Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Little change to 93L; Brazilian floods kill 42
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 02:18 PM GMT on Ιούνιος 23, 2010 +6
There has been little change over the past 24 hours to the tropical wave (Invest 93L) located a few hundred miles south of Haiti. The storm has brought heavy rains to the waters south of Hispaniola, with radar precipitation estimates from the Puerto Rico radar of over six inches of rain in the past day. The heaviest rains have avoided land areas so far. Satellite loops show a very disorganized system, with no low-level spiral bands and only limited heavy thunderstorm activity. There are no signs of a surface circulation visible on satellite imagery. Pressures at the ground stations surrounding the storm (Bahahona and Kingston) are not falling. Water vapor satellite loops show that moist air surrounds 93L, though there is a modest patch of dry air to the storm's southwest. This dry air is likely contributing to the lack of heavy thunderstorms on 93L's west side, slowing development. Wind shear is a low 5 - 15 knots. The high wind shear associated with the strong winds of the subtropical jet stream are over the northern Caribbean, too far north to interfere with development, but close enough to provide good upper-level outflow for the storm. Visible satellite loops show high level cirrus clouds streaming away from 93L to the northeast, evidence of the upper-level outflow channel that is developing to the storm's north. Sea Surface Temperatures are plenty warm, a record 29 - 30°C. The Madden-Julian oscillation (MJO) currently favors upward motion over the Caribbean, which will act to increase the chances of tropical storm formation this week. The main negative for 93L continues to be the lack of spin. The University of Wisconsin 850 mb relative vorticity analysis is showing that spin at 850 mb (roughly 5,000 feet in altitude) has increased over the past day, but 93L needs to acquire additional spin before it can grow more organized. The Hurricane Hunters are on call to investigate 93L Thursday afternoon. Today's flight was canceled, due to 93L's lack of development.


Figure 1. Morning visible satellite image of the central Caribbean disturbance 93L.

Track forecast for 93L
NHC is giving 93L a 30% chance of developing into a tropical depression by Friday morning, which is a reasonable forecast. Given the storm's current lack of spin and relatively modest amount of heavy thunderstorms, the earliest I'd expect 93L to become a tropical depression would be Thursday afternoon, with Friday more likely. Wind shear is expected to be low, less than 10 knots, over the central and western Caribbean this week. Water temperatures will be warm, dry air limited, and the MJO favorable. I don't see any major impediments to the storm becoming a tropical depression by Friday, except for possible interaction with land. There is a low (less than 20% chance) of 93L becoming a hurricane in the Caribbean. Expect 93L to bring flooding rains of 3 - 6 inches to Jamaica, eastern Cuba, and southwestern Haiti today through Thursday. These rains will spread to the Cayman Islands and central Cuba by Thursday through Friday, and western Cuba and Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on Friday and Saturday. The current run of the SHIPS model has 93L slowing down late this week to a forward speed of just 7 knots (8 mph) from its current speed of about 10 mph, in response to a weakening in the steering currents. A trough of low pressure is expected to swing down over the Eastern U.S. on Monday. If this trough is strong enough and 93L develops significantly, the storm could get pulled northwards and make landfall along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast. This is the solution of the ECMWF, GFDL, and HWRF models. This seems like a likely solution, since recent runs of most of the models have been showing a stronger trough. If 93L stays weak and/or the trough is not so strong, the storm would get pushed west-northwestwards towards the Texas coast. This is the solution of the NOGAPS and Canadian models, which foresee a more westerly track for 93L across the Yucatan Peninsula, with the storm eventually threatening Texas by Monday or Tuesday. The GFS and UKMET models do not develop 93L. A likely landfall location is highly uncertain this point, and the storm could hit virtually anywhere along the Gulf of Mexico coast from South Texas to the Florida Panhandle given the current uncertainty in its development, and the strength of next Monday's trough that may steer 93L northwards.

Intensity forecast for 93L
Forecasting the amount of wind shear in the Gulf of Mexico next week is problematic. There is currently a band of high shear near 30 knots over the Gulf, and most of the models predict that this band of high shear will lift northwards, keeping low wind shear over the Gulf next week. This should allow 93L to intensify to at least a 50 mph tropical storm, as predicted by the HWRF model. The GFDL and ECMWF models are calling for 93L to become a Category 1 or 2 hurricane, and this is certainly a possibility. I expect 93L will become Tropical Storm Alex in the Gulf of Mexico next week, and give a 20% chance that it will become a hurricane.

Elsewhere in the tropics
None of the reliable computer models is calling for tropical cyclone formation in the Atlantic over the next seven days.


Figure 2. Total accumulated precipitation in millimeters (left) for the 7-day period ending at 8am EDT June 21, 2010. The yellow colors (200+ mm, 8+ inches) are where extreme flooding was observed. Satellite image from NASA's MODIS instrument (right) for June 17, 2010, showing heavy thunderstorms over the Alagoas state of Brazil. Image credit: NASA and NOAA Climate Prediction Service.

Floods in Brazil kill dozens
Heavy rains over the past week in the northeast state of Alagoas in Brazil have led to major flooding that has killed at least 42 people. Six hundred people are still missing. This weekend rains in Alagoas and Pernambuco states are the latest in a series of devastating floods to strike Brazil this year. Since the start of Brazil's rainy season last November, 488 people have been killed by flooding and 7.5 million have been affected in 10 states. Much of the heavy rains can be blamed on El Niño, which ended in May. In April, flooding and landslides triggered by torrential rain killed at least 229 people and did $13.3 billion in damage in the Rio de Janeiro area.

It's been a bad year for floods, and there are two other major flooding disasters that have occurred in the past week. In China, the death toll has risen to 211 people, with 119 people missing, because of flooding in the southern portion of the country. France suffered a flash flood last week that killed 25.

Wind and ocean current forecast for the BP oil disaster
East to southeast winds of 10 - 15 knots will blow in the northern Gulf of Mexico today through Sunday, according to the latest marine forecast from NOAA. The resulting weak ocean currents should push the oil to the west and northwest onto portions of the Louisiana and Alabama coasts, according to the latest trajectory forecasts from NOAA and the State of Louisiana. I would expect Mississippi to have its most serious threat of oil yet early next week as these winds continue. The longer range outlook is uncertain, and will depend upon what 93L does.

Resources for the BP oil disaster
My post, What a hurricane would do the Deepwater Horizon oil spill
My post on the Southwest Florida "Forbidden Zone" where surface oil will rarely go
My post on what oil might do to a hurricane
NOAA's interactive mapping tool allows one to overlay wind and ocean current forecasts, oil locations, etc.
Gulf Oil Blog from the UGA Department of Marine Sciences
Oil Spill Academic Task Force
University of South Florida Ocean Circulation Group oil spill forecasts
ROFFS Deepwater Horizon page
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery from the University of Miami

Jeff Masters
Categories: Flood Hurricane
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3152. sarahjola 07:36 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
i guess i shall wait and see what the models say in the morning. good night all
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3153. SALAMETGRAD 07:38 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Convection is still displaced well to the east of where the 6z models initialized. In the meantime, the invest would need to develop a center further east of the initialization point to have any shot at all... at least in the short term. (IMO)
3154. TampaSpin 07:38 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Good Nite all.....i'm out too...
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3155. MississippiWx 07:39 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
.
Member Since: Ιούλιος 15, 2006 Posts: 14 Comments: 8889
3156. cirrocumulus 07:41 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Thanks jlp. I think the mid level may start to hit the surface at about 180 miles from most model initiations of the low level. That would be farther north. It does look like it will possibly come together fairly rapidly.
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3157. Twisterman555 07:42 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting MississippiWx:


216:



216 hasn't came out yet, it is only up to 168 hours.
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3158. cirrocumulus 07:43 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
xcool, it looks like the latest models have shifted the intensity higher from the last ones.
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3159. MississippiWx 07:44 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting Twisterman555:


216 hasn't came out yet, it is only up to 168 hours.


Yeah, I noticed that...
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3161. Twisterman555 07:45 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting MississippiWx:


Yeah, I noticed that...


Haha just pointing that out.
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3163. xcool 07:47 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
I'M BACK
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3164. xcool 07:48 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
MY SON JUST UP NOW HA
Member Since: Σεπτέμβριος 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15526
3165. NCHurricane2009 07:48 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/flt/t1/flash-avn.html

Click on the HDW-high check box and L/L check box during animation, You can see upper-level winds are westerly beginning at 81W, still have some influence from that ever-so persistent but weakening TUTT to the north. No wonder why 93L can't produced storms over its surface wave axis, those westerlies are killing outflow west of the axis. However, east of the axis is great outflow under the anticyclone, and it looks like good mid-level spin by Jamaica. Unless the low-level wave axis (the area of lowest surface pressure) reforms to the northeast, 93L will not ever develop. Anyone know if surface pressures are falling by Jamaica?
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3167. MississippiWx 07:49 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting Twisterman555:


Haha just pointing that out.


Are you sure? Something seems weird about that RaleighWX site. If you look at 00z, it was initialized on 00z Wednesday, not Thursday. It seems like to me that up to 168hrs is from last night's 00z run and then after that is tonight's 00z run. I'm pretty sure last night's 00z run had a hurricane hitting in that same spot...Something isn't right with that website.
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3168. xcool 07:51 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
AL, 93, 2010062406, , BEST, 0, 166N, 804W, 25, 1009, WV, 34, NEQ,
Member Since: Σεπτέμβριος 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15526
3169. Twisterman555 07:52 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting MississippiWx:


Are you sure? Something seems weird about that RaleighWX site. If you look at 00z, it was initialized on 00z Wednesday, not Thursday. It seems like to me that up to 168hrs is from last night's 00z run and then after that is tonight's 00z run. I'm pretty sure last night's 00z run had a hurricane hitting in that same spot...Something isn't right with that website.


Hm, see I have never had a link to the ECMWF model until xcool linked the model on the last page. But yeah something seems wrong.
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3170. xcool 07:53 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
GO TO FREE SITE.
Member Since: Σεπτέμβριος 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15526
3171. SALAMETGRAD 07:54 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting NCHurricane2009:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/flt/t1/flash-avn.html

Click on the HDW-high check box and L/L check box during animation, You can see upper-level winds are westerly beginning at 81W, still have some influence from that ever-so persistent but weakening TUTT to the north. No wonder why 93L can't produced storms over its surface wave axis, those westerlies are killing outflow west of the axis. However, east of the axis is great outflow under the anticyclone, and it looks like good mid-level spin by Jamaica. Unless the low-level wave axis (the area of lowest surface pressure) reforms to the northeast, 93L will not ever develop. Anyone know if surface pressures are falling by Jamaica?


Pressures have gradually fallen over the past couple of hours from ~29.90 to 29.80 on the island.
3173. NCHurricane2009 07:57 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting SALAMETGRAD:


Pressures have gradually fallen over the past couple of hours from ~29.90 to 29.80...


Yep, I think we have to look toward Jamaica. The fact that surface pressures are falling when the tropical wave should be moving westward and away from Jamaica (pressures should be rising there now, not falling) means to me that the system is trying to reform to the NE, and the satellite organization is improving to the NE. Perhaps we may be taking off with something toward Jamaica. Anyone have a radar of Jamaica?
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3174. xcool 07:57 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    


oh my


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3175. MississippiWx 07:58 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting btwntx08:
OMG what the lol look what happen to the vitocity lol
Link


Yeah, was just about to post that. I was thinking that might happen. Circulation east of Jamaica is wanting to take over and satellite presentation there is very supportive of it.
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3176. Twisterman555 08:00 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Anyways I am off, we will see what happens with 93L later today. I only post a few times a year at night when the blog is slowed down. I'll go back to just reading today, because I am sure that the blog will be busy in the afternoon haha.
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3177. MississippiWx 08:01 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
93L just has the look of a strengthening system (the circulation near Jamaica). Nice comma of convection building around it. This is where our TD forms.
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3178. xcool 08:01 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
bye all
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3179. NCHurricane2009 08:02 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Anyone stationed at Jamiaca tonight that can report what its like there now?
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3181. SALAMETGRAD 08:02 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting NCHurricane2009:


Yep, I think we have to look toward Jamaica. The fact that surface pressures are falling when the tropical wave should be moving westward and away from Jamaica (pressures should be rising there now, not falling) means to me that the system is trying to reform to the NE, and the satellite organization is improving to the NE. Perhaps we may be taking off with something toward Jamaica. Anyone have a radar of Jamaica?


I've tried to pull up radar; however, been unsuccessful. I know a others are having issues pulling up radar data from the island.

Link
3182. tornadodude 08:03 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
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3183. SALAMETGRAD 08:06 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Link

Here's a link to current obs in Jamaica. I have to say the Westerly wind earlier tonight had me a little concerned.
3184. cirrocumulus 08:17 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Now, I'm seeing another circulation at 76 17. Or 75.8/17 approx.
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3187. WatchingThisOne 08:22 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting MississippiWx:


Are you sure? Something seems weird about that RaleighWX site. If you look at 00z, it was initialized on 00z Wednesday, not Thursday. It seems like to me that up to 168hrs is from last night's 00z run and then after that is tonight's 00z run. I'm pretty sure last night's 00z run had a hurricane hitting in that same spot...Something isn't right with that website.


You need to hit refresh on that site.
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3188. cirrocumulus 08:24 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
It sounds simple, but if you can have three tornadoes or dust devils, why not three circulations? It seems like the mid level circulation sent energy to an even bigger set of energy to the south and that may spin up to be the center later. The most energy precip wise is the third center east of the low level spin and south of the mid level spin.
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3189. JLPR2 08:28 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Couples Swept Away, Negril, Jamaica (PWS)
Updated: 44 sec ago
Mostly Cloudy
76.1 °F / 24.5 °C
Mostly Cloudy
Humidity: 92%
Dew Point: 74 °F / 23 °C
Wind: 0.0 mph / 0 km/h
Wind Gust: 9.0 mph / 14 km/h
Pressure: 29.79 in / 1008.7 hPa (Steady)

1008mb with 1009-1010mb on the other sites in Jamaica
Interesting, but no west winds anywhere, there are ESE ones now
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3190. cirrocumulus 08:34 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Now it looks like a cold front diving south with the precip. Definitely a lot of energy transfer. Later.
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3191. JLPR2 08:41 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
850mb:

700mb:

500mb:


If 93L actually manages to reform its center it has a better chance of developing earlier and who knows what that'll do to the track.
850,700 and 500mb vorts are there and if the new 850mb one manages to steal all the energy from the older one we might finally have some stacking going own, followed by strengthening,
what a complex and confusing situation
ehh... -.-
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3192. cirrocumulus 08:43 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Actually, the cloud tops circle at 76 16. I saw that an hour ago. That makes the final four circulations. Take your pick.
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3193. JLPR2 08:45 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Well I'm off to bed
Good night everyone!

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3194. Fl30258713 08:50 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting xcool:



Those models are just ugly. It will probably create more bubbling along Pensacola Beach if those tracks hold out.
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3196. wunderkidcayman 09:07 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Hey guys I think that 93L is relocating SE of Jamaica there is stacked vort pressures are low convection is builiding there is looking better and better if any on was asking here is the radar Link
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3197. lopaka001 09:12 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Wind Shear still a factor?
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3198. wunderkidcayman 09:13 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
the NHC already know that the COC is reforming near SE Jamaica look they even made a cone for it LOL

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3199. wunderkidcayman 09:42 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
hey check this out

24/0545 UTC 16.8N 77.8W TOO WEAK 93L
23/2345 UTC 17.0N 79.5W TOO WEAK 93L
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3200. wunderkidcayman 09:55 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Hello anyone here
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3201. KoritheMan 09:56 AM GMT on Ιούνιος 24, 2010    
Quoting wunderkidcayman:
Hello anyone here


Me. But still not impressed with 93L.
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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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