Hurricane Isaac grows and grows into what may end up being a massive storm the size of Texas that's also feeling the storm's impact |
Then Tropical Storm Isaac yesterday., making its way to New Orleans |
Eye of Isaac blurs half of the Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans and the Gulf Coast before fateful dawn of August 29th
3.25 pm Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Hurricane Isaac begins to strike the coast of Louisiana at
3:25pm CDT.
Bands of thunderstorms from the giant Hurricane Isaac begin
to hit New Orleans.
Isaac will lash the city of New Orleans with hurricane force
winds for the next day and a half, 24-36 hours of 85 mph plus winds, of an
ocean surge twelve feet high and tornadoes; the massive storm, thought by some
to be the size of Texas, so far isn't packing 95 mph plus winds weathermen had
feared.
Heavy rains are striking Grand Isle and Lake Pontchartrain
at this moment, not any extreme bands, yet.
Hurricane warnings are up from New Iberia and Jeanerette, Louisiana
to the barrier islands off Pensacola in Florida's Panhandle. Flood warnings are up from Orange, the first
town across the border in Texas, on the Sabine River stretching east into parts
of southern Alabama, reaching toward Montgomery. Tropical storm watches and warning reach west
to around Port Author and Beaumont, Texas east to Chattahoochee, Florida and
Lake Seminole in Georgia.
Isaac's width stretches more than 300 miles from the
Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana border to more than 100 miles out into the
Gulf of Mexico.
But Isaac's clouds size is enormous, a hurricane stretching
along a line from Padre Island, Texas to Fort Myers, Florida.
The storm now crawls northwest, hugging the coast of Louisiana,
at 8 mph, slowing down but gaining strength with sustained winds of 80mph and
gusts of 125mph. Forecasters believe
Isaac may reach Cat 2 force winds of 100 mph with greater gusts. Isaac will
raise havoc for the next day or so.
New Orleans and Louisiana were spared another Hurricane
Katrina, as Isaac traveled over "cool eddy’s" of the Gulf waters,
according to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology. Thanks, Cool Eddy.
Meanwhile, Isaac pushed gas prices in Butler County, Ohio
this morning from 3.67 to $4 a gallon.
Jet Propulsion Laboratory at California Institute of Technology story on why Isaac may not be another Hurricane Katrina
Cooler Waters Help Diminish Isaac's Punch
|
August 28, 2012
Seven years after the powerful Category 3 Hurricane Katrina caused
widespread devastation along the Gulf Coast, a Category 1 Hurricane
Isaac, with maximum sustained winds of 80 miles per hour (70 knots), is
making landfall today in southeast Louisiana. And one of the reasons why
Isaac is not Katrina is the path it took across the Gulf of Mexico and
the temperature of the ocean below, which helps to fuel hurricanes.
In 2005, Hurricane Katrina's maximum wind speeds increased dramatically as the storm passed over a warm ocean circulation feature called the Loop Current that is part of the Gulf Stream. The storm evolved quickly from a Category 3 to a Category 5 event on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale in a matter of nine hours as it drew heat from the Loop Current. It subsequently dropped in intensity to a Category 3 storm at landfall.
Because the Loop Current and its eddies are warmer, and thus higher in surface elevation, than the surrounding waters, they are easily spotted by satellite altimeter instruments, such as those aboard the NASA/French Space Agency Jason 1 and Ocean Surface Topography Mission/Jason 2 satellites. Scientists use the latest satellite measurements of sea-surface height from these and other satellite altimeters to create maps showing the location, direction and speed of currents in the Gulf of Mexico.
This color-enhanced image of sea surface heights in the northeastern Gulf, produced using data from available satellite altimeters, including NASA's Jason-1 and Jason-2 satellites, shows Isaac's path through the Gulf. The storm skirted around the Loop Current, then caught the outer edge of a warm eddy before passing directly over a cold eddy. The storm's track away from the Gulf's warmest waters has helped to keep Isaac from intensifying rapidly, as Hurricanes Katrina and Rita did in 2005.
Warm eddies have high heat content and great potential to intensify hurricanes, whereas cold eddies have low heat content and may even cause hurricanes to weaken, as was the case with Hurricane Ivan in 2004.
Latest Public Advisory from the National Hurricane Center in
Miami
000
WTNT34 KNHC 290058
TCPAT4
BULLETIN
HURRICANE ISAAC INTERMEDIATE ADVISORY NUMBER 31B
NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL AL092012
800 PM CDT TUE AUG 28 2012
...ISAAC MOVING SLOWLY NORTHWESTWARD ALONG THE COAST OF
SOUTHEAST
LOUISIANA...DANGEROUS STORM SURGE CONTINUING ALONG THE
NORTHERN
GULF COAST...
SUMMARY OF 800 PM CDT...0100 UTC...INFORMATION
----------------------------------------------
LOCATION...29.0N 89.6W
ABOUT 30 MI...50 KM WSW OF THE MOUTH OF THE MISSISSIPPI
RIVER
ABOUT 75 MI...120 KM SSE OF NEW ORLEANS LOUISIANA
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...80 MPH...130 KM/H
PRESENT MOVEMENT...NW OR 315 DEGREES AT 8 MPH...13 KM/H
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...968 MB...28.59 INCHES
WATCHES AND WARNINGS
--------------------
CHANGES WITH THIS ADVISORY...
NONE.
SUMMARY OF WATCHES AND WARNINGS IN EFFECT...
A HURRICANE WARNING IS IN EFFECT FOR...
* EAST OF MORGAN CITY LOUISIANA TO THE MISSISSIPPI-ALABAMA
BORDER...
INCLUDING METROPOLITAN NEW ORLEANS...LAKE
PONTCHARTRAIN...AND LAKE
MAUREPAS
A HURRICANE WATCH IS IN EFFECT FOR...
* INTRACOASTAL CITY TO MORGAN CITY LOUISIANA
A TROPICAL STORM WARNING IS IN EFFECT FOR...
* THE MISSISSIPPI-ALABAMA BORDER TO DESTIN FLORIDA
* MORGAN CITY TO CAMERON LOUISIANA
A TROPICAL STORM WATCH IS IN EFFECT FOR...
* EAST OF HIGH ISLAND TEXAS TO JUST WEST OF CAMERON
LOUISIANA
FOR STORM INFORMATION SPECIFIC TO YOUR AREA...INCLUDING
POSSIBLE
INLAND WATCHES AND WARNINGS...PLEASE MONITOR PRODUCTS ISSUED
BY
YOUR LOCAL NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST OFFICE.
DISCUSSION AND 48-HOUR OUTLOOK
------------------------------
AT 800 PM CDT...0100 UTC...THE CENTER OF HURRICANE ISAAC WAS
LOCATED
BY NOAA DOPPLER RADAR NEAR LATITUDE 29.0 NORTH...LONGITUDE
89.6
WEST. ISAAC IS MOVING TOWARD THE NORTHWEST NEAR 8 MPH...13
KM/H. A
NORTHWESTWARD MOTION AT A SLIGHTLY SLOWER SPEED IS EXPECTED
OVER
THE NEXT DAY OR TWO. ON THE FORECAST TRACK...THE CENTER OF
HURRICANE ISAAC WILL CONTINUE MOVING NEAR OR OVER THE
SOUTHEASTERN
COAST OF LOUISIANA OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS...AND MOVE
FARTHER INLAND
OVER SOUTHEASTERN LOUISIANA DURING THE NEXT DAY OR SO.
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS ARE NEAR 80 MPH...130 KM/H...WITH
HIGHER
GUSTS. ISAAC IS A CATEGORY ONE HURRICANE ON THE
SAFFIR-SIMPSON
HURRICANE WIND SCALE. SOME SLIGHT STRENGTHENING IS POSSIBLE
BEFORE ISAAC MOVES INLAND...WHILE GRADUAL WEAKENING IS
EXPECTED
AFTER THAT.
HURRICANE-FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 60 MILES...95
KM...
MAINLY TO THE NORTHEAST AND EAST OF THE CENTER.
TROPICAL-STORM-FORCE
WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 185 MILES...295 KM. TROPICAL
STORM
CONDITIONS ARE OCCURRING ALONG THE COASTAL AREAS OF SOUTHEASTERN
LOUISIANA...MISSISSIPPI...AND ALABAMA. A SUSTAINED WIND OF
52 MPH
WITH A GUST TO 64 MPH WAS OBSERVED WITHIN THE PAST HOUR AT
LAKEFRONT AIRPORT IN NEW ORLEANS.
THE MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE REPORTED BY RECONNAISSANCE
AIRCRAFT WAS
968 MB...28.59 INCHES.
HAZARDS AFFECTING LAND
----------------------
STORM SURGE...THE COMBINATION OF A STORM SURGE AND THE TIDE
WILL
CAUSE NORMALLY DRY AREAS NEAR THE COAST TO BE FLOODED BY
RISING
WATERS. THE WATER COULD REACH THE FOLLOWING DEPTHS ABOVE
GROUND IF
THE PEAK SURGE OCCURS AT THE TIME OF HIGH TIDE...
* MISSISSIPPI AND SOUTHEASTERN LOUISIANA...6 TO 12 FT
* ALABAMA...4 TO 8 FT
* SOUTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA...3 TO 6 FT
* FLORIDA PANHANDLE...3 TO 6 FT
* APALACHEE BAY...2 TO 4 FT
* REMAINDER OF FLORIDA WEST COAST...1 TO 3 FT
THE DEEPEST WATER WILL OCCUR ALONG THE IMMEDIATE COAST IN
AREAS OF
ONSHORE WINDS.
SURGE-RELATED FLOODING DEPENDS ON THE RELATIVE
TIMING OF THE SURGE AND THE TIDAL CYCLE...AND CAN VARY
GREATLY OVER
SHORT DISTANCES. FOR
INFORMATION SPECIFIC TO YOUR AREA...PLEASE
SEE PRODUCTS ISSUED BY YOUR LOCAL WEATHER SERVICE
OFFICE. NEAR THE
COAST...THE SURGE WILL BE ACCOMPANIED BY LARGE AND DANGEROUS
WAVES.
A STORM SURGE OF 9.5 FEET WAS RECENTLY REPORTED AT A
NATIONAL
OCEAN SERVICE TIDE GAUGE AT SHELL BEACH LOUISIANA. A STORM SURGE
OF 5.7 FEET WAS OBSERVED AT A NATIONAL OCEAN SERVICE TIDE
GAUGE IN
WAVELAND MISSISSIPPI.
WIND...TROPICAL STORM CONDITIONS WILL CONTINUE TO SPREAD
ACROSS THE
WARNING AREA THIS EVENING...AND HURRICANE CONDITIONS SHOULD
SPREAD
ONSHORE ACROSS SOUTHEASTERN LOUISIANA DURING THE NEXT FEW
HOURS.
WINDS AFFECTING THE UPPER FLOORS OF HIGH-RISE BUILDINGS WILL
BE
SIGNIFICANTLY STRONGER THAN THOSE NEAR GROUND LEVEL. AT
ABOUT THE
30TH STORY...WINDS WOULD LIKELY BE ONE SAFFIR-SIMPSON
CATEGORY
STRONGER THAN AT THE SURFACE.
RAINFALL...ISAAC IS EXPECTED TO PRODUCE TOTAL RAINFALL
AMOUNTS OF
7 TO 14 INCHES...WITH POSSIBLE ISOLATED MAXIMUM AMOUNTS OF
20
INCHES...OVER MUCH OF LOUISIANA...SOUTHERN
MISSISSIPPI...SOUTHERN
ALABAMA...AND THE EXTREME WESTERN FLORIDA PANHANDLE. THESE
RAINS
COULD RESULT IN SIGNIFICANT LOWLAND FLOODING.
TORNADOES...TORNADOES ARE POSSIBLE ALONG THE NORTHERN GULF
COAST
THROUGH TONIGHT.
SURF...DANGEROUS SURF AND RIP CURRENT CONDITIONS WILL
CONTINUE TO
AFFECT THE WEST COAST OF FLORIDA AND PORTIONS OF THE
NORTHERN GULF
COAST FOR THE NEXT DAY OR SO.
-------------
NEXT COMPLETE ADVISORY...1000 PM CDT.
$$
FORECASTER BROWN/KIMBERLAIN/BERG
I don't know what those two dollars signs are for, but
thanks "Brown Kimgerlain and Berg for a very cool Hurricane Isaac Public
Advisory.
'Hurricane' Isaac may strike New Orleans
seven years after Katrina, to the day, August 29th
Déjà vu? Let's hope not
by Mike Marcellino
It's looking more likely Hurricane Isaac will smack into New
Orleans. or very nearby on the Mississippi Gulf Coast Wednesday, seven years to the day, August 29 as Katrina did in 2005,
with near as much force (110 mph vs 130) and maybe a storm surge of as high as
9-13 feet.
Four years after Katrina, in the winter of 2009 folks were
struggling and not thinkin' they were gettin' a fair shake from their
government, I listen to a radio show about that. People calling in from New
Orleans and all over, about their suffering, wailing against their government.
I wrote a poetry music song on that, "Hurricanes of Humanity."
(performed, not yet recorded). I do hope and pray New Orleans residents, or
anyone goes through a replay of that.
Sunday afternoon, I listened to a traditional and new
American country and bluegrass music show Sunday Afternoon Breakdown, co-hosted
by Ernie and Debi. Cool music and show, but fell asleep before they played my
Bill Monroe. song request.
Heard Ernie say, "It's as big as the size of Texas! I
thought he was, well, on 'bluegrass" or something.
Look at this recent NOAA Satellite Image. Looks as big as
Texas.
After leaving 10 dead in Earthquake devastated Haiti and
drenching the laid back Florida Keys, Isaac churns, slowing getting stronger.
The National Hurricane Center says Isaac will strike New Orleans or the nearby
Mississippi Gulf coast, as a Cat 2 hurricane, with extremely dangerous winds
and extensive damage. Governors of Louisiana and Mississippi declared states of
emergency Sunday and President Obama Sunday alerted FEMA (Federal Emergency
Management Agency).
The people of New Orleans know what a Cat 3 hurricane can do
- a toll of at least 1,836 lives and $81 billion damage. The city still hasn't
recovered and many folks still don't think much of FEMA. Let's hope they do it
right this time, if needed.
Stay tuned to my "Notebook Writer blog" for updates later today and additional writing and stories on soon to be Hurricane Isaac and its impact to people of the Gulf Coast and around the world.
Raw footage from striking Key West, Florida Sunday produced by Chasingvideo.com, the Worlds Largest Severe Weather Virtual Stock Video Archive And Severe Weather Electronic News Gathering Agency.
Raw footage from striking Key West, Florida Sunday produced by Chasingvideo.com, the Worlds Largest Severe Weather Virtual Stock Video Archive And Severe Weather Electronic News Gathering Agency.
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