Hurricane Danielle has changed little in organization over the past 12 hours, and is having trouble with strong upper level westerly winds that are creating a moderate 15 - 20 knots of wind shear. Latest
satellite loops show that most of Danielle's low level spiral bands are on the east side of the storm, away from the shear. There is also a considerable amount of dry air on the west side of the storm that is inhibiting thunderstorm formation on the hurricane's west side. Danielle is over warm 28°C water. The Hurricane Hunters will begin flying missions into Danielle on Friday afternoon, since the storm is still too far from land to reach with their airplanes.
Figure 1. Morning satellite image of Danielle, Tropical Depression Seven, and a new tropical wave emerging from the coast of Africa (possibly to be designated 97L?)
Intensity forecast for DanielleIn the short term, now through Thursday, persistent wind shear of 15 - 20 knots due to strong upper level winds out of the west should keep any intensification of Danielle slow. The latest wind shear forecast from the
SHIPS model calls for shear to fall to the low range, 5 - 10 knots, Friday through Saturday. With SSTs expected to be a warm 28 - 29°C, these conditions may favor a bout of rapid intensification. It is possible Danielle could become a major Category 3 hurricane by Saturday night and Sunday, when it should be making its closest approach to Bermuda.
Track forecast for DanielleThe trough of low pressure over the mid-Atlantic Ocean steering Danielle more to the northwest will wane in influence over the next two days, as a ridge of high pressure moves north of the storm. This will keep Danielle moving generally northwest towards Bermuda over the next three days. On Saturday, a new trough of low pressure that is expected to move off the East Coast of the U.S. and Canada should begin pulling Danielle due north, eventually recurving the storm out to sea without hitting land. However, one model--the NOGAPS--predicts that Danielle will be moving too slowly and that the new trough will not be strong enough to recurve Danielle out to sea. The NOGAPS keeps Danielle moving on a northwest course, passing very close to Bermuda, and coming perilously close the Northeast U.S. coast 7 - 8 days from now. The NOGAPS is an outlier in the models, and the official NHC forecast follows the consensus of our other reliable models, calling for Danielle to turn towards the north this weekend and miss Bermuda. These models include the three best-performing models from last year at making 4 - 5 day forecasts--the Canadian, ECMWF, and GFS models. Assuming Danielle follows the official NHC track, Bermuda can expect the storm's outer winds to reach the island Saturday night. NHC
is giving Bermuda a 39% chance of receiving tropical storm force winds of 39 mph or greater from Danielle, and a 9% chance of getting hurricane force winds.
History suggests that a storm in Danielle's current location has only a 15% chance of making landfall on the U.S. East Coast. If Danielle passes east of Bermuda, as forecast, these percentages drop to less than 5%. However, Danielle will bring high surf conditions to the U.S. East Coast beginning this weekend. The latest wave forecast from NOAA's Wavewatch III model (which uses the GFS model as its prediction for the position and intensity of hurricanes), calls for waves from Danielle to begin hitting the coast of North Carolina on Saturday. These waves will build to 6 - 9 feet in the offshore waters from Northern Florida to North Carolina by Sunday. The latest
nearshore water forecast for Cape Hatteras calls for 5 - 8 foot waves Saturday through Sunday. Waves will be much higher in Bermuda, where the
Bermuda Weather Service is predicting 10 - 15 foot waves this weekend.
Figure 2. Wave forecast for the Atlantic made by
NOAA's Wavewatch III model for Sunday morning, August 29, 2010. The model was run at 2am EDT Wednesday, August 25. The model is predicting that waves from Danielle of 2 - 3 meters (6 - 9 feet) will begin affecting the offshore waters from northern Florida to Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, on Sunday. These waves will cause considerable beach erosion and dangerous rip currents.
Tropical Depression SevenSatellite images show that the tropical wave (96L) that emerged off the coast of Africa Monday has become
Tropical Depression Seven. Satellite estimates of TD 7's strength
support calling this a 35 mph tropical depression, and latest
satellite loops show a well-organized system with an increasing amount of heavy thunderstorm activity, plenty of low-level spiral banding, and expanding upper-level outflow to the north. This is likely to be Tropical Storm Earl later today. Tropical Depression Seven is now well east of the Cape Verdes Islands, and has a large stretch of open ocean before it.
Water vapor satellite images show a large region of dry air from the Sahara lies to the west of TD 7, and this dry air will likely be the primary inhibiting factor for development over the next three days. Wind shear is low, 5 - 10 knots, and sea surface temperatures are warm, around 28°C.
Forecast for Tropical Depression SevenWind shear is predicted to remain low, 5 - 10 knots, for the next three days. SSTs will cool a bit to 27.5°C by Thursday, but this is still above the 26.5°C threshold for hurricane development. TD 7 may cross Danielle's cold water wake at some point, which may interrupt development. Dry air will probably be the main inhibiting factor for TD 7 over the next three days. The SHIPS model is indicating an increase in wind shear to the moderate range, 10 - 20 knots, 4 - 5 days from now. In combination, these factors should allow for a slow intensification of TD 7 into Hurricane Earl 4 -5 days from now.
The long range fate of TD 7 remains unclear. The storm is being steering by the same ridge of high pressure steering Danielle, and will initially follow a track similar to Danielle. As TD 7 approaches the central Atlantic 4 - 6 days from now, the storm will encounter the same mid-Atlantic trough that is expected to turn Danielle to the north. This trough should be able to turn TD 7 far enough to the northwest so that it will miss the Lesser Antilles Islands. However, it is unclear at this point whether this trough will be strong enough to fully recurve TD 7 out to sea, east of Bermuda. This will, in part, depend upon how strong Danielle gets and how fast it moves. A stronger Danielle is likely to create more of a break in the ridge of high pressure steering TD 7, encouraging the storm to turn north and recurve out to sea. A weaker Danielle will make TD 7 more likely to miss recurvature, and follow a track to the west or west-northwest towards the U.S. East Coast early next week. History suggests that a storm in TD 7's current location has only a 20% chance of making landfall on the U.S. East Coast.
Elsewhere in the TropicsA new tropical wave is emerging from the coast of Africa this morning (Figure 1.) The latest GFS model run develops this wave into a tropical depression 3 - 4 days from now. I can't see any reason why this would not occur. Conditions for tropical cyclone development will remain favorable in the Eastern Atlantic for at least the next week, and the GFS models has successfully predicted the development of both Danielle and TD 7 over the past two weeks. This new wave probably has a better chance of hitting the U.S. East Coast than either Danielle or TD 7.
Over in the Gulf of Mexico, a trough of low pressure is generating some disorganized thunderstorm activity. This action may increase on Thursday and Friday, when a cold front is expected to move off the coast of Texas and over the Gulf. NHC is giving a 10% chance of this area of disturbed weather developing into a tropical depression by Friday. Any storm that might develop over the Gulf of Mexico from this disturbance would likely not stay over water long enough to develop into a hurricane, and none of the computer models currently support tropical cyclone development in the Gulf over the next seven days.
In the Eastern Pacific,
Tropical Storm Frank has moved away the coast far enough from the Mexican coast to no longer pose a heavy rainfall threat, and all tropical storm warnings have been dropped.
Flood waters peak in southern PakistanFlooding on Pakistan's largest river, the Indus, has
peaked at the 2nd highest flow rates on record today at the Indus River gauge station nearest to the coast, at Kotri. Today's flow rate was 938,000 cubic feet/sec, and the record,
set in 1956, was 980,000 cubic feet/sec. The new flooding has forced new evacuations of hundreds of thousands of people in southern Pakistan over the past four days. Flood heights at
every monitoring station along the Indus have been the highest or almost the highest since records began in 1947. Flooding has slowly eased along the upper and middle stretches of the Indus where most of the heavy monsoon rains fell in late July and early August, though most of the flooded regions remain underwater and 800,000 people are still cut off from receiving aid.
More rain is in the forecast, and flood waters will only gradually subside in coming weeks. The monsoon is currently in an active phase, and is being enhanced by a low pressure system passing over the northern portion of the country. Rainfall will be moderate to heavy in some of the flooded regions over the next two days, according to
the Pakistan Meteorological Department.Figure 3. Flood volumes on Pakistan's main river, the Indus, during August 2010. Flood height have generally been declining in recent weeks along most of the Indus, but are peaking right now near the coast. Image credit:
Pakistan Meteorology Department.Figure 4. Image of the Pakistan flood catastrophe of 2010, courtesy of the
Pakistan Meteorology Department.The toll in Pakistan is staggering: 1,600 dead, 1.2 million homes destroyed, 800,000 stranded and cut off from supplies, 4 million homeless, and 1.6 million already affected by water-borne diseases such as cholera and dysentery. Some aid agencies helping with humanitarian crisis in Pakistan:
Doctors Without BordersThe International Red CrossMERLIN medical relief charity
The mobile giving service
mGive allows one to text the word "SWAT" to 50555. The text will result in a $10 donation to the
UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) Pakistan Flood Relief Effort.
Jeff Masters