Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

ex-TD 5 regenerating; globe has 2nd or 5th warmest July on record
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 2:44 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010 +2
The remnants of Tropical Depression Five have emerged over the Gulf of Mexico, and the system has enough spin to regenerate into a tropical depression later today or early Tuesday. Latest long range radar out of Mobile, Alabama shows that a band of intense but disorganized thunderstorms lies over the northern Gulf of Mexico, and satellite imagery shows that this activity is intensifying and growing more organized. A center of circulation is becoming more defined about 60 miles southwest of Panama City, Florida. Strong upper-level winds out of the northeast are creating a moderate 10 - 20 knots of wind shear over ex-TD 5, and this shear is keeping heavy thunderstorms from forming on the northern side of the center of circulation. Thus, I expect that heavy thunderstorms will be slow to develop over land today. By Tuesday, ex-TD 5 should be able to intensify into a tropical depression or weak tropical storm with 40 - 45 mph winds, and heavy rains should spread across the entire Gulf Coast from central Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle. All of the models bring ex-TD 5 back ashore over Louisiana on Tuesday, and it is unlikely the storm will get sustained winds stronger than 50 mph. The GFDL model predicts ex-TD 5 will stay below tropical storm strength, while the HWRF predicts a 45-mph tropical storm at landfall on Tuesday. The Hurricane Hunters will fly into ex-TD 5 this afternoon to see if it has regenerated into a tropical depression. NHC is giving the system a 60% chance of developing into a tropical depression.


Figure 1. Morning satellite image of the remnants of TD 5.

Elsewhere in the tropics
All of the major models continue to predict a major pattern shift in the global atmospheric circulation late this week, which leads to breakdown of the Russian heat wave and start to the Cape Verdes hurricane season. Most of the models predict a tropical storm will form off the coast of Africa late this week, and track west-northwestward across the Atlantic. As usual, it is highly uncertain what track a storm that has yet to form might take.

The NOGAPS model is predicting the development of a strong tropical disturbance near the coast of Honduras late this week.

Smoke clears from Moscow
Moderate westerly winds over the past few hours have cleared Moscow's air, bringing an end to a 42-hour period where smoke from persistent wildfires blanketed the city. Temperatures at Moscow's Domodedovo airport hit 31°C (88°F) today, which is 11°C (20°F) above average. The latest forecast for Moscow calls continued very hot temperatures and light and variable winds through Wednesday, as Russia's record heat wave continues. However, on Thursday, a strong trough of low pressure is expected to move through European Russia, finally bringing an end to the Great Russian Heat Wave of 2010.


Figure 2. Departure of temperature from average for July, 2010. Image credit: National Climatic Data Center (NCDC).

Second or fifth warmest July on record for the globe
July 2010 was the second warmest July on record, behind 1998, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA's) National Climatic Data Center (NCDC). July was the first month since February that was not the warmest on record. NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies rated July 2010 the fifth warmest July on record. Both NOAA and NASA rated the year-to-date period, January - July, as the warmest such period on record. July 2010 global ocean temperatures were the fifth warmest on record, while land temperatures were the warmest on record. Global satellite-measured temperatures for the lowest 8 km of the atmosphere were the 2nd warmest on record in July, according to University of Alabama Huntsville (UAH), and the warmeest on record, according to Remote Sensing Systems (RSS).

For those interested, NCDC has a page of notable weather highlights from July 2010.

Russia, Finland, and Qatar set all time heat records
Three nations--Russia, Finland, and Qatar--recorded their hottest temperatures in history during July 2010. No nation set a coldest temperature of all time record.

Finland recorded its hottest temperature on July 29, 2010, when the mercury hit 99°F (37.2°C) at Joensuu. The old (undisputed) record was 95°F (35°C) at Jyvaskyla on July 9, 1914.

Qatar had its hottest temperature in history on July 14, 2010, when the mercury hit 50.4°C (122.7°F) at Doha Airport.

Russia had its hottest temperature in history on July 11, when the mercury rose to 44.0°C (111.2°F) in Yashkul, Kalmykia Republic, in the European portion of Russia near the Kazakhstan border. The previous hottest temperature in Russia (not including the former Soviet republics) was the 43.8°C (110.8°F) reading measured at Alexander Gaj, Kalmykia Republic, on August 6, 1940. The remarkable heat in Russia this year has not been limited just to the European portion of the country--the Asian portion of Russia also recorded its hottest temperature in history this year, a 42.7°C (108.9°F) reading at Kara, in the Chita Republic on June 24. The 42.3°C (108.1°F) reading on June 25 at Belogorsk, near the Amur River border with China, also beat the old recrod for the Asian portion of Russia. The previous record for the Asian portion of Russia was 41.7°C (107.1°F) at Aksha on July 21, 2004.

All of these records are unofficial, and will need to be verified by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO.) The source for the previous all-time records listed here is the book Extreme Weather by Chris Burt.

Seventeenth warmest July on record for the U.S.
For the contiguous U.S., it was the 17th warmest July in the 116-year record, according to the National Climatic Data Center. The year-to-date period, January to July, was the 27th warmest such period on record. Two states, Delaware and Rhode Island, had their warmest July on record. Fourteen other states had a top-ten warmest July on record, including nearly every state on the Atlantic East Coast. No state recorded a top-ten coldest July.

U.S. precipitation
For the contiguous U.S., July 2010 ranked as the 36th wettest July in the 116-year record. Four states--Iowa, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraska--had a top ten wettest July on record. Only Louisiana had a top-ten driest July on record.


Figure 3. The record-setting hailstone of July 23, 2010, that fell on Vivian, South Dakota. Image credit: National Weather Service, South Dakota.

Record hailstone falls in South Dakota
A severe storm on July 23rd dropped hundreds of massive hailstones on the small town of Vivian, South Dakota. Local reports stated that every house in Vivian sustained some type of hail damage. One of the stones collected broke the U.S. record not only for the largest hailstone (in diameter) but also the heaviest. The stone measured 8 inches (20.3 cm) in diameter, 18.5 inches (47.0 cm) in circumference, and weighed 1.9375 lbs (0.89 kg). It was also reported that the hailstone was originally much larger, but the freezer it was stored in lost power for about five to six hours and the person who collected it kept opening the freezer door to show friends and relatives. Even so, it smashed the previous hailstone record of 7 inches (17.8 cm) diameter, collected in southern Nebraska in June 2003. The world record for the heaviest hailstone belongs to Bangladesh, with a stone collected in April 1986 that weighed 2.25 lb (1.02 kg).

U.S. tornadoes
On July 25th, an EF-1 tornado touched down in Bronx County, New York, marking only the second ever recorded in the Bronx. On July 26th, an EF-3 tornado hit rural Sheridan County, Montana, killing two. This ties as the deadliest tornado in Montana history, and only the fourth EF-3 or stronger tornado ever observed in the state.

La Niña intensifies to moderate strength
The equatorial Eastern Pacific Ocean is now experiencing moderate La Niña conditions. Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) over the tropical Eastern Pacific in the area 5°N - 5°S, 120°W - 170°W, also called the "Niña 3.4 region", dropped to 1.1°C below average by August 16, according to NOAA.. The Australian Bureau of Meteorology put this number at 1.0°C below average (as of August 8.) Moderate La Niña conditions are defined as occurring when this number reaches 1.0°C below average. SSTs 1.5°C below average would qualify as strong La Niña conditions. La Niña conditions must be present for several months before this will be officially classified as a La Niña event, but it is highly likely that a full-fledged La Niña event lasting at least seven more months has arrived. We started out the year with a strong El Niño, so it may seem surprising that we have transitioned La Niña so quickly, However, historically, about 35 - 40% of El Niño events are followed by a La Niña within the same year.

It is well-known that both the number and intensity of hurricanes in the Atlantic tend to increase during La Niña events. However, as I discussed in a post in June, since 1995, neutral years (when neither an El Niño or La Niña are present) have had Atlantic hurricane activity equal to La Niña years. The last time we had a strong El Niño event followed by a La Niña event in the same year, in 1998, we had a Atlantic hurricane season 40% above average in activity, with 14 named storms, 10 hurricanes, and 3 intense hurricanes. The season was relatively late-starting, with only one named storm occurring before August 20. I'm thinking this year's season may be similar, though four or more intense hurricanes are a good bet due to the record warm SSTs.

Both El Niño and La Niña events have major impacts on regional and global weather patterns. For the remainder of August, we can expect La Niña to bring cloudier and wetter than average conditions to the Caribbean, but weather patterns over North America should not see much impact. Globally, La Niña conditions tend to cause a net cooling of surface temperatures. Thus, while the past twelve month period has been the warmest globally since record keeping began in 1880, the calendar year of 2010 will probably end up just shy of being classified as the warmest year ever.

July 2010 Arctic sea ice extent 2nd lowest on record
Northern Hemisphere sea ice extent in July 2010 was the second lowest in the 31-year satellite record, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. Relatively cool weather occurred this July in the Arctic, compared to 2007, when the record low was set. Ice volume was at a record low for July, though, according to University of Washington Polar Ice Center. On August 16, the fabled Northwest Passage was just a day or two from melting open, and will probably be open for navigation during most of late August and all of September.

Jeff Masters
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801. AustinTXWeather 7:28 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
StormW, what's your latest take on TD5?
Member Since: Septiembre 13, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 241
803. MiamiHurricanes09 7:28 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
I would assume based on the information brought to us Recon And the satellite appearce of ex-05L that the NHC will declare it a tropical depression once more at 5p.m.
Member Since: Septiembre 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
804. reedzone 7:28 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting itrackstorms:


I can find no information to confirm this.


He used to work for the NHC, he pretty much has connection I would believe.
Member Since: Julio 1, 2008 Posts: 13 Comments: 7247
805. Stormchaser2007 7:29 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quite a change

Member Since: Junio 9, 2007 Posts: 4 Comments: 15248
806. Patrap 7:29 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Member Since: Julio 3, 2005 Posts: 372 Comments: 111605
807. TexasHurricane 7:29 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting txsweetpea:


Hmmmm...looks like it has decided to get serious.


Where are you at again? It has pretty much ended here, but that was cool, wasn't expecting that today. :)
Member Since: Julio 2, 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 2811
809. MiamiHurricanes09 7:30 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
I would assume based on the information brought to us Recon And the satellite appearce of ex-05L that the NHC will declare it a tropical depression once more at 5p.m.
Member Since: Septiembre 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
810. Patrap 7:30 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Member Since: Julio 3, 2005 Posts: 372 Comments: 111605
811. Tazmanian 7:31 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
I would assume based on the information brought to us Recon And the satellite appearce of ex-05L that the NHC will declare it a tropical depression once more at 5p.m.



yup
Member Since: Mayo 21, 2006 Posts: 5088 Comments: 111355
812. angiest 7:31 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
recoon looks to be making their next pass.
Member Since: Agosto 26, 2006 Posts: 16 Comments: 4766
814. NOLALawyer 7:31 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Pascagoulagal, I don't think anyone here wants to see people lose their lives. You still have yours, so you didn't lose everything, thankfully. Property can be replaced and rebuilt. Lives are precious.
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815. Patrap 7:31 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Member Since: Julio 3, 2005 Posts: 372 Comments: 111605
816. Tazmanian 7:31 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
09 i think TD 5 has a better ch on geting name this time a round
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817. MiamiHurricanes09 7:32 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting Stormchaser2007:
The 12z GFS brought PGI30L up to 88knots(925mb winds) at 144 hours.

And that wasn't even near peak intensity...it maxed out right after it made landfall over Bermuda.
Member Since: Septiembre 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
818. txsweetpea 7:32 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting TexasHurricane:


Where are you at again? It has pretty much ended here, but that was cool, wasn't expecting that today. :)


14 miles west of the la border in texas....
Member Since: Junio 7, 2010 Posts: 0 Comments: 546
819. aspectre 7:32 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
718 tkeith "xcool's speed puts at 36 hrs out : aspectre's speed, 24 hrs out"

xcool is using the XTRP speed which was averaged over the last 12hours, while mine was averaged over the last 6hours.
Member Since: Agosto 21, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 4846
823. scott39 7:32 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting NHCstevehayward:
The Hurricane Hunters have found very strong winds in the NE quadrant. 37 knots, not sure if they found that LLC
I saw that for 8/11. Maybe Im looking at it wrong?
Member Since: Junio 13, 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 6207
824. itrackstorms 7:33 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting reedzone:


He used to work for the NHC, he pretty much has connection I would believe.


Mystery solved above. Thanks Steve.
Member Since: Julio 20, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 152
825. ElConando 7:33 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting Stormchaser2007:
Quite a change



It showed a HUGE upward pulse of MJO in the Indian ocean. See if it occurs if it turns around back to our area. Many of then been doing that all season.
Member Since: Septiembre 6, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 3703
827. TexasHurricane 7:34 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting StormW:


All depends on motion...either way, if it keeps going west and makes landfall earlier, could ramp up in the last hour before crossing real estate...if it dips further south, more time over the water, and stronger system. I'm still holding with 40-50mph TS, should Recon find a closed LLC.


You think it is still possible that is could go a little more south or no?
Member Since: Julio 2, 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 2811
828. MiamiHurricanes09 7:34 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting Tazmanian:
09 i think TD 5 has a better ch on geting name this time a round
I'm thinking 40-50mph TS before landfall in Louisiana.
Member Since: Septiembre 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
829. Patrap 7:34 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
NWS Slidell Radar back in Service.







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831. TexasHurricane 7:35 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting txsweetpea:


14 miles west of the la border in texas....


ok, sounds like you are around where I am....Mauriceville
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832. all4hurricanes 7:35 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Is it officially a TD the NHC doesn't say anything about it
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833. Patrap 7:35 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting NHCstevehayward:

if the center is where i believe it is, it's headed straight to the New Orleans area


Looks to be on track for that Western Path.

The Southern Solution time has passed.
Member Since: Julio 3, 2005 Posts: 372 Comments: 111605
835. will45 7:36 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting scott39:
I saw that for 8/11. Maybe Im looking at it wrong?



good catch scott
Member Since: Julio 18, 2009 Posts: 1 Comments: 994
836. BobinTampa 7:36 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
On a completely unrelated note, I have finally gotten around to getting a paid membership here.

Definitely worth $10 a year.

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838. Ossqss 7:37 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Click to enlarge





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839. Seastep 7:37 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting all4hurricanes:
Is it officially a TD the NHC doesn't say anything about it


No, not officially.

Recon has found 26kts and 1008.9mb so far
Member Since: Septiembre 9, 2008 Posts: 6 Comments: 3406
840. Patrap 7:37 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Note the rapid falls...

Temperature: 98.0 F 76.0 F 85.1 F
Dew Point: -99.9 F -99.9 F -99.9 F
Humidity: 0.0% 100.0% 0.0%
Wind Speed: 26.0mph from the SSE - -
Wind Gust: 32.0mph from the SSE

History for MDKCM6
Pascagoula, MS, Pascagoula, MS
Member Since: Julio 3, 2005 Posts: 372 Comments: 111605
841. weld 7:38 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting gulfcoastdweller:


yes, WLOX has it's very own weather channel, channel 61 on the world's worse cable provider, Cable One
How right you are
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842. SouthDadeFish 7:38 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
SFMR found 33 knot winds just after it crossed the center.
Member Since: Agosto 12, 2007 Posts: 11 Comments: 2418
844. scott39 7:38 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting NHCstevehayward:

oh my, your right. don't ever get old.
LOL-- Im getting there.
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845. Tazmanian 7:38 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
the HH this found a mb of 1008.4 and winds of 33kt
Member Since: Mayo 21, 2006 Posts: 5088 Comments: 111355
847. washingtonian115 7:39 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting all4hurricanes:
Is it officially a TD the NHC doesn't say anything about it
Are they going to isuue a special advisory for it.
Member Since: Agosto 14, 2010 Posts: 5 Comments: 10664
848. Tropicsweatherpr 7:39 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Quoting Stormchaser2007:
Quite a change



I thought it was going to stay in the Atlantic as it is the basin with more heat but I guess is not occuring.
Member Since: Abril 29, 2009 Posts: 64 Comments: 8224
849. Stormchaser2007 7:39 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
***Joe Bastardi***


MONDAY 3:00 PM

LOOKS LIKE WE HAVE A 25KT DEPRESSION

The data rom recon, which is out there.. says we have a center near 29 north and 87 west. Lets see if a vortex message comes out.
Member Since: Junio 9, 2007 Posts: 4 Comments: 15248
850. AustinTXWeather 7:39 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
Thanks StormW
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851. SouthDadeFish 7:40 PM GMT en Agosto 16, 2010    
The center looks to have moved NW since the last center fix.
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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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