Content on this page requires a newer version of Adobe Flash Player.

Get Adobe Flash player

June 3, 2010

Filed under: Cyclone Info,Storms — admin @ 3:59 am

 

Tropical Storm Agatha made landfall this weekend in El Salvador and Guatemala, and crossed into the western Caribbean. Like Agatha Christie, the famous mystery writer, Agatha was somewhat of a forecasting mystery until today.

A strong area of thunderstorms in the middle of Agatha’s remnants on June 1, but they have continued to erode and today, June 2,
the mystery of possible regeneration has been solved as the National Hurricane Center gives the chance of reorganization “near zero percent.”

Agatha’s remnants swept into the Western Caribbean Sea and is now numbered “System 91L.” At 1800 UTC (12 p.m. EDT) on June 1, the center was located east of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, near 19.1 North and 85.9 West.

On Wednesday, June 2 at 1231 UTC (8:31 a.m. EDT) GOES-13 showed three areas of concentrated scattered clouds in the Caribbean. One concentrated area of cloudiness was near northwestern Cuba, a larger area of cloudiness southeast of Florida, and in the Gulf of Mexico, one area of clouds south of Louisiana. None of these areas showed any signs of development.

 

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

MIMIC IR AND WIND ANALYSIS

    MIMIC IR AND WIND ANALYSIS

Satelite - Animation

    Satelite - Animación

IR Satellite Loop: Northeast US

    IR Satellite Loop: Northeast US

Cyclone Updates

Cyclone Information

Current Surface Analysis

    Current Surface Analysis

Local Radar Loop

    PHL: Local Radar Loop
Tropical Cyclone Tropical Storm Hurricane Katrina

2010 Atlantic Hurricane Season

2009 Atlantic Hurricane Season

2008 Atlantic Hurricane Season