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 191542
TWDEP 

TROPICAL WEATHER DISCUSSION                                      
NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL                           
1605 UTC WED JUN 19 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 1200 UTC SURFACE ANALYSIS AND SATELLITE IMAGERY THROUGH 
1500 UTC.

...INTERTROPICAL CONVERGENCE ZONE/MONSOON TROUGH...            
MONSOON TROUGH 10N85W TO 10N98W TO 08N90W TO 1007 MB LOW PRES 
NEAR 10N108W TO 11N125W. ITCZ 10N125W TO 08N140W. SCATTERED 
STRONG WITHIN 70 NM EITHER SIDE OF THE AXIS FROM 88W TO 94W. 
SCATTERED MODERATE WITHIN 180 NM S OF AXIS FROM 98W TO 110W.

...DISCUSSION... 
MAINLY WESTERLY FLOW ALOFT DOMINATES ACROSS THE 
DISCUSSION AREA N OF 25N. TO THE S OF THESE WINDS A BROAD 
ANTICYCLONIC CIRULATION CENTERED NEAR 22N127W AND ANOTHER 
ANTICYCLONIC CIRCULATION NEAR 16N137W. ANTICYCLONIC FLOW COVERS 
MOST OF THE AREA. RIDGE EXTENDS FROM THE ANTICYCLONES NEWD TO 
SOUTHERN BAJA CALIFORNIA INTO NORTHERN MEXICO. MODERATE TO 
STRONG SUBSIDENCE WITH DRY AND STABLE ATMOSPHERIC CONDITIONS IS 
N OF 15N W OF 110W. A WEAK UPPER LEVEL CYCLONIC CIRCULATION IS 
NEAR 14N111W. ANOTHER UPPER LEVEL CYCLONIC CIRCULATION IS 
CENTERED OFF THE COAST OF MEXICO NEAR 15N100W WITH ANOTHER 
ANTICYCLONIC CIRCULATION OVER GUATEMALA. UPPER DIFFLUENT FLOW 
PATTERN BETWEEN THE CYCLONE AND THE ANTICYOLE IS HELPING TO 
INDUCE THE STRONG CONVECTION ALONG THE MONSOON FROM 7N-10N 
BETWEEN 88W-94W. 

SURFACE RIDGE IS N OF 15N W OF 115W. ALONG THE SOUTHERN 
PERIPHERY OF THE RIDGE THE GRADIENT IS TIGHT ENOUGH TO SUPPORT 
ELY 20 KT WINDS FROM 9N-16N W OF 130W...WITH SEAS TO 9 FT IN NE 
SWELL. NLY SWELLS ARE N OF 26N BETWEEN 117W AND 123W ARE 
FORECAST TO BUILD 8-10 FT N OF 25N BETWEEN 116W-125W THU.

$$ 
DGS



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: Wednesday, 19-Jun-2013 15:43:03 UTC