Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Congressional NHC hearing tomorrow; Hawaii eyes Cosme
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 2:38 PM GMT on July 18, 2007 +3
There are no areas of interest to talk about in the tropical Atlantic today, and none of the reliable computer models are forecasting tropical storm formation during the coming week. We will need to watch the waters off the Carolina coast on Saturday, when a cold front is expected to push off the coast. The tail end of this front could serve as the focus for development of a tropical disturbance.

Hawaii eyes Cosme
Residents of the Hawaiian Islands need to keep an eye on Tropical Storm Cosme, which is headed towards the islands and may impact their weather by Saturday. Cosme is a not-too-impressive 40 mph tropical storm now, thanks to 15 knots of wind shear and ocean temperatures about 25 degrees C. However, satellite imagery of the storm shows that it is maintaining a solid amount of heavy thunderstorm activity despite the wind shear and cool SSTs. I expect Cosme will be a tropical depression or weak tropical storm on Saturday when it passes close to the Hawaiian Islands, since SSTs are expected to increase and wind shear should decrease over the storm on Friday.


Figure 1. Sea Surface temperatures beneath Cosme were about 25 C (78 F), just below the 26 C threshold favorable for tropical cyclones. Cosme will be traversing a region of 24-25 C SSTs through Friday, then SSTs will warm to 25-26 as it reaches the Hawaiian Islands on Saturday.

Congressional hearing on the National Hurricane Center
On Thursday, July 19, from 10am until 12pm EDT, the House Committee on Science and Technology is holding a hearing called, "Tracking the Storm at the National Hurricane Center". You can check out some of the press releases and listen to a webcast of the hearing at the Committee web site. The Miami Herald, Orlando Sentinel, and Houston Chronicle have interesting stories on the upcoming hearing. The list of people testifying include Bill Proenza; QuikSCAT expert Dr. Robert Atlas; an emergency management official from the Gulf Coast states; and the head of NOAA, Admiral Lautenbacher. There may be others testifying, including Dr. Jim Turner, deputy director of the federal agency NTIS (National Technical Information Service), who led the inspection team that showed up at NHC without notice on July 2. Dr. Turner's report was scheduled to be completed this Friday, July 20, but is now scheduled to be released to the Congressional panel tomorrow. Notably absent from the list of people called to testify thus far: anyone from the National Hurricane Center, and a QuikSCAT science expert besides Dr. Atlas, who has thus far not addressed in his public comments--that I have seen--the very high uncertainties surrounding the impact of QuikSCAT data on track forecasts of landfalling hurricanes. I'll be sure to present a full analysis of the science presented--and the science left unsaid.

Jeff Masters
Categories: Politics
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801. Drakoen 1:26 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
the 700mb vorticity shows that there is some spin in the area.
Member Since: October 28, 2006 Posts: 57 Comments: 29010
803. Drakoen 1:28 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
texascanecaster1 where is the SFC low???
Member Since: October 28, 2006 Posts: 57 Comments: 29010
804. eaglesrock 1:31 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
TCC, I've been here since last August. And yes, I'm the same eagles from storm chat.
807. Drakoen 1:34 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
There is no SFC low according to the QuickSAT, buoy,vis loops, and vorticity analysis. Maybe a mid level spin.
Member Since: October 28, 2006 Posts: 57 Comments: 29010
808. biff4ugo 1:38 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
There is something big spinning off the edge of Africa today.
Looks like the hurricane generating "smoke signals" I'm used to.
Member Since: December 28, 2006 Posts: 107 Comments: 1187
809. amazinwxman 1:42 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
the wave that has passed the Antilles (sp?) does that wave have potential to do something and what are it's coordinates please?
810. Drakoen 1:44 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
15N 64w.
Member Since: October 28, 2006 Posts: 57 Comments: 29010
812. hurricane23 1:48 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
Yes a mid-level spin is noted in the area near the islands.I think this wave has some chance to develope as it continues westward into the caribbean.

NHC 8:05 on the wave-

TROPICAL WAVE IS SLIGHTLY TILTED ALONG 20N61W 14N64W 6N64W
MOVING W 15-20 KT. BROAD WAVE WITH LOW/MID LEVEL INVERTED-V
CURVATURE COVERING THE AREA FROM 55W-70W
. CLUSTERS OF SCATTERED
MODERATE/ISOLATED STRONG CONVECTION COVER THE AREA FROM 12N-19N
BETWEEN 59W-69W INCLUDING THE LESSER ANTILLES. SCATTERED
MODERATE/STRONG CONVECTION IS S OF 12N TO INLAND OVER SOUTH
AMERICA FROM TRINIDAD TO THE ABC ISLANDS.
Member Since: May 14, 2006 Posts: 8 Comments: 13276
813. stoormfury 1:50 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
the low and wave in the CALT is still holding on to it's identity. although the wave is embedded in dry air, what are it's chances of development?
Member Since: August 22, 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 2304
814. Drakoen 1:50 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
Morning StormW. Watching a strong tropical wave around the lesser Antilles.
It looks like it was in the low/mid levels. Shear is only 5-10 knots so we will see what happens.
Member Since: October 28, 2006 Posts: 57 Comments: 29010
815. Drakoen 1:51 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
Stoormfury, i don't think that wave is gonna last much longer. More interested in the wave at 15N 64W.
Member Since: October 28, 2006 Posts: 57 Comments: 29010
816. bobw999 1:53 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
NEW BLOG
817. gthsii 1:54 PM GMT on July 19, 2007    
speaking of the africa wave about to exit, curious but there seems to be a lull right after that one, has looked like that for a couple of days now. the train may be taking a brief break and getting ready to pick back up again after its rest.
819. guygee 1:04 PM GMT on July 26, 2007    
NEW BLOG, LOL.
Member Since: September 16, 2005 Posts: 0 Comments: 2830

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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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