Current Radar or Satellite Image

Flhurricane.com - Central Florida Hurricane Center - Tracking Storms since 1995Hurricanes Without the Hype! Since 1995


The Atlantic is quiet
Days since last H. Landfall - US: Any 43 (Milton) , Major: 43 (Milton) Florida - Any: 43 (Milton) Major: 43 (Milton)
 
Show Selection:
Show plain - Location:
#1015914 (Received by flhurricane at: 10:48 PM 09.Sep.2020)
TCDAT2

Tropical Storm Paulette Discussion Number 13
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL172020
1100 PM AST Wed Sep 09 2020

Paulette remains a sheared tropical cyclone with the low-level
center southwest of a large area of deep convection. Recent
scatterometer data showed peak winds of 45-50 kt, so 50 kt is used
as the initial wind speed, which happens to be quite similar to a
blend of the latest TAFB/SAB Dvorak estimates. Paulette should
begin to weaken tomorrow and continue on a downward trend for 2-3
days as strong shear impacts the cyclone. No change has been made
to the forecast through Saturday. Thereafter, the storm is likely to
move into a lower-shear environment on the northeastern side of a
mid/upper-level low, with SSTs rising to about 29C. There is better
agreement among the models tonight that Paulette will survive the
shear and be able to take advantage of that favorable environment.
In fact, almost all of the most reliable guidance, save LGEM/SHIPS,
show the storm becoming a hurricane by 120 hours, and the global
models are trending in that direction. The new NHC forecast is
raised from the previous one, near the model consensus, but isn`t
quite as high as the regional hurricane models.

The storm is moving at about the same motion as before (295/9 kt).
Paulette should turn westward tomorrow as it weakens and encounters
stronger low/mid-level ridging. A weakness in the ridge develops by
the weekend due to the aforementioned mid/upper-level low, which
should cause the tropical cyclone to turn and move faster toward
the northwest. The new NHC track forecast is very similar to the
previous one, lying on the western side of the guidance after
placing heavier weight on the global models and corrected-consensus
aids than on the regional hurricane guidance.


FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT 10/0300Z 20.9N 48.1W 50 KT 60 MPH
12H 10/1200Z 21.3N 49.5W 50 KT 60 MPH
24H 11/0000Z 21.4N 51.5W 45 KT 50 MPH
36H 11/1200Z 21.9N 53.2W 40 KT 45 MPH
48H 12/0000Z 22.8N 54.6W 40 KT 45 MPH
60H 12/1200Z 24.1N 55.9W 40 KT 45 MPH
72H 13/0000Z 25.8N 57.3W 45 KT 50 MPH
96H 14/0000Z 29.0N 62.0W 55 KT 65 MPH
120H 15/0000Z 31.0N 65.0W 65 KT 75 MPH

$$
Forecaster Blake