TD #10 to Strengthen for Days over Water before Hitting Mexico – Could Become a Hurricane
If you are having trouble viewing the embedded video below, try the direct Youtube link.
12 comments
« Previous Entry Next Entry »
Comments closed
Basic HTML is allowed.
Comments
Hi Levi,
Appreciate the update. Noticed the focus on the video seems off. Dang those new computers, eh? hahaha
Thanks.
The video hasn’t rendered at 720p on Youtube yet, so only 480p is available at the moment. I’m not sure why.
Thanks for the update!
Im sure you’ve answered this before, but where do you get your ECMWF and UKMET imagery, I cant seem to find it anywhere on the internet
I use ECMWF imagery from PSU: http://www.meteo.psu.edu/~fxg1/ewalltropatl.html
Happy Friday morning to you! I lienkd up:YUMMY Bread Pudding with Butterscotch Sauce and a Free Bachelor Bingo game that makes watching a silly reality show much more fun! Thanks for hosting the party once again. Have a great week!Rebekah-www.potholesandpantyhose.com
Thank you for posting this! Love listening to your voice. Keep up the great work keeping us informed!
Levi-
Great blog, and I really appreciate your scientific background and forecasts.
I just wanted to add a note (clarification) of a reference you made in this post to the “cone of uncertainty” posted by the NHC in their advisory. You stated that the diameter of the cone (which in your slide was the 5-day cone) was illustrative of the uncertainty in the model track forecast. That statement implies that the cone was particularly wide at any given time-step relative to, say, Humberto’s cone, because the models had a wide geographic scatter for track at each time-step. This is not entirely accurate.
It should be noted that for each time-step the cone diameter is the same for every storm in a given season, and reflects long-term accuracy of NHC track forecasts. The diameter of the cone is actually based not on the scatter of the model runs in the case of a given storm, but rather on the *average error* in the predicted track at each time-step during the *previous* 5 years. More specifically, the cone is a series of circles (one per time-step) with a diameter that is 2/3 of the average error (i.e., +/- 2 S.D.) in position at that time-step for forecasts over the previous 5 years. Therefore, for this entire 2013 season, the cone at forecast time-step t is always the same diameter. The NHC posts the following table for this year:
Time step Diameter (nm)
12 33
24 52
36 72
48 92
72 128
96 177
120 229
See the NHC explanation for more info:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/aboutcone.shtml
Yes I know. The cone widths are fixed every year according to average error. What I meant was that the cone is abnormally wide for a storm so close to land, because of how slow the storm’s movement is. I probably didn’t word it quite properly.
Thanks,Levi. I have 2 questions I would like your thoughts on. The possibility of moisture from TD 10 being pulled northwestward into the desert southwest/Rockies/great plains and the ULL south of Hispaniola and it’s chances for development once it gets into the western Caribbean.
casioカシオg-shock 電子辞書 casio casioの腕時計 ダイバーズウォッチ カシオ http://www.lee-clothing.com
Good day buddie,I found your personal page on the online site and it was enormously surprised by doing it. Legitimately, I adore it in doing my very first experience!The perception of your website is extremely good which give me a pretty pleasant experience. All of the details may also be fantastic not to mention very helpful.Any airway My partner and i searched fairly very good which help me a significant.An individual has a very successful business. That you are really professional. Thanks a lot for your personal try to provide you with united states very much amazing informaton. May possibly that you contented time.
Ralph Lauren Big Kicker Italy Polos http://www.bernardcabane.net/ralph-lauren-big-kicker-italy-polos-p-318.html