses, it becomes much weaker. When the eye contracts and the outer eye is starting to form, it becomes more intense
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#8 Postby Cookiely » Mon Jun 06, 2005 4:50 am

Derek Ortt wrote:when the inner eye collapses, it becomes much weaker. When the eye contracts and the outer eye is starting to form, it becomes more intense

So its much easier to forecast the actual landfall but not so easy to be accurate on the projected strength at landfall. What is the greatest strength increase after a cycle replacement? one category? Could a forecast category 2 storm land as a category 4? Thanks for all your help Derek.
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#9 Postby Brent » Mon Jun 06, 2005 7:39 am

Cookiely wrote:Could a forecast category 2 storm land as a category 4? Thanks for all your help Derek.


Charley.
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#10 Postby Derek Ortt » Mon Jun 06, 2005 7:45 am

a 2 category change is normal for an EWRC, unless the system is a strong 5 when it starts, like Andrew in 1992 because the system simply was too so intense, than 25KT of weakening only dropped it to a cat 4
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#11 Postby Josephine96 » Mon Jun 06, 2005 9:22 am

ERC's usually happen with most major hurricanes.. and they can not be forecast.. Sometimes the storms can weaken.. sometimes they bomb and strengthen..
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#12 Postby weatherluvr » Mon Jun 06, 2005 10:23 am

My understanding of ERCs -- and one of the mets here can clarify or correct me here if I'm wrong -- is they occur due to the upper-level outflow not being able to keep up with the inflow of winds to the center. The excess inflow begins sinking outside of the inner eyewall, choking off and breaking up the inner eyewall.

Think of it like a clogged sink that overflows.
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#13 Postby Cookiely » Mon Jun 06, 2005 12:01 pm

Thanks to all of you for your help.
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#14 Postby Derek Ortt » Mon Jun 06, 2005 12:13 pm

I do not believe that outflow restrictions have any bearing on EWRC's.

If there was a restriction, the entire eye feature would collapse
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#15 Postby weatherluvr » Mon Jun 06, 2005 12:39 pm

Derek Ortt wrote:I do not believe that outflow restrictions have any bearing on EWRC's.

If there was a restriction, the entire eye feature would collapse


Not really outflow restriction... just not fast enough to evacuate the inflow.
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#16 Postby Wthrman13 » Mon Jun 06, 2005 12:43 pm

Eye wall replacement cycles are caused by inner-core hurricane dynamics, and not so much by external atmospheric factors. They currently cannot be forecasted (at least not with any skill), and I believe it will take a large leap in our ability to numerically forecast hurricanes at high resolution, which currently leaves much to be desired, mostly due to crude representations of physical processes in our models, such as cumulus development, turbulence, and precipitation microphysics, as well as poor initialization. Until these are vastly improved, we have virtually no skill in predicting eyewall replacement cycles.
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#17 Postby dhweather » Mon Jun 06, 2005 12:45 pm

Wthrman13 wrote:Eye wall replacement cycles are caused by inner-core hurricane dynamics, and not so much by external atmospheric factors. They currently cannot be forecasted (at least not with any skill), and I believe it will take a large leap in our ability to numerically forecast hurricanes at high resolution, which currently leaves much to be desired, mostly due to crude representations of physical processes in our models, such as cumulus development, turbulence, and precipitation microphysics, as well as poor initialization. Until these are vastly improved, we have virtually no skill in predicting eyewall replacement cycles.


But AKKUWEATHER will be able to fix that, once they get control of everything, right? :grrr:
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#18 Postby HurricaneBill » Mon Jun 06, 2005 2:00 pm

When Hurricane Debbie was seeded multiple times in 1969, the winds decreased and then increased a short time later.

The most dramatic decrease was 95KT to 70KT. However, a day later, the winds increased to 105KT.

At one point, recon said Debbie appeared to have two eyes.

It now seems more likely that Debbie was actually undergoing eyewall replacement cycles rather than being affected by seedings.
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