Skip Navigation Links
NOAA NOAA United States Department of Commerce

Tropical Storm RAMON


ZCZC MIATCDEP5 ALL
TTAA00 KNHC DDHHMM
 
Tropical Storm Ramon Discussion Number   7
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL       EP202023
700 PM PST Fri Nov 24 2023
 
Since the prior advisory, the tropical cyclone has become markedly
better organized. A small central dense overcast has formed near the
low-level center, with some modest evidence of banding along its
northern and eastern semicircle. Subjective Dvorak estimates form
both TAFB and SAB have been oscillating between 30-35 kt, with
other objective intensity measures ranging from 33 kt from ADT, up
to 39 kt from SATCON. Since the system does look better organized
than earlier today, the intensity has been increased to 35 kt,
upgrading Tropical Depression Twenty-E to Tropical Storm Ramon.
 
There might be a brief window for the storm to intensify a bit more 
overnight, with a shortwave trough riding along a subtropical jet 
north of Ramon resulting in a short-term boost in upper-level 
divergence over the cyclone. The divergence will also coincide with 
the nighttime diurnal convective maximum, which has been quite 
prominent the last few nights with this cyclone. However, the same 
shortwave trough is also progressive, and will soon lead to 
substantial increase in upper-level flow over of Ramon, resulting in 
a sharp increase in westerly vertical wind shear. Thus, after a 
brief period of intensification overnight, weakening is expected to 
begin tomorrow, with the system still forecast to become a remnant 
low on Sunday with dissipation shortly thereafter. This intensity 
forecast is shifted a bit closer to the the HCCA consensus aid, 
which favors the hurricane-regional model solutions more than the 
lower SHIPS/LGEM guidance.
 
The center of Ramon may have reformed closer to the deep convection 
earlier today, and its motion is a somewhat uncertain north drift at 
360/4 kt. A mid-level ridge centered to the east of Ramon should 
lead to the cyclone moving slowly northward in the short term. 
However, as the storm encounters the very hostile upper-level 
environment, it should become vertically shallow, leaving the 
low-level center to be steered slowly west-northwestward by a weak 
low-level ridge by the end of the weekend. The latest track forecast 
shows a bit more of a northward motion early on, but falls back 
close to the previous track, just a bit east of the simple and 
corrected track aids.
 
 
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
 
INIT  25/0300Z 13.8N 122.6W   35 KT  40 MPH
 12H  25/1200Z 14.5N 122.6W   40 KT  45 MPH
 24H  26/0000Z 14.9N 122.6W   35 KT  40 MPH
 36H  26/1200Z 15.0N 122.8W   30 KT  35 MPH
 48H  27/0000Z 15.1N 123.1W   25 KT  30 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW
 60H  27/1200Z 15.5N 123.8W   25 KT  30 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW
 72H  28/0000Z...DISSIPATED
 
$$
Forecaster Papin
 
NNNN