Image Department Meteorology
Meteorology_Home Weather_Server News/Seminars
People
Research
Academics Application Contact_Us

Hawaiian_Weather
US_Mainland_Weather
Tropical_Weather
Satellite_Imagery
Radar_Imagery
Marine
Numerical_Models
LAPS
Forecasts
Observations
Archive
Links Disclaimer
Space
SOEST_Home
University_of_Hawaii_Home

 220 
 WTNT44 KNHC 182053
 TCDAT4
  
 SUBTROPICAL STORM MELISSA DISCUSSION NUMBER   2
 NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL       AL142013
 500 PM AST MON NOV 18 2013
  
 DEEP CONVECTION HAS PERSISTED NEAR THE CENTER OF MELISSA...ALBEIT
 SOMEWHAT FRAGMENTED. WEAK ANTICYCLONIC OUTFLOW HAS BECOME
 ESTABLISHED IN THE SOUTHERN SEMICIRCLE OF THE INNER-CORE REGION...
 SUGGESTING THAT MELISSA IS TRYING TO MAKE THE TRANSITION TO A
 TROPICAL STORM. IN ADDITION...EARLIER ASCAT OVERPASSES AT 1314Z AND
 1408Z INDICATED THAT THE RADIUS OF MAXIMUM WINDS HAS CONTRACTED
 DOWN TO LESS THAN 80 NMI AND MAXIMUM WINDS WERE 50-51 KT IN THE
 SOUTHWESTERN QUADRANT. HOWEVER...BOTH OVERPASSES MISSED THE INNER
 CORE WIND FIELD...WHICH MEANS THAT THE RADIUS OF MAXIMUM WINDS COULD
 BE SMALLER AND THE PEAK WINDS COULD BE STRONGER. AFTER MELISSA
 PASSED JUST EAST OF DRIFTING BUOY 41999 AT 1000Z...WHICH REPORTED A
 PRESSURE OF 989.4 MB...THE PRESSURE AT THE BUOY HAS REMAINED AT OR
 BELOW 993 MB SINCE ABOUT 1400Z AS MELISSA HAS MOVED FARTHER
 AWAY...WHICH SUGGESTS THAT THE CYCLONE COULD STILL BE DEEPENING.
  
 THE INITIAL MOTION ESTIMATE IS 325/08 KT. THERE IS NO SIGNIFICANT
 CHANGE TO THE PREVIOUS FORECAST TRACK OR REASONING THROUGH 36 H.
 NHC MODEL GUIDANCE REMAINS IN EXCELLENT AGREEMENT ON MELISSA MOVING
 SLOWLY NORTHWESTWARD AND NORTHWARD OVER THE NEXT 24 HOURS...AND THEN
 ACCELERATING NORTHEASTWARD BY 36 H. MELISSA WILL LIKELY REMAIN A
 SEPARATE ENTITY THROUGH 120 H AND NOT BE ABSORBED BY AN APPROACHING
 FRONTAL SYSTEM UNTIL NEAR OR AFTER THE FORECAST PERIOD. THE
 OFFICIAL FORECAST TRACK IS SIMILAR TO THE PREVIOUS ADVISORY AND
 LIES CLOSE TO THE MULTI-MODEL CONSENSUS TVCA.  THE EXTRATROPICAL
 TRACK IS BASED ON INPUT FROM THE NOAA OCEAN PREDICTION CENTER.
  
 MELISSA HAS ABOUT 36 HOURS OR SO TO STRENGTHEN SOME MORE WHILE THE
 CYCLONE REMAINS OVER RELATIVELY WARM WATER. ALTHOUGH SSTS WILL BE
 DECREASING FROM THE CURRENT 27C TO AROUND 22-23C BY 36-48 H...THE
 500 MB TEMPERATURES ARE NEAR -13C...WHICH IS MUCH COLDER THAN A
 TYPICAL TROPICAL ATMOSPHERE...AND THAT SHOULD HELP TO MAINTAIN 
 UNSTABLE CONDITIONS AND THE FORMATION OF ADDITONAL CONVECTION IN
 THE INNER CORE REGION. AS A RESULT...MELISSA IS EXPECTED TO
 TRANSITION TO A TROPICAL CYCLONE ON TUESDAY. IN ADDITION...THE
 GFS-BASED SHIPS INTENSITY MODEL IS NOW INDICATING THAT THE 850-200
 MB VERTICAL WIND SHEAR WILL DROP SHARPLY FROM THE CURRENT 30 KT TO
 LESS THAN 10 KT IN THE 18-24 H TIME FRAME...AND THAT IS WHEN THE
 CYCLONE COULD REACH ITS PEAK INTENSITY...AND POSSIBLY EVEN OBTAIN
 HURRICANE STRENGTH. GRADUAL WEAKENING IS FORECAST AFTER 48 HOURS AS
 MELISSA MOVES OVER SSTS LESS THAN 20C...INTO A DRIER AND MORE
 STABLE AIRMASS...AND EXPERIENCE STRONG SOUTHWESTERLY WIND SHEAR
 AHEAD OF A DEEP-LAYER TROUGH THAT WILL MOVE OFF OF THE EAST COAST
 OF NORTH AMERICA DURING THE NEXT DAY OR SO. 
 
 FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
  
 INIT  18/2100Z 29.8N  54.2W   50 KT  60 MPH
  12H  19/0600Z 30.7N  54.5W   55 KT  65 MPH
  24H  19/1800Z 32.3N  53.5W   60 KT  70 MPH
  36H  20/0600Z 34.9N  50.6W   60 KT  70 MPH
  48H  20/1800Z 38.0N  46.5W   60 KT  70 MPH
  72H  21/1800Z 44.5N  36.0W   55 KT  65 MPH...POST-TROP/EXTRATROP
  96H  22/1800Z 50.0N  34.0W   45 KT  50 MPH...POST-TROP/EXTRATROP
 120H  23/1800Z 57.0N  39.0W   45 KT  50 MPH...POST-TROP/EXTRATROP
  
 $$
 FORECASTER STEWART
  
 
Return to the Tropical Systems Page for MELISSA

Back to main Tropical Weather page




This page is maintained voluntarily by the MKWC and the UHMET faculty, staff, and students.
It was last modified on: Thu, Jul 23 2020 - 2003 UTC
Send comments to: Ryan Lyman