What's the GFDL Seeing?
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What's the GFDL Seeing?
Er…could somebody check my math?
Here’s what I have, and it’s not adding up.
At 12Z (8AM this morning) the center of Emily was located at 11.0N 50.5W
At 18Z (2PM this afternoon) the center of Emily was located at 11.1N 51.9W
Ignoring the northerly component for a moment…that’s 1.4 degrees of longitude in 6 hours.
There are 24 hours in a day…so…
24/6 = 4 * 1.4 = 5.6 degrees * 60 minutes = 336 nautical miles in one day
336/24 hours = 14 knots.
The 12Z track guidance is tightly clustered around a location near (the NHC forecast for 0Z) : 11.4N 53.8W at 0Z this evening.
Saving some time that’s a forward rate of about 17 knots, rounded up. For Emily to make that verification point it will have to move at an average rate of 19 knots in the next six hours.
Either my math is bad, or Emily isn’t moving that fast, or Emily is accelerating.
The reason I have taken this long walk around a small house…perhaps…is that the GFDL model right now is the only model that isn’t rapidly zooming Emily off to the west, and the average pace in that model form 12Z more closely matches the math above. Perhaps the model is on to something. Or perhaps…there was a typo in the public advisory. Or…perhaps…the center is on the back side of the convective envelope and isn’t moving quite as fast as indicated.
Anyway…I realize I am reading FAR too much into 6 hours of motion…but all of this is an attempt to sniff out what the GFDL is up to.
MW
Here’s what I have, and it’s not adding up.
At 12Z (8AM this morning) the center of Emily was located at 11.0N 50.5W
At 18Z (2PM this afternoon) the center of Emily was located at 11.1N 51.9W
Ignoring the northerly component for a moment…that’s 1.4 degrees of longitude in 6 hours.
There are 24 hours in a day…so…
24/6 = 4 * 1.4 = 5.6 degrees * 60 minutes = 336 nautical miles in one day
336/24 hours = 14 knots.
The 12Z track guidance is tightly clustered around a location near (the NHC forecast for 0Z) : 11.4N 53.8W at 0Z this evening.
Saving some time that’s a forward rate of about 17 knots, rounded up. For Emily to make that verification point it will have to move at an average rate of 19 knots in the next six hours.
Either my math is bad, or Emily isn’t moving that fast, or Emily is accelerating.
The reason I have taken this long walk around a small house…perhaps…is that the GFDL model right now is the only model that isn’t rapidly zooming Emily off to the west, and the average pace in that model form 12Z more closely matches the math above. Perhaps the model is on to something. Or perhaps…there was a typo in the public advisory. Or…perhaps…the center is on the back side of the convective envelope and isn’t moving quite as fast as indicated.
Anyway…I realize I am reading FAR too much into 6 hours of motion…but all of this is an attempt to sniff out what the GFDL is up to.
MW
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Updating on the twitter now: http://www.twitter.com/@watkinstrack
- cycloneye
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The center is a tad on the back of convection.
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12/1745 UTC 11.1N 52.0W T3.0/3.0 EMILY -- Atlantic Ocean
Mike look at where the SSD Dvorak sat estimates puts it.
Mike look at where the SSD Dvorak sat estimates puts it.
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Do the math
MWatkins: you are something jeje. I read your post twice, then I understood. but let me tell you that was like trying to solve a mystery... umm playing CLUE against you can't be an easy task.. jejeje.
More seriously, which model project a weak Emily, because right now she looks kind of ill.
http://www.intellicast.com/Local/USNati ... e&pid=none
More seriously, which model project a weak Emily, because right now she looks kind of ill.
http://www.intellicast.com/Local/USNati ... e&pid=none
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Slow movement could mean the steering ridge isn't that strong. A lift towards the WNW is more likely in that case like GFDL is showing.
GFDL cranks a 135mph storm just off the west tip of Haiti, but then curiously brings it down a notch in improving SST's south of Cuba where Dennis went 150mph?
GFDL cranks a 135mph storm just off the west tip of Haiti, but then curiously brings it down a notch in improving SST's south of Cuba where Dennis went 150mph?
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Sanibel wrote:Slow movement could mean the steering ridge isn't that strong. A lift towards the WNW is more likely in that case like GFDL is showing.
GFDL cranks a 135mph storm just off the west tip of Haiti, but then curiously brings it down a notch in improving SST's south of Cuba where Dennis went 150mph?
GFDL intensity forecasts should be taken with a grain of salt. Every storm is a major to it.
Its track, I'm not sure. Some good theories here though.
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