Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Forecast for 92L: dissipation by Friday
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 2:17 PM GMT on June 16, 2010 +3
A low pressure system about 700 miles east of the Lesser Antilles Islands, Invest 92L, was near tropical depression status early this morning, but is currently weakening. Infrared satellite loops show the disturbance's heavy thunderstorm activity has decreased markedly in the past few hours, with the cloud top temperatures warming noticeably, indicating that 92L's thunderstorms are no longer pushing as high into the atmosphere. Water vapor satellite loops show that the storm is surrounded on all sides by dry air, though there is a region of moister air in front of it that 92L will encounter on Thursday. Wind shear as diagnosed by the University of Wisconsin is near 20 knots, though the SHIPS model is diagnosing the shear at a higher 25 - 30 knots. This high shear is pushing 92L's heavy thunderstorm activity to the east side of the center of circulation, and the center will probably become exposed to view late this morning. Had 92L been able to maintain the heavy thunderstorm activity it had early this morning for 12 or so hours, it could have been classified as a tropical depression. However, classification as a TD requires persistent heavy thunderstorm activity, typically interpreted to mean 12 hours of consistent heavy thunderstorm activity, and 92L did not meet that criterion.


Figure 1. Morning satellite image of Invest 92L. Image credit: NOAA.

The forecast for 92L: dissipation
Wind shear is the main story in the forecast for 92L, as a band of very high wind shear of 20 - 50 knots lies to the northwest of the storm. The current expected track of 92L carries it into this band of high wind shear, and the SHIPS model (based on the GFS model) is predicting that the shear will remain in the 25 - 30 knot range through Friday. Other models predict higher shear levels. It is likely that the high shear, combined with the dry air surrounding the storm, will destroy 92L by Friday. The National Hurricane Center is giving 92L a low (10% chance) of developing into a tropical depression by Friday morning, and this is a reasonable forecast. It is likely that 92L will bring heavy rain showers and wind gusts up to 35 mph on Friday to the Lesser Antilles Islands. I don't expect 92L to be organized enough to cause flooding problems to any of the islands in its path. None of our reliable global computer models develop 92L into a tropical depression. The rest of the tropical Atlantic is quiet, and none of the reliable computer models is calling for tropical cyclone development in the Atlantic over the next seven days.

Is the formation of 92L a harbinger of an active hurricane season?
According to the Hurricane FAQ, Goldenberg (2000) found that during the period 1944 - 1999, formation of a named storm in the tropical Atlantic south of 22°N and east of 77°W during June and July was a harbinger of at least an average season, and in many cases an above average season. The formation of a storm in this region during June or July is one factor the NOAA and Colorado State University seasonal hurricane forecast teams have used in the past as a predictor for an active season in their early August forecasts. Now, 92L didn't make it to named storm status, though it was pretty close to being a tropical depression. However, the near-formation of 92L into a tropical depression, is, in my mind, a clear harbinger that we can expect a severe hurricane season this year. It's very rare to have a development like 92L in that portion of the tropical Atlantic this early in the season. The lower than average wind shear and higher than average SSTs that helped 92L get organized are more likely than not to carry over into the main portion of hurricane season, giving us a much more active hurricane season than normal.


Figure 2. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) image of the oil spill taken at 7:51 am EDT Tuesday June 15, 2010, by the Canadian Radarsat-1 satellite, operated by MDA GeospatialServices of Richmond, Canada. A large amount of oil was present on the Florida Panhandle coast near Pensacola, and was headed east towards Panama City. Image credit: Center for Southeastern Tropical Advanced Remote Sensing, University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. SAR images have a resolution of 8 - 50 meters, and can be taken through clouds and precipitation.

Oil spill wind and ocean current forecast
Light and variable winds less than 10 knots will blow in the northern Gulf of Mexico for the next five days, according to the latest marine forecast from NOAA. The winds will tend to have a westerly component for the most part, which will maintain a slow (1/4 mph) eastward-moving surface ocean current that will transport oil eastwards along the Florida Panhandle coast, according to the latest ocean current forecast from NOAA's HYCOM model. These winds and currents may be capable of transporting oil east past Panama City, Florida to Cape San Blas by Monday. Oil will continue to threaten the coasts of Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi for the remainder of the week as well, according to the latest trajectory forecasts from NOAA and the State of Louisiana. The long range 8 - 16 day forecast from the GFS model indicates a typical summertime light wind regime, with winds mostly blowing out of the south or southeast. This wind regime will likely keep oil close to the coastal areas that have already seen oil impacts over the past two weeks.

NOAA has lauched a great new interactive mapping tool that allows one to overlay wind forecasts, ocean current forecasts, oil location, etc.

Oil spill resources
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 has lauched a great new interactive mapping tool that allows one to overlay forecasts and oil location observations
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

I'll have an update on Thursday.

Jeff Masters
Categories: Hurricane
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651. Caribbeanislands101 8:43 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Member Since: April 7, 2010 Posts: 5 Comments: 347
653. Caribbeanislands101 8:43 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
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654. Caribbeanislands101 8:44 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
a href="" target="_blank">Link
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655. Caribbeanislands101 8:44 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
we will see one soon enjoy !!
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657. Caribbeanislands101 8:47 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
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659. HadesGodWyvern 8:47 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
National Hurricane Center
Tropical Cyclone Advisory #2
TROPICAL DEPRESSION EP022010
21:00 PM UTC June 16 2010
==================================

At 18:00 PM UTC, Tropical Depression Two (1007 hPa) located at 15.0N 95.8W or 60 NM southwest of Puerto Angel, Mexico has sustained winds of 25 knots with gusts of 35 knots. The depression is reported as moving northwest at 3 knots.

Forecast and Intensity
====================
24 HRS: 15.3N 97.6W - 45 knots (Tropical Storm)
48 HRS: 15.7N 99.6W - 55 knots (Tropical Storm)
72 HRS: 16.0N 101.5W - 55 knots (Tropical Storm)

Tropical Cyclone Warnings/Watches
=====================================
A TROPICAL STORM WARNING FOR SALINA CRUZ TO PUNTA MALDONADO MEXICO

A TROPICAL STORM WATCH FOR WEST OF PUNTA MALDONADO TO ACAPULCO MEXICO
Member Since: May 24, 2006 Posts: 43 Comments: 36686
660. Caribbeanislands101 8:51 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Member Since: April 7, 2010 Posts: 5 Comments: 347
661. Caribbeanislands101 8:52 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
AccuWeather forecast on invest 92
Link
Member Since: April 7, 2010 Posts: 5 Comments: 347
663. hendric 9:01 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting aspectre:
I took that into consideration, and decided that the pores within the crude deposit near the pipe intake are also being gradually clogged by such particles; at least enough to balance any pipe-widening due to scouring thus far.

Ah, but the reservoir is not really tough rocks w/pores, but weak, friable rock that can be damaged just by the oil/gas mix passing through. So there are channels getting "etched" into the rock, not pores filling up. The Oil Drum recently did a post on this.
Member Since: September 12, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 5
664. AllStar17 9:02 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
TROPICAL DEPRESSION TWO-E
5:00 pm EDT Advisory: GRAPHICS UPDATE
STORM TRACK:


ADVISORIES:
Member Since: June 29, 2009 Posts: 13 Comments: 5135
665. SQUAWK 9:05 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting StSimonsIslandGAGuy:


Remind me to make sure I have a shirt on in Charlie Christ's presence. Long sleeved. And a hat. And scarf. Sheesh.


What? You gonna give up advertising?
Member Since: December 9, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 2497
666. MiamiHurricanes09 9:06 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Post #633.

Haha. I think it does.
Member Since: September 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
667. MiamiHurricanes09 9:07 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting WinterAnalystwx13:
Where's the Experts????? They should make things more interesting...
Not an expert but I can make the blog interesting, lol.
Member Since: September 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
668. cg2916 9:08 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Member Since: December 21, 2007 Posts: 13 Comments: 2908
669. MiamiHurricanes09 9:09 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
92L should be stripped of its invest status as it is now just a naked swirl, all the convection was left far east of the LLC. Movement towards the west is about 18 miles per hour.
Member Since: September 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
670. BaltOCane 9:10 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
It's being decapitated, poor thing.
Member Since: May 19, 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 411
671. Floodman 9:12 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting SQUAWK:


What? You gonna give up advertising?


Hell, I thought he was a guy...
Member Since: August 2, 2006 Posts: 10 Comments: 9919
672. MiamiHurricanes09 9:12 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting BaltOCane:
It's being decapitated, poor thing.
Not necessarily. To make this really gory the wind shear is slowly peeling 92L's skin, and now all that's left are its bones (the LLC).
Member Since: September 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
673. BaltOCane 9:16 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
Not necessarily. To make this really gory the wind shear is slowly peeling 92L's skin, and now all that's left are its bones (the LLC).


yes, that's much more colorfull, thank you lol :)
Member Since: May 19, 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 411
677. cg2916 9:20 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
Not necessarily. To make this really gory the wind shear is slowly peeling 92L's skin, and now all that's left are its bones (the LLC).


It's naked now.
Member Since: December 21, 2007 Posts: 13 Comments: 2908
678. xcool 9:22 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
bored tropical .we need 93l now
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679. Floodman 9:24 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting xcool:
bored tropical .we need 93l now


What, is your DS dead?
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681. xcool 9:24 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Floodman haha
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682. cg2916 9:27 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    


Look at that, it is not doing well. It's lost its organization, it's losing convection, I don't know why looking at the satellite loop it decided to stretch out N-S. It has outflow to the E, not good.

I've noticed that the "wall" Miami pointed out earlier is still there. You know what, I'm starting to wonder if that "wall" is made of concrete because shear hasn't started actually tearing the storms off like classic shear.
Member Since: December 21, 2007 Posts: 13 Comments: 2908
683. cg2916 9:28 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting xcool:
bored tropical .we need 93l now

We have an invest and a TD in the EPAC.
Member Since: December 21, 2007 Posts: 13 Comments: 2908
684. Magicchaos 9:31 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Wonder why SPC still has a slight risk over central PA when we aren't going get much more of anything. Must be a precaution.
Member Since: April 3, 2009 Posts: 107 Comments: 382
685. AllStar17 9:36 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
**REPOST**
TROPICAL DEPRESSION TWO-E
5:00 pm EDT Advisory: GRAPHICS UPDATE
STORM TRACK:


ADVISORIES:
Member Since: June 29, 2009 Posts: 13 Comments: 5135
686. mfaria101 9:37 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting Floodman:


Muahahaha...yup, "looking for oil"; that's apparently what they're calling it these days


Well the young lady in the pic. did seem to have some oil on, 'course it was probably Hawaiian tropic.....
Member Since: May 29, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 30
687. DEKRE 9:38 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting StSimonsIslandGAGuy:


Remind me to make sure I have a shirt on in Charlie Christ's presence. Long sleeved. And a hat. And scarf. Sheesh.


It would be interesting to know what a persons sexual preference has to do with his capacity to do a job.

Bloody hypocrites
Member Since: April 27, 2010 Posts: 0 Comments: 306
688. stormpetrol 9:40 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Wow!LLC of 92L racing away around 15/52.8, I think if it was a bit closer to land it might have been upgraded to a TD, I've seen 1-2 upgraded in the matter of hours just because it was near land, just my opinion
Member Since: April 29, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 6396
689. Floodman 9:45 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting DEKRE:


It would be interesting to know what a persons sexual preference has to do with his capacity to do a job.

Bloody hypocrites


Well said
Member Since: August 2, 2006 Posts: 10 Comments: 9919
690. xaratanga 9:48 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Thank you allstar for the graphics on TD2e.
Dr. Masters, and all you knowledgeable blog members, please post more info on the East Pacific tropical weather, the Atlantic and Gulf get all the attention and I feel like the ugly stepsister. I know what goes on down here doesn't impact the US that much, but there are over 1 million of us US citizens living in Mexico, and a lot of us would like more info on whats happening here. Please....pretty please!!!!!
691. stillwaiting 9:49 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
92L's far from dead,its a open wave and if sheer drops off,regeneration is not out of the question IMO...
Member Since: October 5, 2007 Posts: 20 Comments: 4970
692. all4hurricanes 9:53 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
92L is dead for now, there's time for zombies later but right now there is a tropical depression in the east pacific which is more than what's formed in the Atlantic all year so I suggest we pay attention to it.
Member Since: March 29, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 2192
693. JLPR2 9:55 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting cg2916:


Look at that, it is not doing well. It's lost its organization, it's losing convection, I don't know why looking at the satellite loop it decided to stretch out N-S. It has outflow to the E, not good.

I've noticed that the "wall" Miami pointed out earlier is still there. You know what, I'm starting to wonder if that "wall" is made of concrete because shear hasn't started actually tearing the storms off like classic shear.


The convection wasn't able to pass a certain Lat point.
Cool, LOL!
XD
Member Since: September 4, 2007 Posts: 7 Comments: 7487
694. KEEPEROFTHEGATE (Mod) 9:56 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    


Member Since: July 15, 2006 Posts: 143 Comments: 40474
695. IKE 10:00 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
SYNOPSIS FOR CARIBBEAN SEA AND TROPICAL N ATLC FROM 07N TO 22N
BETWEEN 55W AND 65W
530 PM EDT WED JUN 16 2010

.SYNOPSIS...A WEAK TROPICAL WAVE MOVING W ACROSS THE SE
CARIBBEAN THIS EVENING WILL CONTINUE W THROUGH THE CENTRAL
PORTION LATE TONIGHT THROUGH THU...THEN ACROSS THE SW WATERS THU
NIGHT THROUGH FRI NIGHT AND INTO NICARAGUA SAT. A SMALL 1012 MB
LOW CENTER NEAR 15N52.5W WILL GRADUALLY WEAKEN TO A TROUGH AS IT
MOVES W-NW ACROSS THE N HALF OF THE TROPICAL ATLC WATERS THU AND
THROUGH THE LEEWARD ISLANDS FRI. THE NEXT TROPICAL WAVE
CURRENTLY ACROSS THE CENTRAL ATLC WILL REACH 55W LATE FRI AND
MOVE INTO THE E CARIBBEAN SAT.
Member Since: June 9, 2005 Posts: 23 Comments: 37044
697. cyclonekid 10:08 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting AllStar17:
**REPOST**
TROPICAL DEPRESSION TWO-E
5:00 pm EDT Advisory: GRAPHICS UPDATE
STORM TRACK:


ADVISORIES:
You always do better than me :D Well I try...

TROPICAL DEPRESSION TWO-E
Images made by Cyclonekid

Tracking Maps:



Projected Path:


Advisories:
Member Since: July 14, 2009 Posts: 51 Comments: 1629
698. CaneAddict 10:13 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Quoting WinterAnalystwx13:


Debby...your wrong. There is very high likelihood of seeing a TS at the end of this month. If not, early July is when we will have our first storm. The TUTT, you know?, the thing causing the high shear, will be moving out, and Dry Air doesn't rule the Caribbean. The Caribbean is actually very moist, and we are bound to see something before the End of July, I can guarantee that.
Quoting xaratanga:
Thank you allstar for the graphics on TD2e.
Dr. Masters, and all you knowledgeable blog members, please post more info on the East Pacific tropical weather, the Atlantic and Gulf get all the attention and I feel like the ugly stepsister. I know what goes on down here doesn't impact the US that much, but there are over 1 million of us US citizens living in Mexico, and a lot of us would like more info on whats happening here. Please....pretty please!!!!!


You could probably find a blog that covers your area. This is a majority of the atlantic basin.
Member Since: October 5, 2007 Posts: 3 Comments: 2151
699. StormGoddess 10:14 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
Looks like "Wanna be Alex" is getting a good spanky from the wind shear now. That's good. :)
Member Since: June 10, 2010 Posts: 6 Comments: 570
700. scott39 10:16 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
92L LLC is not giving up and I feel like we will be tracking a TC soon after it makes it around the shear. This is an African low, they dont give up easy.
Member Since: June 13, 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 6207
701. xcool 10:18 PM GMT on June 16, 2010    
92L WAS TD
Member Since: September 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15501

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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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