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Tropical Storm Jose


NortheastPAWx

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20 minutes ago, Paragon said:

Looks like the storm will do two loops now- one where it is now and the other one closer to our latitude; we are talking about the 7-10 day period here when the ridge builds back in and either stalls the system or loops it back.  This one looks like a north of Hatteras system vs what Irma was (south of Hatteras.)  Is this still going to be a hurricane 7-10 days from now?  It's barely one right now!

OBX, to Nova Scotia are definitely the areas to just keep an eye on it; this is particularly true for boaters/beach goers and people who have interests right on the coast. This is a completely different setup than that with Irma, so little to no parallels can be drawn to her at this point.

When TC's gain latitude beyond the subtropics, they can often acquire extra tropical characteristics--windfield expands as does circulation, so they tend to have broader regional impact but less severe impact in the immediate vicinity of the center relative to a true TC. Either way I wouldn't be focused on intensity right now....

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1 minute ago, jbenedet said:

OBX, to Nova Scotia are definitely the areas to just keep an eye on it; this is particularly true for boaters/beach goers and people who have interests right on the coast. This is a completely different setup than that with Irma, so little to no parallels can be drawn to her at this point.

When TC's gain latitude beyond the subtropics, they can often acquire extra tropical characteristics--windfield expands as does circulation, so they tend to have broader regional impact but less severe impact in the immediate vicinity of the center relative to a true TC. Either way I wouldn't be focused on intensity right now....

So this is way more of a "Perfect Storm" 1991 kind of scenario than it is a Sandy-like scenario.

 

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So this is way more of a "Perfect Storm" 1991 kind of scenario than it is a Sandy-like scenario.

 

 

 

 

This is a completely different setup than Sandy. This is not a trough hooking him left, hence the meandering just off the mid atl/ne late in the period. This is completely dictated by the WAR. That being said, the PNA looks to spike pretty positive in the 3-7 day period, which opens the door to the potential of troughing, despite any mesoscale feature being reflected with current modeling.

 

 

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1 minute ago, USCG RS said:
11 minutes ago, Paragon said:
So this is way more of a "Perfect Storm" 1991 kind of scenario than it is a Sandy-like scenario.

 
 

Potentially... This is a completely different setup than Sandy. This is not a trough hooking him left, hence the meandering just of the mid atl/ne late in the period. This is completely dictated by the WAR. That being said, the PNA looks to spike pretty positive in the 3-7 day period, which opens the door to the potential of troughing, despite any mesoscale feature being reflected with current modeling.

And climatologically, looping systems like these rarely if ever make landfall.  In the winter we'd be excited by something like this because it could mean a lot of snow falling over a long amount of time (some of our biggest noreasters have looped-  a la 1888, 1978 and 2010.)

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Still favoring an OTS track for Jose, but IF it were to come west, here's how it would happen:

Talim recurves a little stronger than forecast due to a sooner turn N/NE limiting land interaction with China

us_cyclone-en-087-0_euro_2017091300_15855_481_talim-240.png

As a result, more latent heat transported into the NPAC jet, resulting in more amplification than forecast. 

us_model-en-087-0_modez_2017091300_108_15835_449.png

Talim is recurving much farther west than Sanvu. As a result, the whole developing RWT shifts west. Ridge that was over the west coast is over the EPAC

us_model-en-087-0_modez_2017091300_192_15804_449.png

With a strong trough over the western US (snow in the Rockies!)

us_model-en-087-0_modez_2017091300_192_15806_449.png

This then amps up the blocking high developing N of Jose, which would allow the storm to come west. That assumes that the ECMWF has correctly modeled an entire hemisphere's worth of RWT interactions. Slim chance, but is it impossible?  No. Far from it. 

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Jose is a gymnast. The Category 1 hurricane is currently performing an anti-cyclonic loop out in the open Atlantic. In the days ahead, it is seemingly destined to become Earth's version of Jupiter's famous red spot. If the 9/13 6z run of the GFS is to be believed, Jose will become a permanent feature over the Atlantic Ocean, persisting through that model's entire 384-hour forecast period as the storm's steering currents again break down.

Not surprisingly, all of this seems to have confused the models to some extent. Overnight, the guidance's run-to-run continuity broke down. Gone were the UKMET's forecast of Florida landfall and the ECMWF's and GFS's out to sea consensus. Back was an earlier GFS idea of East Coast landfall.

In cases where such uncertainty exists, climatology becomes more important. Until the guidance pins down the details of the evolving synoptic pattern and the interactions among the various synoptic features, confidence in any specific solution is low. During such times, climatology can provide some useful insight.

Unlike the shattered model stability, the probabilistic outcomes from historic climatology associated with hurricanes in the vicinity of Jose has changed little over the past 24 hours. Of the 39 hurricanes that passed within 100 nautical miles of Jose's 5 am position, 8 or 21% made U.S. landfall (yesterday's 5 am figure was 19%). Landfall in eastern Canada was about 40% higher than U.S. landfall, with Newfoundland and Labrador (8 landfalls) being the favored spot for such landfall.

So, at least for now, U.S. landfall remains a low probability scenario. Landfall in Canada is more likely than U.S. landfall, but no landfall whatsoever remains somewhat more likely than any landfall (U.S. or Canada). Much uncertainty exists.

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1 hour ago, Paragon said:

So this is way more of a "Perfect Storm" 1991 kind of scenario than it is a Sandy-like scenario.

 

I'd caution against making comparisons to either at this point to avoid being labeled a sensationalist, but that's just me. In short, it's still too early to say. I see little similarity to either right now.

The significant high latitude blocking is something both systems had. So there's that. The glaring difference at this point is the lack of troughing over the eastern CONUS. But as I said before, it's still early so both aspects could change to bear more or less resemblance to those systems...

 

 
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26 minutes ago, jbenedet said:

I'd caution against making comparisons to either at this point to avoid being labeled a sensationalist, but that's just me. In short, it's still too early to say. I see little similarity to either right now.

The significant high latitude blocking is something both systems had. So there's that. The glaring difference at this point is the lack of troughing over the eastern CONUS. But as I said before, it's still early so both aspects could change to bear more or less resemblance to those systems...

 

 

No I just mean in terms of looping around offshore and the fact that both transitioned to extratropical with an expanding windfield, not in terms of impact of course.  Storms of this type rarely make landfall at our latitude.  The lack of troughing that you mentioned has perhaps something to do with this being much earlier in the season, as both the Perfect Storm and Sandy occurred in late October.  In terms of impact, I've always felt this to be more like Felix, which means days of high surf, rip tides, etc.  Note that none of these events produced much rainfall for our region, but a lot of wind (and in Felix's case, not even that- but Felix never reached our latitude- it shot straight east from Hatteras after doing its loop and stall.)

This might have been a far higher impact system in the winter, when you actually want an offshore looping track to produce prodigious snowfall totals.


 

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And climatologically, looping systems like these rarely if ever make landfall.  In the winter we'd be excited by something like this because it could mean a lot of snow falling over a long amount of time (some of our biggest noreasters have looped-  a la 1888, 1978 and 2010.)

If we are going to get anything of substance, we need a trough to swing through. He's not going to be all that strong up here, especially as the sheer strengthens once more. Additionally, we have to see how much intensity he can recover. If he regains a good core structure and deepens in the Bahamas region with the warm SSTs, then he has a chance to be significant, but we still need the trough. The ULL will not only pull him in, but transition him in such a way that he can continue to strengthen/maintain at the mid lattidtiudes while encountering strong sheer and much cooler SSTs. Yes there is a wall to his East, but if he just meanders there, he dies off the EC, and quickly (not that that is a bad thing).


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1 hour ago, donsutherland1 said:

Jose is a gymnast. The Category 1 hurricane is currently performing an anti-cyclonic loop out in the open Atlantic. In the days ahead, it is seemingly destined to become Earth's version of Jupiter's famous red spot. If the 9/13 6z run of the GFS is to be believed, Jose will become a permanent feature over the Atlantic Ocean, persisting through that model's entire 384-hour forecast period as the storm's steering currents again break down.

Not surprisingly, all of this seems to have confused the models to some extent. Overnight, the guidance's run-to-run continuity broke down. Gone were the UKMET's forecast of Florida landfall and the ECMWF's and GFS's out to sea consensus. Back was an earlier GFS idea of East Coast landfall.

In cases where such uncertainty exists, climatology becomes more important. Until the guidance pins down the details of the evolving synoptic pattern and the interactions among the various synoptic features, confidence in any specific solution is low. During such times, climatology can provide some useful insight.

Unlike the shattered model stability, the probabilistic outcomes from historic climatology associated with hurricanes in the vicinity of Jose has changed little over the past 24 hours. Of the 39 hurricanes that passed within 100 nautical miles of Jose's 5 am position, 8 or 21% made U.S. landfall (yesterday's 5 am figure was 19%). Landfall in eastern Canada was about 40% higher than U.S. landfall, with Newfoundland and Labrador (8 landfalls) being the favored spot for such landfall.

So, at least for now, U.S. landfall remains a low probability scenario. Landfall in Canada is more likely than U.S. landfall, but no landfall whatsoever remains somewhat more likely than any landfall (U.S. or Canada). Much uncertainty exists.

I really enjoy your statistical analyses and level head. Thanks for all of the extra work you do to teach the public that visits this forum. You're the best.

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3 minutes ago, Snow88 said:

12z Euro retrogrades Jose close to Long Island


 

lol this is awesome- people were talking about how great the Euro was with Irma (meanwhile it busted badly close in to the event- it was too far west), and now the Euro shows a hit.  What day/hour does it show it close to Long Island?

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