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"

 
Cyclone Forecasts
   Latest Advisory
   Past Advisories
   Audio/Podcasts
   About Advisories
Marine Forecasts
   Atlantic & E Pacific
   Gridded Marine
   About Marine
Tools & Data
   Satellite | Radar
   Analysis Tools
   Aircraft Recon
   GIS Datasets
   Data Archive
Development
   Experimental
   Research
   Forecast Accuracy
Outreach & Education
   Prepare
   Storm Surge
   About Cyclones
   Cyclone Names
   Wind Scale
   Most Extreme
   Forecast Models
   Breakpoints
   Resources
   Glossary | Acronyms
   Frequent Questions
Our Organization
   About NHC
   Mission & Vision
   Staff | Q&A
   Visitors | Virtual Tour
   Library Branch
   NCEP | Newsletter
Contact Us
   Comments
Follow the National Hurricane Cent
er on Facebook Follow the National Hurricane Center on Twitter
FirstGov.gov is the U.S. Government's official Web portal to all Federal, state and local government Web resources and services.
 
 

Eastern Pacific Tropical Weather Discussion



000
AXPZ20 KNHC 182120
TWDEP 

TROPICAL WEATHER DISCUSSION                                      
NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL                           
2205 UTC TUE JUN 18 2013

TROPICAL WEATHER DISCUSSION FOR THE EASTERN PACIFIC OCEAN FROM 
THE EQUATOR TO 32N...EAST OF 140W. THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS 
BASED ON SATELLITE IMAGERY...WEATHER OBSERVATIONS...RADAR...AND 
METEOROLOGICAL ANALYSIS.

BASED ON 1800 UTC SURFACE ANALYSIS AND SATELLITE IMAGERY THROUGH 
2100 UTC.

...INTERTROPICAL CONVERGENCE ZONE/MONSOON TROUGH...            
MONSOON TROUGH AXIS EXTENDS FROM 09N84W TO 08N95W TO 11N102W TO  
1008 MB LOW PRES NEAR 09N107W 08N110W TO 11N120W. ITCZ AXIS 
CONTINUES FROM 11N120W TO 11N130W TO 08N140W. SCATTERED MODERATE 
TO STRONG FROM 06N TO 10N BETWEEN 78W AND 88W. SCATTERED 
MODERATE ISOLATED STRONG FROM 07N TO 10N BETWEEN 102W AND 110W 
AND FROM 10N TO 13N BETWEEN 105W AND 110W. SIMILAR CONVECTION IS 
WITHIN ABOUT 90NM OF A LINE FROM 09N11W TO 11N115W TO 12N120W.

...DISCUSSION...                                                
ALOFT...MAINLY WESTERLY FLOW DOMINATES THE FORECAST REGION N OF 
25N. TO THE SOUTH OF THESE WINDS...BROAD ANTICYCLONE CENTERED 
NOW NEAR 17N135W COVERS MOST OF THE AREA FROM 10N TO 25N W OF 
110W. A RIDGE EXTENDS FROM THE ANTICYCLONE NEWD TO SOUTHERN BAJA 
CALIFORNIA INTO NORTHERN MEXICO. MODERATE TO STRONG SUBSIDENCE 
PREVAILS N OF 18N W OF 110W LEADING TO RATHER DRY AND STABLE 
ATMOSPHERIC CONDITIONS. A WEAK UPPER LOW IS SEEN NEAR 14N99W. A 
TROUGH EXTENDS FROM THE LOW NNE TO NEAR TAMPICO MEXICO. A 
SLIGHTLY UPPER DIFFLUENT FLOW PATTERN BETWEEN THE LOW AND THE 
RIDGE IS HELPING TO INDUCE THE CONVECTION NEAR THE SURFACE LOW 
PRES EMBEDDED WITHIN THE MONSOON TROUGH NEAR 09N107W. ELY FLOW 
ALOFT ON THE SOUTHERN PERIPHERY OF AN UPPER ANTICYCLONE OVER THE 
CARIBBEAN SEA IS ADVECTING MID TO UPPER LEVEL MOISTURE ACROSS 
THE FAR EASTERN PORTION OF THE AREA N OF 05N AND E OF ABOUT 90W. 

ELSEWHERE AT THE SURFACE...A 1029 MB HIGH PRES ANALYZED NW OF 
THE DISCUSSION AT 33N145W EXTENDS A RIDGE SEWD TO NEAR 20N115W. 
THIS SYSTEM IS FORECAST TO MOVE EWD TOWARDS 33N140W IN 24 HOURS. 
THE PRES GRADIENT TO ITS E IN COMBINATION WITH LOWER PRES OVER 
THE WRN U.S. W COAST WILL SUPPORT FRESH TO STRONG WINDS NEAR THE 
COAST OF CENTRAL AND SRN CALIFORNIA THROUGH THE NEXT 48 HRS. NW 
TO N SWELLS GENERATED BY THESE WINDS ARE FILTERING S INTO THE NE 
PORTION OF THE AREA TO N OF 28N E OF 122W WHERE NW-N WINDS OF 20-
25 KT AND SEAS OF 8-10 FT ARE EXPECTED THROUGH THU.

ADDITIONAL PULSES OF CROSS EQUATORIAL SW SWELLS WITH LEADING 
EDGE PERIOD OF 19-20 SECONDS ARE PROPAGATING THROUGH THE SOUTH-
CENTRAL WATERS...RAISING SEAS TO 8 FT S OF 03N BETWEEN 126W AND 
137W. THESE SWELLS ARE FORECAST BY WAVEWATCH GUIDANCES TO REACH 
THE COASTLINES OF CENTRAL AMERICA AND MEXICO LATER TONIGHT INTO 
WED THEN WILL BE REINFORCED BY YET ANOTHER BATCH OF LONG PERIOD 
SW SWELLS WITH PERIODS OF 16-18 SECONDS. THESE SWELLS COULD LEAD 
TO ROUGH SURF NEAR AND ALONG THE ABOVE COASTLINES. 

$$ 
GR



Quick Navigation Links:
Tropical Cyclone Forecasts  -  Tropical Marine Forecasts  -  Data Archive
Outreach  -  Prepare  -  About Cyclones  -  About NHC  -  Contact Us

NOAA/ National Weather Service
National Centers for Environmental Prediction
National Hurricane 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: Tuesday, 18-Jun-2013 21:21:15 UTC