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 221609
TWDEP 

TROPICAL WEATHER DISCUSSION                                      
NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL                           
1605 UTC WED MAY 22 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 
1330 UTC.

...INTERTROPICAL CONVERGENCE ZONE/MONSOON TROUGH...

MONSOON TROUGH AXIS EXTENDS FROM SW CARIBBEAN NEAR 11N82W TO 
12.5N90W TO 13N100W TO 09.5N115W...WHERE IT TRANSITIONS TO 
ITCZ...CONTINUING ON TO 07.5N123W TO 11.5N131W TO 03.5N140W. 
SCATTERED TO LOCALLY NUMEROUS MODERATE TO STRONG CONVECTION 
NOTED WITHIN 120 NM N AND 210 NM S OF TROUGH AXIS BETWEEN 98W 
AND 103W. SCATTERED MODERATE ISOLATED STRONG CONVECTION NOTED 
WITHIN 150 NM N AND 90 NM S OF AXIS BETWEEN 113W AND 120W. 
SCATTERED MODERATE TO STRONG CONVECTION NOTED WITHIN 120 NM N OF 
ITCZ BETWEEN 128W AND 135W. 

...DISCUSSION...

A SURFACE RIDGE DOMINATES W AND NW PORTIONS OF THE AREA THIS 
MORNING...ANCHORED ON A 1036 MB HIGH CENTERED NEAR 44N143W WITH 
RIDGE EXTENDING SE TO NEAR 18N116W. A STRONG PRES GRADIENT ALONG 
THE COAST OF CALIFORNIA IS PRODUCING GALE FORCE N-NW 
WINDS...WITH 20-25 KT WINDS EXTENDING S INTO THE DISCUSSION AREA 
N OF 28N BETWEEN 119W AND 132W...WHERE SEAS ARE RUNNING 8 TO 10 
FT. SATELLITE IMAGERY THIS MORNING ALSO DEPICTS THE ELONGATED 
REMNANTS OF FORMER T.S. ALVIN EMBEDDED ALONG THE ITCZ IN THE 
VICINITY OF 134W. THE PRES GRADIENT BETWEEN THE RIDGE AND THIS 
LOW PRESSURE ARE PRODUCING A SMALL AREA OF NE WINDS 20-25 KT 
FROM ROUGHLY 12N TO 16N BETWEEN 129W AND 136W...WHERE SEAS ARE 8 
TO 10 FT. OTHERWISE...MODERATE TO FRESH ANTICYCLONIC FLOW 
PREVAILS ACROSS THE AREA W OF 120W...WITH SEAS GENERALLY 7 TO 8 
FT IN MIXED NORTHERLY AND SW CROSS EQUATORIAL SWELL. THE HIGH IS 
FORECAST TO SINK S DURING THE NEXT FEW DAYS WITH NORTHERLY WINDS 
20-25 KT PUSHING A BIT FARTHER S INTO THE AREA TO 27.5N BETWEEN 
118.5W AND 126W BY FRIDAY MORNING. N-NW TO N SWELL GENERATED 
OFFSHORE OF CALIFORNIA WILL CONTINUE TO PROPAGATE SOUTHWARD 
ACROSS THE REGIONAL WATERS THROUGH THE WEEKEND...PEAKING AT 12 
TO 15 FT OFFSHORE OF BAJA CALIFORNIA NORTE THURSDAY MORNING. 
MEANWHILE...THE REMNANTS OF ALVIN WILL CONTINUE TO SHIFT WWD 
THROUGH THE WEEKEND AND MAINTAIN A MODEST AREA OF NE WINDS 20-25 
KT AND SEAS 8-9 FT WITHIN 180 NM TO THE NW.

MONSOONAL FLOW HAS BECOME WELL ESTABLISHED ACROSS THE FAR 
EASTERN PACIFIC E OF 110W...WITH MODERATE SW TO W WINDS 
EXTENDING AS FAR N AS 11N BETWEEN 95W AND 110W. UPPER LEVEL 
RIDGING PREVAILS ACROSS THE AREA E OF 110W AND IS PRODUCING A 
FAVORABLE ENVIRONMENT FOR SUSTAINED DEEP CONVECTION. 

A BROAD LOW TO MIDDLE LEVEL CYCLONIC CIRCULATION IS FORECAST TO 
DEVELOP ALONG 80W-82W...STRADDLING CENTRAL AMERICA  AND 
EXTENDING INTO BOTH THE SW CARIBBEAN AND THE EPAC. GLOBAL MODELS 
FORECAST THIS FEATURE TO SHIFT W DURING THE NEXT SEVERAL DAYS 
WITH SOME POTENTIAL FOR IMPROVED ORGANIZATION AND GRADUAL 
INTENSIFICATION. FRESHENING GAP WIND FLOW THROUGH THE GULFS OF 
PAPAGAYO AND TEHUANTEPEC BEGINNING SATURDAY WILL FLOW ACROSS THE 
N AND INTO PORTIONS OF THIS WESTWARD MOVING FEATURE...AND COULD 
CONTRIBUTE TO BAROTROPIC GROWTH AND INTENSIFICATION. FRESHENING 
WINDS TO 25 KT ARE EXPECTED DOWNSTREAM OF PAPAGAYO BY EARLY 
SUNDAY...AT WHICH TIME NORTHERLY FLOW IS EXPECTED TO BEGIN TO 
FRESHEN THROUGH THE GULF OF TEHUANTEPEC. 

NOTE...A GOES-E/GOES-13 ANOMALY OCCURRED LAST NIGHT PRIOR TO 
0400 UTC AND HAS IMPACTED THE FULL SUITE OF IMAGERY AVAILABLE 
FROM THIS SATELLITE...AND IS LIMITING CONFIDENCE IN SATELLITE 
INTERPRETATION ACROSS THE REGION BETWEEN APPROXIMATELY 60W AND 
100W. NESDIS ENGINEERS ARE WORKING ON RECOVERY EFFORTS AT THIS 
TIME. GOES-14 IS BEING ACTIVATED AND THE FIRST IMAGES ARE 
EXPECTED TO BECOME AVAILABLE AROUND 0500 UTC THU MAY 23. 

$$
STRIPLING



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, 22-May-2013 16:09:50 UTC