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#1024617 (Received by flhurricane at: 3:41 AM 10.Nov.2020)
TCDAT4

Tropical Storm Eta Discussion Number 40
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL292020
300 AM CST Tue Nov 10 2020

There hasn't been a lot of change to the cloud pattern of Eta
overnight, with the center apparently located on the northwestern
side of a small central dense overcast. Scatterometer data from
earlier indicated 35-40 kt winds, and with the typical undersampling
from that instrument, along with consensus 45-kt estimates from
TAFB/SAB, so Eta's initial wind speed is kept at 45 kt. A NOAA
Hurricane Hunter aircraft should be in the storm this morning.

Eta is forecast to be in a low-to-moderate shear environment over
warm SSTs for the next couple of days. Gradual strengthening is
expected through early Thursday, with the main restrictive factor
being nearby dry air. After that time, increasing shear and
drier mid-level air are likely to cause Eta to weaken. The rate
of this weakening is pretty uncertain, and a lot depends on how
much Eta can re-intensify over the next couple of days. The new
forecast is similar to the previous one, which is quite close to
the consensus guidance.

The storm has basically become stationary overnight. Eta should
drift to north today due to steering flow changes with a nearby
upper-level low losing influence while ridging east of Florida
builds southward. A slow northward track is then anticipated for a
couple of days over the east-central Gulf of Mexico in this flow
pattern. Beyond that time, model guidance is in rather poor
agreement, ranging from a stronger system moving faster to the
northeast due to broad troughing over the south-central United
States, to a weaker tropical cyclone getting caught under a narrow
ridge over the Gulf of Mexico and turning west-southwestward. Since
the new forecast expects Eta to be weakening, the NHC forecast will
be west of the consensus and west of the previous track. I have
little confidence in the long-range track forecast due to its
seeming dependence on the intensity, and the wide spread in the
guidance.

Key Messages:

1. Heavy rainfall from Eta will continue across western Cuba and
South Florida today and tonight. Additional flash and urban
flooding, especially across previously inundated areas, will be
possible in South Florida. Flash and urban flooding will also be
possible for western Cuba.

2. Eta could approach the Florida Gulf Coast later this week as a
tropical storm, and possibly bring impacts from rain, wind, and
storm surge. Interests in this area should continue to monitor
the progress of Eta and updates to the forecast this week.


FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT 10/0900Z 22.9N 85.5W 45 KT 50 MPH
12H 10/1800Z 23.1N 85.6W 50 KT 60 MPH
24H 11/0600Z 24.0N 85.6W 55 KT 65 MPH
36H 11/1800Z 25.0N 85.4W 60 KT 70 MPH
48H 12/0600Z 26.0N 85.3W 60 KT 70 MPH
60H 12/1800Z 26.8N 85.3W 50 KT 60 MPH
72H 13/0600Z 27.3N 85.4W 40 KT 45 MPH
96H 14/0600Z 28.8N 86.5W 35 KT 40 MPH
120H 15/0600Z 30.0N 87.0W 30 KT 35 MPH

$$
Forecaster Blake