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#1068229 (Received by flhurricane at: 10:42 AM 02.Nov.2021)
TCDAT1

Tropical Storm Wanda Discussion Number 11
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL212021
300 PM GMT Tue Nov 02 2021

After the overnight burst of deep convection and associated improved
organization, dry air has wrapped into the system from all quadrants
and has temporarily eroded Wanda`s inner-core convection. Despite
the recent convective degradation, visible satellite imagery
indicates that the cyclone`s low-level circulation has improved,
with well-defined, curved low-level cloud lines and shallow
convection having become more evident. Based on improved low-level
structure, the intensity estimate remains at 45 kt despite the
overall loss of deep convection.

During the past 6 h, Wanda has made the expected sharp left-hand
turn and is now moving northward, or 010/08 kt. There are no
significant changes to the previous forecast track or reasoning.
Over the next couple of days, the latest model guidance is in
excellent agreement that Wanda should remain embedded within a
deep-layer trough, and gradually turn toward the north-northeast
later today, followed by a northeastward motion tonight and
Wednesday as the cyclone moves through the trough-to-ridge flow
pattern. By 48-60 hours, the cyclone is forecast to move toward the
east and east-southeast as a ridge builds to the northwest and west
of Wanda. The new NHC official forecast track is very similar to
the previous advisory track, and lies close to the middle of the
simple- and corrected-consensus guidance envelope.

The aforementioned improved low-level structure should act to force
new convection later today and especially tonight during the
nocturnal convective maximum period. Thus, Wanda has another 24-36 h
to strengthen while the system remains over marginally warm
sea-surface temperatures (SST) near 23 deg C and within a
relatively low vertical wind shear environment. Thereafter, slow but
steady weakening is likely due to an increase in southwesterly wind
shear, a decrease in mid-tropospheric moisture, and a decrease in
SSTs. However, baroclinic effects associated with an approaching
mid-tropospheric trough from the west could partially offset the
weakening process. Wanda is expected become a post-tropical cyclone
around 72 h, but this could be delayed if the baroclinic forcing on
day 3 ends up stronger than currently expected. The new official
intensity forecast is essentially just an update of the previous
intensity forecast, and is close to an average of the intensity
consensus models IVCN, NOAA-HCCA, and FSSE.


FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT 02/1500Z 35.6N 40.6W 45 KT 50 MPH
12H 03/0000Z 37.0N 40.0W 45 KT 50 MPH
24H 03/1200Z 38.8N 39.6W 50 KT 60 MPH
36H 04/0000Z 40.7N 39.5W 45 KT 50 MPH
48H 04/1200Z 42.1N 39.3W 45 KT 50 MPH
60H 05/0000Z 42.7N 38.1W 45 KT 50 MPH
72H 05/1200Z 42.5N 36.1W 45 KT 50 MPH...POST-TROPICAL
96H 06/1200Z 41.0N 33.0W 45 KT 50 MPH...POST-TROPICAL
120H 07/1200Z 42.5N 29.5W 40 KT 45 MPH...POST-TROPICAL

$$
Forecaster Stewart