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BIRDSEYE VIEW POSTS

Since 2012 on the now retired Weather Underground blogs, I have been posting annotated "birdseye view" charts of the Atlantic basin, with a detailed explanation and forecasting that references the chart. From there you may know me as "NCHurricane2009." While I now do these "birdseye view" posts here, I will continue to do comments at Yale Climate Connections via Disqus where the former Weather Underground community has moved to. Feel free to reply to me there, at my Disqus feed at this link, or via e-mail at IOHurricanes@outlook.com 

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MY 2024 ATLANTIC HURRICANE SEASON BIRDSEYE VIEW POST #48

*******Note that forecast and outlooks in this post are NOT the official forecast from the National Hurricane Center (NHC). They are my own detailed views on the Atlantic tropics based on current observations and latest computer model runs. As such do not make decisions based on my posts...consult news media...watches and warnings from your local weather office...and any evacuation orders issued by local governments to make the most informed and best decisions. Visit the NHC website hurricanes.gov (hurricanes dot gov) for the latest watches/warnings and official forecasts on active tropical cyclones.*********


...MONDAY JULY 22 2024 1:19 PM EDT...


Tropical activity in the Atlantic basin has been calm over the last few days to higher concentrations of dry Saharan air toward the east and pockets of suppressing cut-off upper vorticity across the western half of the basin. Through the next six days the western cut-off upper vorticity is expected to generally decay due to prolonged isolation from high-latitude cold air... allowing for the ongoing eastern Atlantic tropical upper ridging to expand westward into the eastern Caribbean. In addition the warm surface southerly flow ahead of the current slow-moving Kentucky frontal low... followed by the next frontal system that moves into western North America... will promote warm core upper ridging across the Gulf of Mexico and southeastern United States... with whatever remaining of the decaying upper vorticity lingering across the western and central Caribbean while sandwiched between the Gulf of Mexico and eastern Caribbean upper ridging. Therefore for the next few days expecting the following:


For the western and central Caribbean... no tropical cyclone formation expected as suppressing upper vorticity lingers in the region.


For the eastern Caribbean and tropical belt of the Atlantic basin (Lesser Antilles to western Africa)... despite upper ridging favoring tropical activity the models continue to not show tropical development perhaps while projecting that dry Saharan air will continue to blanket the region.


For the western Gulf of Mexico... including coastal northern Veracruz... coastal Tamaulipas... and coastal Texas... a tropical disturbance is possible within the next few days. In the upper-levels... the cut-off upper vortex over northeastern Mexico will soon be merging with the current upper trough over central North America. The upper trough that results from the merger will likely be amplified enough to promote lower wind shear and supportive upper divergence over the western Gulf of Mexico. Anticyclonic outflow on the west side of the forecast Gulf of Mexico upper ridging mentioned in the first paragraph of this post may also promote tropical activity in the western Gulf. Currently divergence ahead of the northeastern Mexico upper vortex continues to produce thunderstorm activity in the western Gulf of Mexico... which through this morning has gained concentration in the southwestern Gulf. The next surface tropical wave that will move over the southwestern Gulf of Mexico is currently in the western Caribbean near 82W longitude... if this wave later deposits a low-level spin enhanced by the aforementioned upper-level wind pattern in the western Gulf of Mexico... or alternatively if a low-level spin is simply generated by the upper-level wind pattern... will declare a tropical area of interest for the western Gulf in future updates.


...COMPUTER MODEL SUMMARY...

Source...Florida State University Experimental Forecast Tropical Cyclone Genesis Potential Fields (http://moe.met.fsu.edu/tcgengifs/).


0000Z (Jul 22) CMC Model Run...

**No tropical development shown in Atlantic basin through 168 hours (7 days)


0000Z (Jul 22) ECMWF Model Run...

**No tropical development shown in Atlantic basin through 168 hours (7 days)


0600Z (Jul 22) GFS Model Run...

**No tropical development shown in Atlantic basin through 168 hours (7 days)


0600Z (Jul 22) NAVGEM Model Run...

**No tropical development shown in Atlantic basin through 168 hours (7 days)

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