Nassau, at daybreak, under a glancing blow. Remarkably little damage reported, but looks cool.
It could get messy indeed, ApplePie, how messy detailed near the bottom of this michty post. I don't think it will, but the chance is there for big trouble in New York and New Jersey.
So, new stats have been released, models and maps updated, and sugary beverages been consumed in the journalist plagued centre at NOAA. Dr. Jeff Masters breaks all this down into simple words for laymen like myself to understand. So, what's going down? Here I am to obscenely plagarise Dr. Jeff Master's Wunderblog, only without the confusing charts and number crunching.
First an update on the Bahamas. The category 3 hurricane with winds of 115mph is still tracking through the region hitting the evocatively named Crooked, Long, Rum and Cat islands. The sparsely populated Lovely Bay settlement on Acklins Island is reported to have been devastated, but there have been no reports of casualties.
Irene will ride right over Eleuthera and Abaco Island, both populated by some thousands of people. Storm surge is once again the main concern, however these two islands have a trick up their sleeve. They both have extensive reefs, and these are incredibly good at breaking up surges and tidal waves. Here's hoping they do the trick. The main population centre of the Bahamas, Nassau City, will get away with a minor glancing blow, as will Grand Bahama. Irene is currently undergoing its eyewall replacement cycle too, and that won't be complete until Friday, so that'll take a little sting out of her.
What then? Well other than the eye-wall replacement cycle there's also some high-altitude wind sheer pumping 15-20 knots against her rotation. This effectively drags the hurricane and weakens it a touch. There is a chance also that this sheer will punch a hole in her and inject some dry air into her core. Hurricanes are fueled by moisture, and dry air is their kryptonite. However models put the chances of that at 10%, so don't bet on it. This drag will however persist over the next three days, acting as a little brake. Experts are divided on how much an impact this will have. Some say it will seriously weaken Irene, others reckon that in the past such big storms have simply powered through such problems. At the very least though, such sheer is welcome. Hurricane Katrina was belted by a very unlikely blast of heavy sheer and unpredicted dry air coming in at the last moment, tilting her to the West away from the direct hit and weakening her from a category five to a category three. This effectively saved fifty thousand lives in New Orleans. So meteorologists are putting a lot more study now into such phenonoma.
What of her strength? Currently ocean temperatues are a very warm 29c and will remain so for three days at least. Although most analysts are saying a category three is the upper level, and sticking by that, a slightly troubling last four runs of the ECMWF global modelling system - described as Dr. Jeff Masters as the best forecasting model - has it bumping up to a category 4 with a plunge of pressure down to 912-920mb as it crosses over Eastern North Carolina.
From't Beeb.
What of the track? Well, the track has been refined a little, moving a touch West. This puts a hit on North Carolina as very likely, the question is now whether the hurricane will curve inland a touch, weakening and dumping much welcome rain on the drought-stricken Eastern states (and on one hell of a stubborn nasty wildfire) or run straight North and cross the outerbanks, reintensify and hit New Jersey and New York. The ECMWF model and GFDL (no, I have no idea what those acronyms mean, they might mean Ectoplasmic-Cunt-Munching-Wiffle-Factor and Gecko-Friendly-Dyson-Libido for all I know) place her as moving inland over Moorhead City. This is currently pegged as the likeliest hit (population 7,000 - once again Americans confusing the word 'city' for 'town') and when she leaves land again to track towards New York and New Jersey, her extended stay over land will sap so much strength that she might no longer be a hurricane when she reaches the city.
However! The GFS (Granny-Fapping-Synthesis) has her curving a little East, grazing the outerbanks and putting her at a category two for New Jersey and a category one for New York. This would mean a category two landfall on Long Island.
Category 2 doesn't sound so bad, and I wasn't particularily worried, but now a couple of additional factors have been raised. Now, part of my complacency is that Hurricane Bob of 1991 hit Rhode Island at a category 2 and did only a piffling 1.5 billion in damage, with few deaths. But it turns out Hurricane Bob was a small sized hurricane despite its wind speeds, and Irene is a lot wider. NOAA now put her at a category 3/4 on storm surge. This is because her wider mass piles up more water, and her slower movement gives her more time to accumulate a big surge.
Now, this sounds worrying, but I'm still a little sceptical. If anyone remembers Hurricane Ike from 2008 I was crying panic over that one too, and that's because although she was a category two she had a huge width and all the scientists were crying up how she was going to have a huge storm surge. A bad storm surge there was, with 112 deaths, but no where near the horror story predicted for the 58,000 who couldn't be arsed evacuating. Scientists frankly are still at a loss as to how their models were so far out on that one.
Still, Masters is worried, and for this additional reason: high tide. If she hits, it will likely coincide with not only the high tide but also full moon. There's a possibility - slim, but there - of a category three storm surge on Long Island, and a category two on New York.
Obviously this is all reliant on sub-topography. In some areas waters will be funnelled, in others repelled. For New Jersey, Delaware, Ocean City and Atlantic City a category 1 surge can, according to models, reach 5-9 feet. With high tide and added pile-up owing to slow speed, a category 2 surge would bring 10-15 feet - but probably only 6-8 feet for the metropolitan areas. Masters gives a 30% chance of deeper than ten feet for the general, lesser populated area.
The model used for storm surges, the wonderfully named SLOSH, is rather sketchy with a plus or minus factor of 20% on heights, and its ability has been called into question since Ike. It has proven right in the past though. Sometimes.
What Irene means for New York:
Manhattan is protected by floodwalls of five feet high above mean sea level. During a nor'easter in 1998 heavy winds of a 990mb storm pushed an eight foot surge into battery park, which overtopped the walls and flooded the NYC subway and the Hoboken New Jersey subway. Lower Manhatten experienced 4 feet of flooding. Mass transit was offline for ten days. Aside from that New York has done okay flood wise, with Long Island bearing the brunt of the 1938 hurricane. However, in 1821 the only hurricane ever to make a direct hit on the city, a category two, made a flood of 13 feet in just one hour at Battery Park, reaching up to where the Financial District is now. SLOSH predicts that a mid-strength category 2 storm of 110mph (a little under what the Bahamas are getting right now) would drive a 15-20ft storm surge into Manhattan, Queens, Kings and up the Husdon river - owing entirely to the funnelling effect of the bay. Power plants would be knocked out, infrastructure badly damaged and the New York docks destroyed. This is quite unlikely, probably in the order of 5%. Slightly more likely at 20% is the category 1 hit with an 8-12ft surge.
So, what to do if you live in New York? First off, don't expect Roland Emmerich. As the mighty Morbo cries, "Hurricanes do not work that way!" Do reckon on a chance of an evacuation order, especially likely if you are in Carolina, somewhat more slimmer in New York's coastal regions. The storm will hit on Sunday, so have a plan and be prepared just in case.
What does Pete predict? Currently North Carolina, slight inland track, four hundred million or so in damage, welcome relief for drought areas. This prediction will change in't coming days, though, as more cards are revealed.
Meanwhile, tremendous footage from the ISS here:
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/videogal ... =108144931