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Windspeed

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Everything posted by Windspeed

  1. Laura and Michael both had 29-30°C SSTs right up to the shoreline. Michael's VWS decreased the closer it got to he coast. Laura's increased too late, essentially just after landfall, and wasn't able to disrupt its core. Delta's VWS should be infringing at least 6-9 hours prior to landfall. Some modeling even slows down Delta's forward motion near landfall which could allow shear and cooler SSTs to disrupt the core even further. That being said, Delta's circulation is going to be large and the surge impact will already have been attained regardless if it's falling apart at landfall.
  2. Ring of 80-90°C cloudtops surrounding the eye now.
  3. Yeah again intensification this evening and whatever more Delta can muster by midday tomorrow matters only in fetch for surge. Winds are going to come down by landfall but the radius of 34+ wind is going to continue increasing. This is going to be a surge event.
  4. Hmm.. Wouldn't have thought W GOM majors were so rare in October.
  5. Excellent post by Philippe Papin: https://twitter.com/pppapin/status/1314350609924067328?s=19
  6. That's a mid-upper low. It's evolving into a stronger ULL due to backside outflow / TUTT off of Delta. Actually, I think you were being facetious here. Anyway... yeah.
  7. -93°C in those towers within the NW semicircle.
  8. Dakota Smith at CIRA (Atmospheric Research Division at CSU) has the best satellite posts.
  9. Eyewall is closed. With that dropsonde showing 121 kts just above surface level, I'd say strengthening will continue as recon makes more passes. Think this will make a run at Cat 4 during DMAX.
  10. Yeah FL supports upgrade as well. The pressure drop supports upgrade. That is inevitably going to mix down. I'd say based on the pressure drop alone that recon will make several more passes. We have significant intensification in progress.
  11. We'll have a dropsonde and sampling of the NE quadrant in mere minutes.
  12. Recon about to make SW to NE pass. We'll know intensity very soon.
  13. Wow... And just like that, a strong CB went up in the eastern eyewall and is rotating around in the northern semicircle. This has the look of a strong Category 3 hurricane. Need recon.
  14. There's about 8-10 kts of southerly shear. Relatively too weak to prevent intensification but perhaps enough to keep downshear convection weaker as CBs go up and rotate around the eyewall. As Delta turns more northward and gains forward motion, there will be a window tonight (6-12 hrs) where shear is weakest prior to an increase in SSW VVW flow and mid-level shear prior to landfall. That and cooler SSTs should eventually put a halt on whatever intensification is gained by Delta through mid-day tomorrow. That should be prior to landfall.
  15. Here's an animation of the classic NHC AVN IR colorization...
  16. Heh, was I analyzing frame by frame? How about noting the obviously clear symmetrical eye at the end of that animation and obvious continued improvement. You know, the first clear eye we've had since Delta existed?
  17. Likely response of an intense convective plume going up in the northern to western semicircle creating subsidence in the SE region of the core. That may just as well wrap shortly. Either way the overall structure has improved significantly since early this morning. Recon is about to make another pass. Should know more in just a bit.
  18. Continuing to improve. Really convenient when big structural changes occur during daylight as nothing beats visible.
  19. Eye is showing signs of warming and the high cirrus are starting to respond with dissipation. You can see the sinking motion. Banding / convective plumes in the eyewall are continuing to go up and they look symmetrical as well. All systems go...
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