BOOM.
Now then... there's quite a story unfolding just northeast of the Bahamas at the moment, as tropical storm Joaquin (probably a hurricane by now) has really got its act together over the past 36 hours and appears to have behaved in exactly the right way to maximise it's potential for future intensification.
This behaviour has been two-fold.
Firstly, the low level circulation of the storm made a dash south early in the period, toward its mid-level convective swirl, which pulled it away from some strong wind shear. Very few models saw that one coming... and although ECM did explore the idea, official NHC forecasts initially called for a weak tropical storm, upgrading to a moderate storm in the following outlook. The jump south then changed the game completely, and forecasts since have brought the storm up to hurricane strength by the end of Wednesday 30th.
Secondly, it has since maintained a southerly component to its motion rather than the due west motion that could have occurred, which has continued to take it into an increasingly low shear environment not just at present but also in terms of likely conditions over the coming 3 or 4 days. The models have responded by coming up with some increasingly dramatic - and dangerous - solutions.
Yet a very wide range of possible paths remains, as the models struggle severely with a weak steering environment over the coming two days followed by an uncertain trough in terms of timing, extent and orientation:
The main pack are curving the storm west, which is behaviour very reminiscent of Hurricane Sandy in 2012. This time around, it's caused by the trough being negatively tilted - the axis running more NW to SE than the usual SW to NE. Instead of the usual turn east, you get a turn west with nearby tropical cyclones.
Those that don't curve the storm west are either moving Joaquin along more slowly so that the trough ends up to its NE, or have the trough positively tilted (but note that the positive tilt solution has lost a lot of support over the past 24 hours).
The latest intensity guidance is... alarming:
This has been trending steadily upward with each of the last four sets of model runs. It's been a long time since I last saw such a tight clustering hitting category 4 intensity! Those ones which then climb toward category 5 beyond 72 hours are concerning... conditions are meant to be becoming less conducive for intensification by then presuming the storm is lifting north - but what if it doesn't? There is an outside chance that the storm is left meandering near the Bahamas over record-warm waters. Not sure that's what the cat 5 models are going with though - perhaps the trough takes longer to arrive in those solutions?
I'll wrap it up for now with this snapshot of the GFS 06z operational run. Yesterday, most of the op runs had hardly any development as the storm moved east toward the Azores... it's a very different story now! The 00z was more restrained but this 06z does represent the trend we're seeing in general this morning.
Here's hoping that if Joaquin does achieve its true potential, it doesn't perform that hook west and slam into the U.S.
Of course, without that, places such as Newfoundland then become at risk, and the storm could have major impacts in the extratropical Atlantic as well... there's little chance of a total let-off with this one unless, perhaps, dry air manages to invade the storm more than expected in the very near future.
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