Fabian was a long-lived, powerful Cape Verde hurricane that struck Bermuda with category three intensity. It caused extensive damage on that island, where it was reported to be the worst hurricane since 1926.
Fabian's genesis can be traced back to a vigorous tropical wave that emerged from western Africa on 25 August, and moved westward through the Cape Verde Islands a day later. By 27 August, the deep convection associated with the system became more consolidated in a circular area, and it is estimated that a tropical depression formed at 1800 UTC, centered about 365 n mi west of the Cape Verde Islands. Fabian's path is shown in Figure 1, and time series of the tropical cyclone's maximum sustained wind and minimum central pressure are displayed in Figure 2 and Figure 3, respectively. The best track positions and intensities are listed in Table 1. With a favorable atmospheric and oceanic environment (characterized by vertical shear from 850 to 200 mb of 5-10 kt or less, sea surface temperatures near 27.5°C), the tropical cyclone strengthened fairly steadily and became a tropical storm around 1200 UTC 28 August, and a hurricane by 0000 UTC 30 August over the east-central tropical Atlantic. Fabian reached its estimated peak intensity of 125 kt at 1800 UTC 1 September when it was centered about 265 n mi east-northeast of the northern Leeward Islands. This hurricane maintained Category 3 or Category 4 intensity on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale for almost a week.
Fabian was steered on a westward to west-northwestward heading for several days by deep easterlies to the south of a subtropical ridge. The forward speed gradually slowed from 18-19 kt just after genesis to less than 10 kt by 2 September, as the tropical cyclone neared a weakness in the subtropical ridge produced by a mid-level cyclonic circulation over the southwestern North Atlantic. Then, the hurricane turned toward the northwest while continuing to decelerate over the next couple of days. A large mid-tropospheric trough nearing the east coast of the United States provided a more northward steering flow, and Fabian turned north-northwestward to northward with increasing forward speed. Fabian targeted Bermuda, and struck that island with an intensity close to 100 kt. The eastern eyewall of the hurricane moved over Bermuda around 2000 UTC on 5 September. Observers on the western end of the island reported a brief interlude of blue sky and winds decreasing to 50-60 kt at various times between 1945 and 2115 UTC, which indicates that they were in the eastern fringes of Fabian's eye. The center of Fabian did not make landfall. However, since the eyewall passed over Bermuda, the hurricane made a direct hit on that island.
After raking Bermuda, the hurricane accelerated north-northeastward and northeastward, weakening to below 100 kt after 1800 UTC 6 September. Fabian lost its tropical characteristics on 8 September while located about 700 n mi east-northeast of Cape Race, Newfoundland. It turned northward the next day and merged with another extratropical cyclone between southern Greenland and Iceland.
Observations in Fabian (Figure 2 and Figure 3) include satellite-based Dvorak technique intensity estimates from the Tropical Analysis and Forecast Branch (TAFB), the Satellite Analysis Branch (SAB) and the U. S. Air Force Weather Agency (AFWA), as well as flight-level and dropwindsonde observations from flights of the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron of the U. S. Air Force Reserve Command (AFRES) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
Fabian's peak intensity is estimated to be 125 kt, based on a 700 mb flight-level wind of 140 kt measured by AFRES around 1917 UTC 1 September. A minimum central pressure of 942 mb was measured at that time. A lower central pressure of 939 mb was measured by NOAA at 2245 UTC 3 September, but maximum flight-level winds around that time only supported an intensity of 115 kt.
Surface observations in Hurricane Fabian, all from Bermuda, are listed in Table 2. A sustained (10 min average) wind speed of 105 kt and a gust to 131 kt were measured by Cable and Wireless at an elevation of 280 ft above sea level. Sustained 104 kt winds, with gusts to 127 kt, were observed at Warwick Tower at an elevation of 220 ft above ground level. Sustained winds of 102 kt with a gust to 143 kt were measured by Bermuda Harbor Radio at an elevation of 255 ft above sea level. Since these observations are unofficial and at elevations significantly higher than 10 m, it is difficult to use them to make an accurate assessment of the hurricane's strength when it hit Bermuda. They are, however, not inconsistent with category three intensity. Unfortunately, due to a loss of power, the official wind measurements from the Bermuda Airport (TXKF) anemometer ended at 1935 UTC 5 September, and the extreme sustained and gust wind speed values were estimated. Ship and drifting buoy reports of winds of tropical storm force associated with Fabian are given in Table 3.
Fabian was directly responsible for eight fatalities. A man drowned in a rip current near Cape Hatteras on 4 September. Four people drowned when they, and their vehicles, were swept off of a causeway in Bermuda on 5 September. Three fishermen drowned when their vessel sank about 350 n mi southeast of St. John's, Newfoundland on 7 September.
Bermuda was hit hard by Fabian. There was extensive damage to vegetation and considerable roof damage to houses in exposed locations. Some buildings had more severe damage, due to inherent structural weakness in some cases and possibly due to tornadoes (which were not confirmed) in others. There were huge (estimated 20 to 30 ft high) battering waves on the south shore of the island, with the reported storm surge estimated near 10 ft. Significant structural damage was inflicted as a result of wave action and/or surge. Property damage in Bermuda is estimated to be at least 300 million U.S. dollars.
In comparison to the long-term average, Fabian's track was well predicted in most cases. Average official track errors (with the number of cases in parentheses) for Fabian were 25 (46), 45 (44), 64 (42), 83 (40), 114 (36), 136 (32), and 206 (28) n mi for the 12, 24, 36, 48, 72, 96, and 120 h forecasts, respectively1. These errors are considerably (40-50%) lower than the average official track errors for the 10-yr period 1993-20022 of 45, 81, 116, 150, 225, 282, and 374, respectively. Overall, the official forecasts were slightly slow with somewhat of a westward bias. Table 4 lists the average forecast errors for the various track prediction models and model consensus for comparison with the official forecast errors. In general the official forecasts had lower average track errors than any of the individual models. However, the GUNS and GUNA consensus had average errors that were a little lower than, or the same as, the official forecasts at hours 12 through 72.
Average official intensity errors for Fabian were 4, 7, 10, 13, 18, 20, and 21 kt for the 12, 24, 36, 48, 72, 96, and 120 h forecasts, respectively. For comparison, the average official intensity errors over the 10-yr period 1993-2002 are 6, 10, 13, 15, 19, 21, and 22 kt, respectively. Thus the intensity forecasts for Fabian were about the same as the recent historical averages.
Table 5 lists the watches and warnings, all for Bermuda, associated with Hurricane Fabian. A hurricane watch was issued 35 h before Fabian's closest approach, and a hurricane warning was issued 29 h before Fabian's closest approach.
We thank Roger Williams, director of the Bermuda Meteorological Service, for providing meteorological observations and the information on Fabian's impact on Bermuda.
1All forecast verifications in this report include the depression stage of the cyclone. National Hurricane Center verifications presented in these reports prior to 2003 did not include the depression stage.
2 Errors given for the 96 and 120 h periods are averages over the two-year period 2001-2002.
| Date/Time (UTC) | Position | Pressure (mb) | Wind Speed (kt) | Stage | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lat. (°N) | Lon. (°W) |
||||
| 27 / 1800 | 14.6 | 30.7 | 1009 | 25 | tropical depression |
| 28 / 0000 | 14.7 | 32.3 | 1008 | 30 | " |
| 28 / 0600 | 14.9 | 34.2 | 1008 | 30 | " |
| 28 / 1200 | 15.0 | 36.2 | 1006 | 35 | tropical storm |
| 28 / 1800 | 15.1 | 38.2 | 1004 | 40 | " |
| 29 / 0000 | 15.2 | 40.1 | 1000 | 45 | " |
| 29 / 0600 | 15.4 | 41.8 | 997 | 50 | " |
| 29 / 1200 | 15.5 | 43.1 | 997 | 50 | " |
| 29 / 1800 | 15.8 | 44.3 | 990 | 60 | " |
| 30 / 0000 | 16.3 | 45.6 | 987 | 65 | hurricane |
| 30 / 0600 | 16.7 | 46.9 | 984 | 70 | " |
| 30 / 1200 | 17.0 | 48.0 | 973 | 85 | " |
| 30 / 1800 | 17.3 | 49.2 | 960 | 100 | " |
| 31 / 0000 | 17.6 | 50.3 | 952 | 110 | " |
| 31 / 0600 | 17.8 | 51.4 | 952 | 110 | " |
| 31 / 1200 | 18.0 | 52.5 | 952 | 110 | " |
| 31 / 1800 | 18.2 | 53.5 | 948 | 115 | " |
| 01 / 0000 | 18.3 | 54.3 | 945 | 120 | " |
| 01 / 0600 | 18.5 | 55.3 | 949 | 120 | " |
| 01 / 1200 | 18.7 | 56.3 | 949 | 120 | " |
| 01 / 1800 | 19.0 | 57.3 | 944 | 125 | " |
| 02 / 0000 | 19.3 | 58.3 | 943 | 125 | " |
| 02 / 0600 | 19.6 | 59.2 | 945 | 120 | " |
| 02 / 1200 | 20.1 | 59.9 | 945 | 120 | " |
| 02 / 1800 | 20.5 | 60.7 | 946 | 120 | " |
| 03 / 0000 | 20.9 | 61.3 | 945 | 115 | " |
| 03 / 0600 | 21.3 | 61.8 | 945 | 110 | " |
| 03 / 1200 | 21.9 | 62.3 | 945 | 110 | " |
| 03 / 1800 | 22.5 | 62.8 | 944 | 110 | " |
| 04 / 0000 | 23.2 | 63.0 | 939 | 115 | " |
| 04 / 0600 | 23.8 | 63.3 | 944 | 105 | " |
| 04 / 1200 | 24.8 | 63.8 | 944 | 105 | " |
| 04 / 1800 | 25.8 | 64.3 | 941 | 110 | " |
| 05 / 0000 | 27.1 | 64.6 | 940 | 115 | " |
| 05 / 0600 | 28.6 | 65.1 | 946 | 105 | " |
| 05 / 1200 | 30.1 | 65.3 | 951 | 105 | " |
| 05 / 1800 | 31.8 | 65.3 | 950 | 105 | " |
| 06 / 0000 | 33.4 | 64.7 | 953 | 100 | " |
| 06 / 0600 | 34.9 | 64.0 | 956 | 100 | " |
| 06 / 1200 | 36.0 | 62.4 | 957 | 100 | " |
| 06 / 1800 | 36.9 | 60.4 | 958 | 100 | " |
| 07 / 0000 | 37.9 | 58.2 | 962 | 90 | " |
| 07 / 0600 | 39.1 | 55.7 | 965 | 85 | " |
| 07 / 1200 | 40.6 | 53.4 | 967 | 80 | " |
| 07 / 1800 | 42.3 | 50.7 | 972 | 75 | " |
| 08 / 0000 | 44.3 | 47.9 | 975 | 70 | " |
| 08 / 0600 | 46.3 | 44.7 | 977 | 70 | " |
| 08 / 1200 | 48.7 | 40.8 | 980 | 65 | " |
| 08 / 1800 | 51.7 | 36.0 | 980 | 65 | extratropical |
| 09 / 0000 | 54.0 | 32.0 | 980 | 60 | " |
| 09 / 0600 | 56.0 | 29.0 | 982 | 50 | " |
| 09 / 1200 | 58.0 | 27.0 | 982 | 50 | " |
| 09 / 1800 | 60.0 | 27.0 | 990 | 40 | " |
| 10 / 0000 | absorbed | ||||
| 01 / 1800 | 19.0 | 57.3 | 944 | 125 | maximum intensity |
| 04 / 0000 | 23.2 | 63.0 | 939 | 115 | minimum pressure |
| 05 / 2000 | 32.3 | 65.1 | 952 | 100 | closest approach (12 n mi west) to Bermuda |
| Minimum Sea-level Pressure | Maximum Surface Wind Speed (kt) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Date/ Time (UTC) | Press. (mb) | Date/ Timea (UTC) | Sust. Windb (kts) | Peak Gust (kts) | Storm Surgec (ft) | Storm Tided (ft) | Rain (storm total) (in) |
| Bermuda | ||||||||
| Bermuda Airport (TXKF) | 2030 | 964.0 | 2055 | 105e | 130e | 1.82f | ||
| TXKF anemometer siteg | 1927 | 72 | 102 | |||||
| Cable and Wirelessh | 1940 | 105 | 131 | |||||
| Bermuda Harbour Radioi | 2050 | 961.0 | 1855 | 102 | 143 | |||
| Weatherbird (research vessel)j | 2048 | 961.0 | 1855 | 67 | 95 | |||
| Pitt's Bay (Hamilton)k | 2000 | 960.0 | ||||||
| Cambridge Beaches Hotell | 2100 | 953.0 | ||||||
| Southhamptonm | 2000 | 954.5 | ||||||
| Warwick Towern | 1900 | 98 | 120 | |||||
| Warwick Towero | 1900 | 104 | 127 | |||||
|
aTime is for sustained wind. bAveraging period is 10 min. cStorm surge is water height above normal astronomical tide level. dStorm tide is water height above National Geodetic Vertical Datum (1929 mean sea level). eTXKF maximum winds estimated at weather service building 130 ft above sea level. fRain data unreliable but total rainfall amounts were unlikely to exceed 3 in. Most observations reported only light rain and low visibility due to sea spray. g Airfield anemometer 40 ft above sea level; power failed at mast base due to storm surge at 1935 UTC. hInstrument height 280 ft above sea level. iInstrument height 255 ft above sea level; mast fell down shortly after peak gust at 1935 UTC. Pressure from barograph trace. jWind instrument not well exposed. kVoluntary observer (barograph). lWest end of Bermuda; pressure from barograph (time not calibrated). mVoluntary observer; Davis Instruments. nInstrument height 157 ft above ground level. oInstrument height 220 ft above ground level. |
||||||||
| Ship Name or Call Sign | Date/Time (UTC) | Lat. (°N) | Lon. (°W) | Wind dir/speed (deg/kt) | Pressure (mb) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ELRU8 | 03 / 1800 | 20.6 | 59.4 | 180 / 35 | 1014.5 |
| ELZU6 | 05 / 0000 | 29.0 | 61.7 | 150 / 37 | 1014.0 |
| ELZU6 | 05 / 0900 | 30.9 | 63.0 | 140 / 41 | 1010.0 |
| ELZU6 | 05 / 2200 | 34.3 | 66.1 | 040 / 43 | 1003.0 |
| 3FKD9 | 07 / 1200 | 38.4 | 51.1 | 180 / 45 | 1007.3 |
| 44551 | 07 / 2000 | 43.5 | 45.7 | 150 / 39 | 1006.1 |
| 44551 | 07 / 2100 | 43.5 | 45.7 | 150 / 39 | 1003.2 |
| VEP717 | 08 / 0300 | 46.7 | 48.7 | 010 / 35 | 993.8 |
| 3FPK7 | 08 / 0300 | 46.7 | 48.0 | 320 / 36 | 990.7 |
| HP6038 | 08 / 0300 | 46.4 | 48.4 | 040 / 40 | 990.9 |
| ELVX4 | 08 / 0600 | 43.0 | 40.8 | 200 / 35 | 1011.0 |
| VEP717 | 08 / 0600 | 46.7 | 48.7 | 350 / 40 | 995.2 |
| 3FPK7 | 08 / 0600 | 46.7 | 48.0 | 340 / 37 | 992.7 |
| HP6038 | 08/ 0600 | 46.4 | 48.4 | 310 / 41 | 993.6 |
| 62711 | 08 / 0700 | 47.3 | 45.8 | 320 / 70 | 985.7 |
| 62711 | 08 / 0800 | 47.3 | 45.8 | 350 / 45 | 985.5 |
| HP6038 | 08 / 0900 | 46.4 | 48.4 | 290 / 36 | 1001.9 |
| Forecast Technique | Period (hours) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 | 24 | 36 | 48 | 72 | 96 | 120 | |
| CLP5 | 34 (46) | 78 (44) | 114 (42) | 155 (40) | 253 (36) | 351 (32) | 413 (28) |
| GFNI | 27 (38) | 52 (37) | 73 (35) | 90 (33) | 147 (30) | ||
| GFDI | 26 (43) | 49 (42) | 71 (40) | 96 (37) | 159 (33) | 197 (29) | 261 (25) |
| GFDL | 28 (45) | 50 (43) | 71 (41) | 92 (38) | 154 (34) | 201 (30) | 240 (26) |
| LBAR | 31 (45) | 68 (43) | 99 (41) | 132 (39) | 219 (35) | 315 (31) | 422 (27) |
| AVNI | 27 (44) | 51 (42) | 77 (40) | 114 (38) | 181 (34) | 191 (30) | 275 (24) |
| AVNO | 32 (45) | 55 (43) | 77 (41) | 109 (39) | 177 (35) | 207 (31) | 250 (25) |
| AEMI | 26 (24) | 51 (22) | 74 (21) | 100 (20) | 177 (18) | 277 (13) | 469 (11) |
| BAMD | 31 (46) | 62 (44) | 88 (42) | 112 (40) | 193 (36) | 260 (32) | 356 (28) |
| BAMM | 37 (46) | 73 (44) | 106 (42) | 140 (40) | 219 (36) | 286 (32) | 358 (28) |
| BAMS | 50 (45) | 99 (43) | 143 (41) | 181 (39) | 259 (35) | 315 (31) | 380 (27) |
| NGPI | 24 (42) | 46 (40) | 73 (38) | 98 (36) | 156 (32) | 220 (28) | 274 (24) |
| NGPS | 27 (43) | 42 (41) | 66 (39) | 93 (37) | 149 (33) | 216 (29) | 268 (25) |
| UKMI | 29 (44) | 53 (42) | 69 (40) | 80 (38) | 103 (34) | 190 (30) | 248 (26) |
| UKM | 29 (23) | 52 (22) | 77 (21) | 89 (20) | 100 (18) | 171 (16) | 229 (14) |
| A98E | 32 (46) | 61 (44) | 102 (42) | 144 (40) | 248 (36) | 327 (32) | 403 (28) |
| A9UK | 28 (23) | 57 (22) | 83 (21) | 109 (20) | 176 (18) | ||
| GUNS | 19 (41) | 37 (40) | 55 (38) | 75 (35) | 109 (31) | 159 (27) | 216 (23) |
| GUNA | 19 (41) | 37 (40) | 56 (38) | 77 (35) | 114 (31) | 144 (27) | 211 (21) |
| OFCL | 25 (46) | 45 (44) | 64 (42) | 83 (40) | 114 (36) | 136 (32) | 206 (28) |
| NHC Official (1993-2002 mean) | 45 (2985) | 81 (2726) | 116 (2481) | 150 (2230) | 225 (1819) | 282 (265) | 374 (216) |
| Date/Time | Action | Location |
|---|---|---|
| 04 / 0900 | Hurricane Watch | Bermuda |
| 04 / 1500 | Hurricane Warning | Bermuda |
| 06 / 0300 | Hurricane Warning Discontinued | Bermuda |
Figure 1: Best track positions for Hurricane Fabian, August/September 2003. Track during the extratropical stage is based on analyses from the NOAA Ocean Prediction Center.
Figure 2: Selected wind observations and best track maximum sustained surface wind speed curve for Hurricane Fabian, August/September 2003. Aircraft observations have been adjusted for elevation using 90%, 80%, and 80% reduction factors for observations from 700 mb, 850 mb, and 1500 ft, respectively. Dropwindsonde observations include actual 10 m winds (sfc), as well as surface estimates derived from the mean wind over the lowest 150 m of the wind sounding (LLM), and from the sounding boundary layer mean (MBL). Estimates during the extratropical stage are based on analyses from the NOAA Ocean Prediction Center.
Figure 3: Selected pressure observations and best track minimum central pressure curve for Hurricane Fabian, August/September 2003. Objective Dvorak estimates represent linear averages over a three-hour period centered on the nominal observation time. Estimates during the extratropical stage are based on analyses from the NOAA Ocean Prediction Center.
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Page last modified: Monday, 07-Feb-2005 16:38:05 GMT