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Hurricane Felicia Discussion Number 15
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL EP062021
1100 AM HST Sat Jul 17 2021
Felicia has remained an impressive hurricane this morning. The
hurricane's clear eye is still surrounded by a ring of very cold
cloud tops and recent microwave overpasses show that the tiny
cyclone continues to exhibit a very symmetric convective inner-core
structure. The intensity estimate is still 125 kt, based on the
latest TAFB Dvorak fix. Due to the small size of the hurricane and
the lack of ground truth so far from land, it is worth mentioning
that the uncertainty in that estimate is somewhat higher than usual.
Virtually no change was made to the NHC track, intensity, or size
forecasts, though the uncertainty in the intensity forecast remains
high. All of the available intensity guidance continues to insist
that at least gradual weakening will begin soon. Although that
hasn't panned out yet, cooler SSTs ahead of Felicia could still
contribute to at least a little weakening later today and Sunday. A
faster rate of weakening is expected by around 48 h as the small
cyclone moves over colder-yet waters and possibly encounters some
moderate wind shear. There is poor agreement among the various
global and regional models how soon the shear will affect Felicia.
Once it does, the hurricane will likely decline rapidly due to the
very small size of its inner core. By 72 h, every typically
reliable intensity model shows Felicia below hurricane strength.
The official intensity forecast remains on the very high side of
the guidance, closest to the interpolated GFS forecast for the
first 3 days, and is near the intensity consensus after that.
Felicia has turned west-northwestward, with a forward speed of
around 7 kt. In contrast to the intensity forecast, confidence in
the track forecast is very high. A turn back toward the west is
anticipated by late Sunday as a ridge to the north of Felicia builds
slightly. Felicia should then turn west-southwestward early next
week as it comes under the influence of an extensive deep-layer
ridge centered over the central Pacific. The spread in the track
guidance is low, and the NHC track forecast is very similar to the
various consensus aids.
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
INIT 17/2100Z 14.9N 125.3W 125 KT 145 MPH
12H 18/0600Z 15.3N 126.6W 120 KT 140 MPH
24H 18/1800Z 15.8N 128.5W 110 KT 125 MPH
36H 19/0600Z 16.1N 130.5W 100 KT 115 MPH
48H 19/1800Z 16.1N 132.6W 85 KT 100 MPH
60H 20/0600Z 16.0N 134.9W 70 KT 80 MPH
72H 20/1800Z 15.6N 137.4W 60 KT 70 MPH
96H 21/1800Z 14.7N 142.6W 40 KT 45 MPH
120H 22/1800Z 14.0N 148.0W 30 KT 35 MPH
$$
Forecaster Zelinsky
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