Skip Navigation Links weather.gov   
NOAA logo - Click to go to the NOAA homepage National Weather Service   NWS logo - Click to go to the NWS homepage
National Hurricane Center
Local forecast by
"City, St" or "ZIP"

 
Get Storm Info
   Satellite | Radar
   Aircraft Recon
   Advisory Archive
   Experimental
   Mobile Products
   E-mail Advisories
   Audio/Podcasts
   GIS Data | RSS XML/RSS logo
   Help with Advisories
Marine Forecasts
   Atlantic and E Pacific
   Forecast and
   Analysis Tools

   Help with Marine
Hurricane Awareness
   Be Prepared | Learn
   Frequent Questions
   AOML Research
   Hurricane Hunters
   Saffir-Simpson Scale
   Forecasting Models
   Eyewall Wind Profiles
   Glossary/Acronyms
   Storm Names
   Breakpoints
Hurricane History
   Seasons Archive
   Forecast Accuracy
   Climatology
   Most Extreme
About the NHC
   Mission and Vision
   Personnel | Visitors
   NHC Virtual Tour
   Library
   Joint Hurr Testbed
   The NCEP Centers
Contact UsHelp
FirstGov.gov is the U.S. Government's official Web portal to all Federal, state and local government Web resources and services.

Tropical Storm GENEVIEVE


ZCZC MIATCDEP3 ALL
TTAA00 KNHC DDHHMM
TROPICAL STORM GENEVIEVE DISCUSSION NUMBER   2
NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL   EP082008
200 PM PDT MON JUL 21 2008

SATELLITE IMAGES INDICATE THAT THE CENTER REMAINS ON THE EASTERN
SIDE OF A NEW BURST OF DEEP CONVECTION WITH PLENTY OF BANDING
FEATURES IN THE WESTERN SEMICIRCLE.  AN ASCAT MICROWAVE PASS AT
1604 UTC SHOWED 30-35 KT WINDS WITH THIS SYSTEM AND DVORAK
SATELLITE CLASSIFICATIONS FROM TAFB/SAB ARE A CONSENSUS T2.5...35
KT.  THUS THE DEPRESSION HAS BEEN UPGRADED TO TROPICAL STORM
GENEVIEVE AND AN INITIAL INTENSITY OF 35 KT WILL BE USED.  MODERATE
EASTERLY SHEAR SHOULD INHIBIT ANY RAPID DEVELOPMENT DURING THE NEXT
DAY OR SO.  THEREAFTER...MOST OF THE MODELS SHOW VERY LIGHT
SHEAR...AND WITH WATERS THAT ARE PLENTY WARM IN THE PATH OF THE
STORM...THE SYSTEM COULD BECOME A HURRICANE IN A FEW DAYS...OR
SOONER.  THE OFFICIAL FORECAST IS CLOSE TO A BLEND OF THE
SHIPS/LGEM/GFDL MODELS AND IS NEAR THE PREVIOUS FORECAST.  

GENEVIEVE HAS BEEN MOVING AT ABOUT 280/15 FOR THE PAST SEVERAL
HOURS.  MODEL GUIDANCE SUGGESTS THE STORM SHOULD SLOW DOWN
RELATIVELY SOON...PERHAPS DUE TO THE RIDGE WEAKENING A LITTLE DUE
TO A MID- TO UPPER-LEVEL TROUGH OVER MEXICO.  THAT TROUGH DOESN'T
LOOK VERY IMPRESSIVE ON WATER VAPOR IMAGES...SO I'M GOING TO KEEP
THE STORM ON THE FASTER SIDE OF THE GUIDANCE...BUT NOT AS SPEEDY AS
THE GFS.  THE OFFICIAL FORECAST IS ADJUSTED WESTWARD OF THE
PREVIOUS ONE.  
 
 
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
 
INITIAL      21/2100Z 13.9N 102.6W    35 KT
 12HR VT     22/0600Z 14.1N 104.3W    40 KT
 24HR VT     22/1800Z 14.5N 106.6W    45 KT
 36HR VT     23/0600Z 14.9N 108.4W    55 KT
 48HR VT     23/1800Z 15.4N 110.4W    60 KT
 72HR VT     24/1800Z 16.0N 113.0W    65 KT
 96HR VT     25/1800Z 16.5N 116.0W    60 KT
120HR VT     26/1800Z 17.5N 120.0W    55 KT
 
$$
FORECASTER BLAKE
 
NNNN


Quick Navigation Links:
NHC Active Storms  -  Atlantic and E Pacific Marine  -  Storm Archives
Hurricane Awareness  -  How to Prepare  -  About NHC  -  Contact Us

NOAA/ National Weather Service
National Centers for Environmental Prediction
National Hurricane Center
Tropical Prediction Center
11691 SW 17th Street
Miami, Florida 33165-2149 USA
nhcwebmaster@noaa.gov
Disclaimer
Credits
Information Quality
Glossary
Privacy Policy
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
About Us
Career Opportunities
Page last modified: Thursday, 18-Sep-2008 19:03:45 GMT