• STRMDISC: Delta 8

    From Weather Alert@21:1/175 to All on Tuesday, October 06, 2020 14:12:00
    894
    WTNT41 KNHC 061454
    TCDAT1

    Hurricane Delta Discussion Number 8
    NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL262020
    1100 AM EDT Tue Oct 06 2020

    Satellite imagery and recent NOAA Hurricane Hunter aircraft data
    show that Delta is a very symmetric and compact hurricane. The
    aircraft reported a tiny 5-nmi-wide eye, which has also been
    seen in radar imagery from the Cayman Islands, and there is a hint
    of a pinhole eye in infrared satellite data. The central pressure
    has continued to fall, with the lastest center dropwindsonde data
    supporting a pressure of 955 mb. The plane has reported a peak
    flight-level winds of 109 kt, and believable SFMR winds of 102 kt.
    Therefore, the initial intensity is set at 100 kt, making Delta the
    third major hurricane of the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season.

    Delta has continued to rapidly strengthen over the past 24 hours,
    with an estimated 55-kt increase in wind speed between 1200 UTC
    Monday and 1200 UTC today. Environmental conditions of low
    vertical wind shear, deep warm waters, and sufficient mid-level
    moisture are expected to support additional rapid intensification
    through today, and the only reason that the strengthening could
    slow is if a difficult-to-predict eyewall replace cycle begins.
    The SHIPS Rapid intensification index continues to indicate a high
    likelihood of at least an additional 25-30 kt of intensity increase
    before the system reaches the northeastern portion of the Yucatan
    Peninsula. Given that, the NHC intensity forecast is above the
    various intensity aids and call for Delta to be an extremely
    dangerous category 4 hurricane when it nears the Yucatan. It could
    be stronger than indicated below since landfall is predicted to
    occur between the 12 and 24 h forecast points. Some reduction in
    intensity is likely when Delta moves over land, but the
    environmental conditions over the southern Gulf of Mexico are
    expected to support re-strengthening, and the NHC intensity
    forecast shows a second peak in 48-72 hours. As mentioned before,
    increasing southwesterly shear and cooler shelf waters near the
    northern Gulf coast are expected to cause some reduction in wind
    speed, but Delta is still expected to be a dangerous hurricane when
    it nears the northern Gulf coast.

    Delta is moving west-northwestward at about 14 kt. A mid-level
    ridge that extends westward across Florida and the northeastern
    Gulf of Mexico should continue to steer Delta west-northwestward to northwestward during the next couple of days. As the hurricane
    nears the western portion of the ridge it should slow down. By
    day three a developing trough over the south-central United States
    is expected to cause Delta to turn northward toward the northern
    Gulf coast. The track guidance is tightly clustered through 48
    hours, but there is still a fair amount of spread thereafter
    regarding the timing and details of the northward turn. The ECMWF
    and its ensemble mean are well west of the bulk of the remainder of
    the guidance. The NHC track lies near the TVCA multi-model consensus
    which is close to a blend of the GFS, HWRF, UKMET ensemble mean.

    Key Messages:

    1. Extremely dangerous storm surge and hurricane conditions are
    expected within portions of the northern Yucatan Peninsula of
    Mexico beginning tonight, and a Hurricane Warning is in effect.

    2. Heavy rainfall will affect portions of the Cayman Islands,
    western Cuba and the northern Yucatan Peninsula through midweek.
    This rainfall could lead to significant flash flooding and
    mudslides. The potential for heavy rain and flash flooding will
    increase across portions of the central Gulf Coast, Tennessee
    Valley, and southeastern United States as Delta moves inland later
    this week.

    3. There is an increasing likelihood of life-threatening storm surge
    and dangerous hurricane-force winds, especially along the coasts of
    Louisiana and Mississippi, beginning on Friday. Residents in these
    areas should ensure they have their hurricane plan in place and
    monitor updates to the forecast.

    FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

    INIT 06/1500Z 18.2N 82.6W 100 KT 115 MPH
    12H 07/0000Z 19.4N 84.5W 120 KT 140 MPH
    24H 07/1200Z 21.0N 87.2W 120 KT 140 MPH
    36H 08/0000Z 22.3N 89.6W 105 KT 120 MPH
    48H 08/1200Z 23.4N 91.3W 110 KT 125 MPH
    60H 09/0000Z 24.6N 92.3W 115 KT 130 MPH
    72H 09/1200Z 26.3N 92.5W 110 KT 125 MPH
    96H 10/1200Z 30.5N 91.2W 70 KT 80 MPH...INLAND
    120H 11/1200Z 34.5N 87.5W 25 KT 30 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW

    $$
    Forecaster Brown
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