Hurricane Ike, TS Hannah, TS Josephine – Update 9-5
Posted by feww on September 5, 2008
Ike Update 9/12: Who Rubbed the Oil Lamp?
Tropical Storm Hannah
FEWW Comment: Big Hannah’s torrential rains have already submerged parts of Haiti in more than two meters of floodwater, leaving about 140 people dead. A nightmare scenario in the US Atlantic coast could unfold, if Hannah were to move in slow motion over the U.S. east coast, as already predicted by NHC, without necessarily making landfall, repeating a similar performance to her Haiti debut.
Updated Tropical Atlantic Imagery – Aviation color enhancement – GOES East – Date and time as shown on image. Credit NOAA/SSD/NESDIS
TS Hannah: Coastal Watches/Warnings and 3-Day Track Forecast Cone
This graphic shows an approximate representation of coastal areas under a hurricane warning (red), hurricane watch (pink), tropical storm warning (blue) and tropical storm watch (yellow). The orange circle indicates the current position of the center of the tropical cyclone. The black line and dots show the National Hurricane Center (NHC) forecast track of the center at the times indicated. The dot indicating the forecast center location will be black if the cyclone is forecast to be tropical and will be white with a black outline if the cyclone is forecast to be extratropical. If only an L is displayed, then the system is forecast to be a remnant low. The letter inside the dot indicates the NHC’s forecast intensity for that time. NOAA/NHC
TS Hannah
- Source: NHC
- Forecaster: Rhome
- Date and Time: Sept 5, 2008 / 06:00UTC
- Location: The center of tropical storm Hanna was located near latitude 27.2 North, longitude 77.2 West or about 90 km north of Great Abaco Island and about 790 km south of Wilmington, North Carolina.
- Direction: Hanna is moving toward the northwest. NHC expects a gradual turn to the north with an increase in forward speed later today. The center of Hanna will be near the southeast coast of the United States later Today. However, rains and winds associated with Hanna will reach the coast well in advance of the center.
- Speed: About 30 km/hr.
- Wind Speed: About 105 km/hr with higher gusts. It is still possible for Hanna to become a hurricane.
- Breadth: Tropical storm force winds extend outward up to 510 km (v. large) mainly to the north and east of the center.
- Estimated minimum central pressure: 984mb (29.05 inches).
- Additional Information: Hanna could produce rainfall totals of 2 to 3 inches over the Northern Bahamas and the eastern portions of south and north Carolina, with maximum isolated amounts of 5 inches possible. Rainfall totals of up to 3 inches are possible from the Georgia coast southward to the central Florida coast. Very heavy rainfall amounts are likely to spread rapidly northward into the mid Atlantic states and New England from Friday night into Saturday and may result in flooding.
Hurricane Ike
Hurricane Ike: Coastal Watches/Warnings and 5-Day Track Forecast Cone
NOAA/NHC
FEWW Comment: Ike, having strengthened to a very dangerous Category 4B on the FEWW Hurricane Scale just over 24 hours ago, is now slightly downgraded to a category 4A hurricane churning in a westerly direction. If Ike remains on its 5-day NHC-predicted path, and maintains its current strength as a major hurricane (Category 3A or above,) it would sweep over the northern edge of Haiti and the Island of Cuba causing additional destruction on a grand scale, compounding the misery caused by TS Fay, Hurricane Gustav and Hurricane Hannah during the last 19 days.
- Source: NHC
- Forecaster: Brown
- Date and Time: Sept 5, 2008 at 03:00UTC
- Category and Wind Speed: About 215 km/hr, with higher gusts. Ike is an extremely dangerous category four hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale [Category 4A on FEWW Hurricane Scale.] Some weakening is forecast during the next 24 to 48 hours.
- Location: The center of hurricane Ike was located near latitude 23.6 North, longitude 59.5 West or about 760 km north-northeast of the Leeward Islands and about 1,215 km east-northeast of Grand Turk island.
- Direction: Ike is moving in a westerly direction. A turn toward the west-southwest is expected on Friday, and this motion is expected to continue through Saturday. On this track the hurricane will continue to move over the open waters of the west-central Atlantic during the next 48 hours.
- Speed: About 22 km/hr.
- Breadth: Hurricane force winds extend outward up to 55 km from the center, and tropical storm force winds extend outward up to 185 km.
- Estimated minimum central pressure: 945mb (27.91 inches).
TS Josephine
Coming soon …
2009 Hurricane Season « Fire Earth said
[…] Hurricane Ike, TS Hannah, TS Josephine – Update 9-5 […]
feww said
Drink-driving [above the “legal limit”] is illegal in most “developed” countries.
jim cox said
[EP violation! Edited by moderator: FEWW]