Originally posted by Omega_M
Forget about Erin. Make way for category 5 Dean.
While Dean will be the more sensationalized story and could do some pretty hefty in mexico, Erin will be more of a meteorological fantastico because of this: [thanks _nut_]
quote:
MESONET TICKER ... MESONET TICKER ... MESONET TICKER ... MESONET TICKER ...
August 19, 2007 August 19, 2007 August 19, 2007 August 19, 2007
The OCS/Mesonet Ticker: Aiming to please the climatic fanatic.
Tropical Depression Erin Becomes Tropical STORM Erin ... Over Land!
Today's storm damage and suffering across parts of Oklahoma will
be written about for a long time to come. By all accounts, this
looks like a once-in-a-decade-or-rarer singular flood event for
the state.
The scientific community will also be writing about this event for
some time to come as well. A re-intensification to Tropical Storm
strength 60-70 hours after landfall is -- lacking the appropriate
superlatives -- quite rare.
But it's true: the system somehow reorganized over the richly
humid Oklahoma prairie last night and developed sustained winds
greater than tropical storm magnitude. The Watonga Mesonet station
measured the requisite 35-knot sustained winds for the better part
of three hours: http://ticker.ocs.ou.edu/archive/20070819/watonga.png
Notice the incredible pressure trace (brown) on this meteogram: as
the system wrapped up again, the pressure at Watonga bottomed out.
The rainfall is monumental, too: nearly four inches in 90 minutes.
Sustained tropical storm winds weren't confined to Watonga. Several
stations in the region meaured adequate winds, including Hinton and
Fort Cobb. In the following image from about 6pm last night, Hinton
and Watonga show sustained winds of 41 and 52 mph, respectively.
The center of circulation moved very slowly eastward over the next
12 hours, and the eye feature become MUCH better defined. Here's
an early-morning look: http://ticker.ocs.ou.edu/archive/20070819/0545.png
(the wind numbers on this map are gusts, but the wind barbs show a
symmetric well-balanced storm nearly 450 miles inland from its
landfall point.
Finally, as with all tropical systems, rainfall was copious. The
numbers are still accumulating, but training echoes related to
Erin's rainfall bands dumped amounts approaching ten inches on parts
of the state: http://ticker.ocs.ou.edu/archive/20070819/erintot.png
Several volunteer observers also measured 10+ inch totals.
ing awesome, that's what that is!
Lira
quote:
Originally posted by tubularbills
ing awesome, that's what that is!
No, it's not! They've got all the rain there is to have now in Oklahoma, and we're having to deal with a 4 month long draught here!! I don't even remember what clouds look like!!! Relative Humidity is dropping below 15% here!!!! The sky is gonna eat us all!!!!!
It rules :D
Omega_M
hurricane, hell ya !!
Lilith
quote:
Originally posted by tubularbills
Its raining men.
ing awesome, that's what that is!
:stongue:
tubularbills
quote:
Originally posted by Lilith
:stongue:
dean sucked :(
TweeK
quote:
Originally posted by inconspicuous
well, take solace in knowing that the guy who stole it is flooded in right now.
even better solution: he floods the car, can't call for help, leaves car. cops find it abandoned.
Found my car. :o
Stripped down and runined. Took my wheels and put those rims on it. :wtf: