Friday, July 5, 2019

Could a tropical storm brew before the middle of July in Gulf of Mexico?

By Alex Sosnowski, AccuWeather senior meteorologist




Showers and thunderstorms forecast to congeal along the coast of the southern United States next week and could slowly allow a storm to brew that may be tropical in nature.
While much of the Atlantic Basin is likely to remain hostile for tropical development due to large areas of dry air, dust and wind shear, there is a somewhat more likely area where development may take place in the coming days.
The southeastern part of the nation, including parts of the Gulf of Mexico and the western Atlantic, will become an active zone for showers and thunderstorms this weekend into next week.
SE Next Week

Slightly cooler air aloft associated with a developing non-tropical storm, combined with warm and humid conditions, will spur on thundery downpours this weekend through next week.
However, during next week through next weekend, the storm aloft may slowly spin down to the surface.
"At this time, it appears the most likely area for slow development would be over the northeastern Gulf of Mexico, perhaps near the coasts of Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and southeastern Louisiana," according to AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Dan Kottlowski.
Gulf of Mexico Tropical Development

"That development could be tropical or subtropical in nature," Kottlowski said.
subtropical storm has both tropical and non-tropical characteristics.
Subtropical storms tend to be somewhat lopsided and may contain pockets of dry air near the center. However, in terms of impact, they can also bring heavy rainfall, rough sea and surf conditions and strong winds, just like their true tropical storm cousin.
Development may occur as early as the middle of next week, late next week and next weekend or perhaps not at all.
noaa tropical threat july 5 2019
Satellite imagery shows it's mostly quiet over the Gulf of Mexico as of July 5, but that could change drastically over the next 7 to 10 days. (NOAA)
It is possible that the development zone extends northeastward off the Georgia and Carolina coast next week. This will be a swath where showers and thunderstorms extend over the Atlantic.
In any event, the area around the northeastern Gulf coast may be prone to several days of downpours from a slow-moving storm.
At some point, the more concentrated batch of downpours and thunderstorms associated with the feature, tropical or not, may be pulled inland over the South and then northeastward around an area of high pressure near Bermuda.
There is another area, located in a narrow zone immediately west of Africa, where there is a plume of moisture and slightly lower wind shear.
Atlantic Satellite Friday July 5
This image showing inactivity over the bulk of the tropical Atlantic was taken on Friday morning, July 5, 2019. Some clouds were gathering along the Southeast coast of the United States and a batch of thunderstorms was emerging from Africa in the far right. (CIRA / NOAA)

This area is the source of tropical waves or disturbances that move westward across Africa in the form of gusty winds and locally heavy thunderstorms.
These waves often result in the bulk of tropical storms and hurricane over the Atlantic Basin from August through September and October. This period is the heart of hurricane season with the peak in September.
Static Atlantic Hurricane Frequency

Any such development through next week off Africa will have to fight against dry, dusty air to the immediate north.
While El Niño conditions may suppress the numbers of tropical storms and hurricane in the Atlantic basin somewhat this year, all it takes is for one or two hurricanes to strike populated areas and result in great risk to lives and property.
This year, AccuWeather will implement its RealImpact™ Scale for Hurricanes to assist with public safety and understanding, as well as risk of damage should a tropical threat arise.
Download the free AccuWeather app to keep track of the latest tropical activity. Keep checking back for updates on AccuWeather.com and stay tuned to the AccuWeather Network on DirecTV, Frontier and Verizon Fios.
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