All the children thank you too!
It is difficult to find a well defined center of Beta on Satellite views. In fact, I'm seeing several swirls rotating around the center.
The top pic is the current daylight view with the middle being the water vapor view from noon that showed dry air encircling the storm. the bottom is the current WV view that has even less storm activity around the center. NHC has lowered the max winds down to 45 mph and slightly slowed the forward motion now NW at 5 mph. They still forecast Beta to basically stall once inland and then make the move back to the NE by late Tuesday PM.
The new center line track has been shifted back southward that could bring Beta's center back over the Gulf Tuesday night & Wednesday. However, NHC mentions that the cooler, drier air environment surrounding Beta SHOULD keep it from regaining strength. Radar views have the center 10-15 miles off the coast with much of its circulation already over land.
The dry air wrapping around Beta has taken its toll. The northern feeder band has pulled well to the north with a wide area of dry air diminishing the radar returns. The question for us remains where will the cluster of squalls off the mouth of the River go? Will they move inland over us? maybe, but the drier air coming down from the Northeast has lowered the rain totals.
Now the rain prediction is for 1-2" over SE LA/MS with the 3-5" totals remaining off shore.
Our brisk east winds continue to pile water into the marshes resulting in widespread flooding outside the levee protection system. Conditions will slowly improve as the winds from Beta diminish, but it won't be until the weekend before water levels get back to normal.
I've mentioned in previous posts Hurricane Teddy moving up the east coast would stall a large area of high pressure centered over Maine. Dew points in the 40s have plunged down into Georgia with 60s into central Florida and all along the northern Gulf. That's a vast different atmosphere than for Sally last week and will be why Beta's rain totals will be much lower.
2 comments:
Me too! I need sun. I can't wait for a nice cool sunny fall day. Thanks Bob!
You have always been one of my favorite meteorologist and now you are at the top. Because now I see you are not only a great meteorologist but an awesome person as well. Thank you for your caps for kids project and a hugh THANK YOU for acknowledging SEPTEMBER AS CHILDHOOD CANCER AWARENESS MONTH.
Childhood cancer receives the least amount of federal funding for cancer research only 4% and that's not fair. Children need kinder treatments than those made for adults.
My grandson was diagnosed with high risk acute Lymphoblastic leukemia a couple weeks before his 3rd birthday in 2018. And when his hair fell out you wouldn't believe that a 3 year old would be self conscious of it but he was. So thank you for what you do.
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