CYCLONE MIKE wrote:Alright, since we have something brewing down there I have a couple of questions for anyone that can give some answers. First of all can this thing go POOF before our eyes overnight and die out? Second I was just looking at all the latest sat. pics from the gulf and noticed a big slug of dry air over Texas working SE towards our developing system. I know I am rusty as I have not read loops for 9 months or so, but would that not shear this apart or at least move it more easterly? Lastly how do the computer models pick up on the potential for storms to develop out of nowhere a week in advance?
Very unlikely that this system just dies given the convection, no front or shear and the developing low at the surface. The ridge building eastward over the western gulf has made it about as far eastward as it is forecasted to expand, meanwhile a ridge in the Atlantic is forcasted to push across Forida out into the eastern Gulf, this will provide the mechanism for this forming low to be driven northward between them. Models are fed all weather data, pressures, winds, e.t.c.... from around the globe, based on software that simulates general weather patterns they then in turn forecast where weather comes together to form lows, highs, fronts, e.t.c... It is alot more complicated than what I just gave you, but it is the basics. Hope I helped you some.