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 46 (Milton) , Major: 46 (Milton) Florida - Any: 46 (Milton) Major: 46 (Milton)
 
Show Selection:
Show plain - Location:
#1062509 (Received by flhurricane at: 10:54 AM 20.Sep.2021)
TCDAT2

Tropical Storm Rose Discussion Number 6
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL172021
1100 AM AST Mon Sep 20 2021

While a cursory look at visible satellite images would suggest Rose
is intensifying, other data show that it remains a sheared storm.
The low- and mid-level centers remain roughly 90 n mi apart
according to SSMIS microwave, and a 1038Z ASCAT-A scatterometer
pass showed no significant change in intensity overnight. The
current wind speed is kept at 35 kt, with a much heavier weight on
the 30-kt scatterometer pass than Dvorak estimates near 55 kt. This
is a good example of the value of the scatterometer which can tell
the forecaster much more about the surface winds that conventional
satellite estimates can miss (even if the data is possibly too low
with all the thunderstorm activity).

There are a lot of thorns in the way of Rose blossoming into a
stronger storm. Increasing shear and drier mid-level air are on
the way for tonight, competing against the somewhat warm SSTs.
Thus Rose has about a day to flower into a moderate tropical storm,
and no significant change was made to the short term forecast. At
longer range, stronger shear and dry air should pull the petals off
Rose one-by-one, causing the cyclone to slowly weaken. The new
forecast is similar to the previous one, with some small 5-kt
downward adjustments. Rose could even shrivel up into a remnant
low by day 5, but that`s not shown yet in the forecast.

The initial motion remains northwestward at about 14 kt. Rose is
still expected to move generally northwestward around the
southwestern and western periphery of a strong subtropical ridge
during the next few days. Around day 3, however, a mid- to
upper-level trough over the north-central Atlantic is forecast to
dig southeastward, causing the cyclone to turn northward and
eventually northeastward by the weekend. Guidance is in much
better agreement on this scenario than the last cycle (though
there are still some westward model solutions), and the new NHC
track forecast is shifted northeastward at long range.


FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT 20/1500Z 17.3N 33.4W 35 KT 40 MPH
12H 21/0000Z 19.0N 34.8W 40 KT 45 MPH
24H 21/1200Z 21.0N 36.1W 35 KT 40 MPH
36H 22/0000Z 22.6N 37.1W 35 KT 40 MPH
48H 22/1200Z 24.1N 38.1W 35 KT 40 MPH
60H 23/0000Z 25.4N 39.1W 30 KT 35 MPH
72H 23/1200Z 26.7N 40.0W 30 KT 35 MPH
96H 24/1200Z 29.0N 40.0W 25 KT 30 MPH
120H 25/1200Z 31.0N 38.0W 25 KT 30 MPH

$$
Forecaster Blake