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

 385 
 WTPZ44 KNHC 191450
 TCDEP4
 
 HURRICANE OLAF DISCUSSION NUMBER  19
 NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL       EP192015
 800 AM PDT MON OCT 19 2015
 
 A small eye is now apparent in infrared imagery, and the coverage
 and symmetry of the cold cloud tops has improved during the past few
 hours. The initial intensity is set to 100 kt based on the latest
 Dvorak classification of T5.5/102 kt from SAB, making Olaf the 6th
 major hurricane in the eastern North Pacific this year. This is the
 farthest south that a major hurricane has formed in the basin since
 reliable records began in 1971.
 
 Further strengthening appears likely in the next day or so, and in
 fact the SHIPS RI index shows a 44 percent chance of a 25-kt
 increase in the next 24 hours. The NHC intensity forecast has been
 adjusted upward to account for the observed strengthening, and shows
 a peak of 125 kt in 24 hours. Little change in intensity is then
 shown through 48 hours, however, there could be fluctuations in
 intensity due to eyewall cycles during this time that are not
 represented in the forecast. Later in the period, gradual weakening
 should begin as Olaf moves over slightly cooler waters into a
 somewhat drier environment. The new NHC forecast is above the
 guidance in the first 24 hours and close to the latest SHIPS model
 prediction thereafter.
 
 Olaf continues to move westward, with an initial motion of 280/12.
 This continues a trend of a motion that has been a little faster and
 to the left of much of the guidance and the NHC forecast. While the
 track forecast reasoning has not changed, with Olaf expected to
 gradually turn northward through the forecast period as the ridge to
 the north erodes, the guidance envelope has continued to shift
 westward this cycle. In fact, the multi-model consensus has shifted
 westward by about 2 degrees compared to 24 hours ago at days 4 and
 5. The new NHC track forecast has been adjusted to the left this
 cycle by 60 to 90 n mi at days 2 through 5. The NHC track is now on
 the left side of the guidance envelope and closer to the UKMET
 model, which has been the best performing track model so far for
 Olaf.
 
 FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
 
 INIT  19/1500Z  9.9N 137.7W  100 KT 115 MPH
  12H  20/0000Z 10.2N 139.1W  115 KT 130 MPH
  24H  20/1200Z 10.8N 140.8W  125 KT 145 MPH
  36H  21/0000Z 11.4N 142.4W  120 KT 140 MPH
  48H  21/1200Z 12.2N 144.0W  120 KT 140 MPH
  72H  22/1200Z 14.0N 146.0W  110 KT 125 MPH
  96H  23/1200Z 16.7N 146.9W  100 KT 115 MPH
 120H  24/1200Z 19.5N 147.5W   85 KT 100 MPH
 
 $$
 Forecaster Brennan
 
 
Return to the Tropical Systems Page for OLAF

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