New US Tropical System In East Coast
Rough surf and rip currents caused by Hurricane Sam, which is anticipated to spin over 1,000 miles out to sea on Sunday, may pose a greater threat to Atlantic beaches from New Jersey to Florida. As a storm system crawls across the country, weather conditions will deteriorate in the mid-Atlantic and southern Atlantic coasts this week. Forecasters from AccuWeather warn that the pattern might develop stormy ahead of the potential for a tropical system to form.
The same storm system that remained over the Central states for much of this week, bringing torrential rain and thunderstorms, will begin to move eastward this weekend. However, when weather systems resume their normal west-to-east motion for a period, another atmospheric traffic bottleneck is expected to form this week in the eastern portion of the United States and over western Atlantic waters.
Stormy weather will be extended across the region ranging from Georgia to Virginia and the Delmarva Peninsula due to the storm system’s slow passage down the Eastern Seaboard.
“During the middle and later parts of this week, the next hold up in the weather pattern may lead to days of wet weather, gusty winds on the coast, and above-normal tides in portions of the mid-Atlantic and southern Atlantic coasts,” Meteorologist said.
From the interior Southeast to the Carolina or Virginia coast, a nontropical storm is expected to form. The worst rain and wind conditions — as well as how bad the conditions grow — will be decided by where the storm forms.
At the same time, a ridge of high pressure will move eastward from the Great Lakes, preventing clouds and rain from reaching parts of the Northeast this week. However, across sections of the mid-Atlantic and southern Atlantic coasts, the movement of air around that high and the building storm further south could produce stiff breezes or perhaps easterly to northeasterly gales.
“While some coastal flooding may occur during high tide due to the new moon and king tides this week,” Metrologist said, “the additional effects of the northeast winds could bring more serious coastal flooding and possibly beach erosion from the mid-Atlantic to the southern Atlantic coasts.”
According to the City of Miami Beach website, king tides are the astronomically highest tides of the entire year. Cities that have had problems with high water in the past, such as Charleston, South Carolina, Miami, and Norfolk, Virginia, may take on water when the bad weather develops this week due to the combined impacts of the tides and onshore winds.
Drenching rain is expected inland from the coast, along with gusty gusts, and locally powerful thunderstorms are possible during the middle and end of the week.
As if the stormy situation wasn’t bad enough, a developing tropical system is expected to form in the zone from the central Caribbean to the Bahamas later this week.
From October to November, this part of the Atlantic becomes a tropical hotspot as the train of tropical waves flowing west from Africa weakens.Since last week, recent climate forecasters Hurricane Experts have been warning about possible tropical activity in October originating in the Caribbean.
There’s some ambiguity about where the tropical system will form and how powerful it will become.
“Strong projected wind shear should keep a tropical storm from emerging just east of the zone this week, from Florida to the Carolinas,” said Meteorologist.
Wind shear, on the other hand, is expected to decrease later this week and be almost non-existent from the Bahamas to the central Caribbean. From the middle of this week through next weekend, that is where tropical storm formation is most likely to occur, according to Rayno.
It might be a weak tropical low-pressure region, a depression, or a strong tropical storm that forms, but the problem for the US Atlantic coast is that any system that forms in that zone is likely to be guided northward by steering breezes. The stormy conditions along the southern Atlantic and mid-Atlantic coasts could potentially feed into or follow this.
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