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#1063866 (Received by flhurricane at: 5:00 AM 30.Sep.2021)
TCDAT3

Hurricane Sam Discussion Number 31
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL182021
500 AM AST Thu Sep 30 2021

Sam is a very impressive hurricane in infrared satellite imagery
this morning. The 25-nm-wide eye remains very distinct and is
surrounded by a ring of convection with cloud tops around -65C.
The outflow is also well established in all quadrants. An Air Force
Reserve Hurricane Hunter aircraft that performed three eyewall
penetrations overnight has reported peak 700-mb flight-level winds
of 139 kt in the northeastern, southeastern, and eastern eyewall,
and peak SFMR surface winds of 119 kt. These data still support an
initial wind speed of 125 kt. Sam`s minimum pressure has fallen a
few millibars since the NOAA aircraft mission last evening. The
latest estimated pressure from dropsonde data gathered by the Air
Force is 937 mb. NOAA buoy 41044 has recently reported a peak
one-minute wind of 68 kt with a gust to 86 kt in the northeastern
eyewall of Sam. The buoy has also reported peak seas of 40 ft.

Sam could still strengthen a little today as it continues to move
over a warm ocean eddy and remains in low vertical wind shear
conditions. After that time, difficult-to-predict eyewall cycles
however, could cause some fluctuations in intensity. After 48
hours, gradually decreasing SSTs and ocean heat content are likely
to cause a more definitive weakening trend, with a faster rate of
weakening likely after day 3. Sam is forecast to complete its
extratropical transition by day 5, and it is predicted by the
global model guidance to become a large and powerful extratropical
low over the north Atlantic.

Sam is moving northwestward or 320/10 kt. The track forecast
reasoning is again unchanged from the previous advisory. Sam will
move northwestward, and then northward around the western portion
of a subtropical ridge during the next 48 hours. After that time,
Sam is predicted to turn northeastward between the ridge and a
large mid-latitude trough over the northeastern United States. As
that trough lifts northeastward by day 3, Sam is forecast to
continue on a northeastward heading, but it is not likely to
accelerate as much as a typical recurving tropical cyclone over
the north-central Atlantic. The dynamical model guidance remains
in excellent agreement through 72 hours, but there is increasing
spread after that time. The latest runs of the GFS and ECMWF
models have come into somewhat better agreement at days 3 through
5, and the NHC track forecast is near the consensus of those
typically reliable models.

Although the core of Sam is forecast to pass east of Bermuda early
Saturday, the tropical-storm-force wind field is forecast to expand
and could pass very close to the island beginning late Friday night
or early Saturday. Therefore, the Bermuda Weather Service has issued
a Tropical Storm Watch for Bermuda.


Key Messages:

1. Swells generated by Sam will impact the Northern Leeward Islands
and the Greater Antilles, including Puerto Rico, during the next
few days. Swells are expected to reach Bermuda and the Bahamas by
Friday, and then spread to the United States east coast by this
weekend. These swells could cause life-threatening surf and rip
current conditions. Please consult products from your local
weather office.

2. Tropical storm conditions are possible on Bermuda beginning
Friday night or early Saturday, and a Tropical Storm Watch has
been issued for that island.


FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT 30/0900Z 21.5N 59.1W 125 KT 145 MPH
12H 30/1800Z 23.0N 60.2W 130 KT 150 MPH
24H 01/0600Z 25.6N 61.4W 125 KT 145 MPH
36H 01/1800Z 28.4N 61.8W 120 KT 140 MPH
48H 02/0600Z 31.1N 61.3W 115 KT 130 MPH
60H 02/1800Z 33.5N 59.9W 105 KT 120 MPH
72H 03/0600Z 35.5N 58.0W 95 KT 110 MPH
96H 04/0600Z 38.7N 52.6W 80 KT 90 MPH
120H 05/0600Z 44.3N 45.0W 65 KT 75 MPH...POST-TROP/EXTRATROP

$$
Forecaster Brown