Further Updated: Twin Invests 96L and 97L Worth Watching in the Atlantic
By: Jeff Masters , 2:41 PM GMT on July 29, 2016
There’s a new threat area to discuss today in the Atlantic: a tropical wave midway between the Lesser Antilles Islands and the Cabo Verde Islands that is headed west to west-northwest at 25 mph. This disturbance was designated Invest 97L on Thursday afternoon by NHC, and should arrive in the northern Lesser Antilles by late Saturday night. The Hurricane Hunters are on call to investigate the storm on Sunday, if needed. Satellite loops on Friday morning showed 97L had a modest area of heavy thunderstorms which were poorly organized, though there was some increasing spin evident in the cloud pattern. Wind shear was a light 5 – 10 knots, and sea surface temperatures (SSTs) was an adequate-for-developement 27°C (81°F), which was about 1°C (1.8°F) above average. Water vapor satellite imagery showed that 97L had a modest amount of dry air from the Saharan Air Layer (SAL) surrounding it, which was slowing development.
Forecast for 97L
The Friday morning operational runs of our three reliable models for predicting tropical cyclone genesis, the European, GFS and UKMET models, did not show 97L developing much. The 00Z Friday runs of the GFS and European model ensemble forecasts, done by taking the operational high-resolution version of the model and running it at lower resolution with slight perturbations to the initial conditions in order to generate a range of possible outcomes, had fewer than 10% of their ensemble members predict that 97L would become a tropical depression. In their 8 am EDT Friday Tropical Weather Outlook, NHC gave 97L 2-day and 5-day development odds of 20% and 30%, respectively. When 97L reaches the Western Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico by the middle of next week, we will need to watch it, but the crystal ball is very murky on whether or not 97L might find favorable conditions for development then.
Figure 2. MODIS visible satellite image of 96L south of the Cabo Verde Islands taken on Friday morning, July 29, 2016. Image credit: NASA.
96L continues to grow more organized
Forecast for 96L
Steering currents favor a west to west-northwesterly motion at 15 – 20 mph for 96L over the next five days, and the storm should reach a point near 40°W, midway between the Lesser Antilles Islands and Africa, on Sunday night. The 8 am EDT Friday run of the SHIPS model predicted modestly favorable conditions for development through Saturday night, with wind shear in the light to moderate range, 5 – 15 knots, a moist atmosphere, and warm SSTs near 27 – 27.5°C (81 – 82°F.) However, by Saturday night, 96L will encounter cooler waters, with temperatures a marginal 26.5°C (80°F). The SHIPS model also predicts that wind shear over the weekend will become high, greater than 20 knots, and the atmosphere will get very dry, due to an intrusion of the Saharan Air Layer (check out the 10-day African dust forecast from NASA.) These unfavorable conditions would stymie any development of 96L. As 96L approaches the Lesser Antilles Islands later next week, the shear increases even further and the air grows drier, making 96L unlikely to be a threat to the islands.
The Friday morning operational runs of our three reliable models for predicting tropical cyclone genesis, the European, GFS and UKMET models, all supported continued development of 96L through Saturday. The 00Z Friday run of the GFS ensemble forecast had 30 – 40% of its twenty ensemble members predict that a tropical depression would form from 96L this weekend in the eastern Atlantic. Most of these forecasts had the storm dying out the middle Atlantic, due to unfavorable conditions, and none had it becoming a hurricane. Between 30 – 40% of the 50 members of the 00Z Friday European ensemble model forecasts also showed 96L becoming a tropical depression this weekend. In their 8 am EDT Friday Tropical Weather Outlook, NHC gave 96L 2-day and 5-day development odds of 40% and 50%, respectively.
A tropical cyclone-free Eastern Pacific for the first time since July 1
For the first time since July 1, there are no active tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific, thanks to the dissipation of Tropical Storm Frank on Thursday. The seven named storms this month tied a record set in 1985 for the most July storms on record in the basin. We have a chance to break the record with an eighth named storm, if it forms by Sunday: in their 8 am EDT Friday Tropical Weather Outlook, NHC gave a new tropical disturbance 850 miles south-southwest of the southern tip of Mexico’s Baja Peninsula 2-day and 5-day development odds of 50% and 80%, respectively. This storm–which would be named Howard if it gets to tropical storm strength–is expected to move west-northwest and not impact Mexico.
This Sunday marks the 40th anniversary of Colorado’s Big Thompson flash flood, one of the deadliest flooding disasters in U.S. history, with 139 people killed. Bob Henson will be back later today with a look back at this historic flood.
Wunderblogger Steve Gregory has more on the tropics in a Thursday afternoon post, HEAT WAVE ENDS AS MR & MRS ENSO FIGHT IT OUT.
The next name on the Atlantic list is Earl.
For more on this story go to: https://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/twin-invests-96l-and-97l-worth-watching-in-the-atlantic