Cat
2 Irma Rapidly Intensifying in Eastern Atlantic; Big Long-Range
Questions
Above:
Microwave satellite image of Irma at 4:24 am EDT Thursday, August
31, 2017. An eye is visible as a lighter spot in the solid ring of
red that is the storm’s eyewall. Image credit: Navy
Research Lab, Monterey. |
31 August, 2017
Here
comes trouble. Hurricane
Irma built
an eyewall over the warm waters of the Eastern Atlantic on Thursday
morning, and is now rapidly intensifying, becoming a Category 2
hurricane with 100 mph winds at 11 am EDT. Irma is the fourth
hurricane of this active Atlantic hurricane season, and comes three
weeks before the usual
September 21 date for
the season's fourth hurricane. Irma appears destined to become a
dangerous long-track major hurricane that could potentially impact
the islands of the Caribbean as well as the mainland U.S. next week
and the following week.
Satellite
images on
Thursday morning showed a well-organized storm with plenty of heavy
thunderstorms which were increasing in intensity, and a prominent eye
had appeared in both visible and infrared imagery. Irma had a
respectable upper-level outflow channel to the south, and a weaker
one to the north. Conditions were favorable for development, with sea
surface temperatures (SSTs) near 27.5°C (82°F)—more than 1°C
above average, light wind shear of 5 -10 knots, and a moist
surrounding atmosphere with a mid-level relative humidity near 65%.
Intensity
forecast for Irma
For
the next five days, wind shear is predicted to be very favorable for
development--a low 5 – 10 knots--according to the 12Z Thursday run
of the SHIPS
model. In
fact, SHIPS keeps wind shear at less than 5 knots from Thursday
afternoon into Saturday. Irma will begin moving into a drier region
with slightly cooler sea surface temperatures beginning on Thursday
night. Friday through Sunday, SSTs will be 26.5 – 27.5°C (80 -
82°F), and the mid-level relative humidity will be 50 –
55%--conditions that are less favorable for development. Since Irma
has already built a solid inner core, it should be able to overcome
these less favorable conditions and continue to intensify at a slow
to moderate pace. If the storm can develop upper-level outflow
channels to both the north and the south, faster intensification may
occur.
Early
next week, when Irma will be approaching the Lesser Antilles Islands,
SSTs will warm considerably with a major increase in total heat
content. The atmosphere is also predicted to be moister with low
shear, so increased strengthening is likely. Four out of five of our
reliable intensity models--the HWRF, LGEM, COAMPS-TC, and
DSHIPS--predicted in their 6Z and 12Z Thursday runs that Irma would
be a major Category 3 or 4 hurricane with 115 – 135 mph winds by
Tuesday. The official NHC forecast of a Category 4 hurricane in five
days looks reasonable, given Irma's current rapid intensification
burst.
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Track
forecast for Irma
Irma
will head generally west to west-northwest at about 10 mph through
Friday, then assume a more west-southwesterly track early next week,
as the ridge of high pressure steering the storm builds to the
southwest. This would potentially bring Irma into the Lesser Antilles
Islands as early as Tuesday night, September 5, as predicted by the
0Z Thursday run of the European model. The 0Z and 6Z GFS model
solutions were slower, predicting that Irma would make its closest
approach to the Lesser Antilles Islands on Wednesday night, but miss
the islands, passing about 500 miles to the northeast. The 0Z
Thursday run of the UKMET model split the difference between these
forecasts, forecasting that Irma would pass within 200 miles of the
northernmost Lesser Antilles Islands on Wednesday morning.
To
get a better sense of where Irma might go, it is often helpful to
look at the ensemble forecasts from the European and GFS models.
These forecasts take the operational high-resolution version of the
models and impose slight variations in the initial atmospheric
conditions, to simulate an ensemble of potential outcomes. They are
run at lower resolution, so individual ensemble members are likely to
be less reliable than the operational version. The GFS model runs 20
different ensemble forecasts, and the European model runs 50. One
tool that I have found valuable is to look at the “high probability
cluster” of the European model—the four ensemble members that
have done the best job tracking Irma over the past day. Looking at
Figure 2, the high probability cluster predicts that the Caribbean
and U.S. Gulf Coast might be the most at-risk areas for a landfall by
Irma.
Bottom
line: Climatology
is in Irma's favor. We are fast approaching the average peak date of
the Atlantic hurricane season (September 10) as well as the seasonal
peak of African tropical waves. Moreover, SSTs are above seasonal
averages across the entire tropical Atlantic. Irma is more than a
week away from any possible U.S. impacts. Bear in mind that, on
average, long-range hurricane forecasts beyond 7 days have very
little skill when it comes to specific locations and intensities, and
much could change in the coming days. The idea is not to take a
particular track or strength forecast as gospel at this point, but to
be aware that a major hurricane could be approaching North America in
the 1- to 2-week time frame.
Watching
the Gulf for another potential tropical cyclone
The
last thing that residents of Texas and Louisiana need is another
tropical system to worry about. Alas, computer models suggest that
another tropical cyclone could develop in the western Gulf of Mexico
next week. Fortunately, all signals are that this would be a much
weaker system that Harvey was, even if it does form. Wind shear is
predicted to relax over the Bay of Campache by early next week, and a
tropical depression could take shape over the bay’s warm waters. In
its tropical weather outlook issued at 8
am Thursday,
NHC gave near-zero odds of anything developing in the area
through Sunday, and only 20% odds of at least a tropical
depression by Tuesday.
Ensemble
model runs from Wednesday night provide limited support for
the idea of a depression or weak tropical storm moving north from the
Bay of Campeche next week. About two-thirds of the GFS ensemble
members, but only about 20% of the European ensemble members, develop
at least a depression by Tuesday. Among the 00Z Thursday runs
of our top three operational models for longer-range forecasting (the
GFS, Euro, and UKMET), only the Euro developed the western Gulf
system, although the 06Z GFS run has a slow-moving weak cyclone
traversing the northwest Gulf late next week, much like the 00Z Euro
run.
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