Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Impressive Bill churning huge waves; New England air pollution episode underway
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 02:38 PM GMT on August 18, 2009 +6
Hurricane Bill has popped out an impressive eye, and continues to gather strength over the middle Atlantic. Visible and infrared satellite imagery show a well-organized, symmetric hurricane, with plenty of low-level spiral banding and upper-level outflow channels to the north and south. The spectacular appearance of the storm is evidence of the light wind shear environment that Bill finds itself in.

Wind shear is low, 5 - 10 knots, and is forecast to remain low to moderate, 5-15 knots, for the next five days. Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs) will rise steadily from 27.5°C today to 29°C on Friday. Total ocean heat content also rises today into Wednesday, and it is expected that Bill will take advantage of these favorable conditions to intensify into a major hurricane. The Hurricane Hunters make their first penetration into Bill this afternoon. The NOAA Hurricane Hunters will be continuously flying Bill for the next three days. They are flying research missions that will feed real-time radar data into an experimental version of the HWRF model to see if this data can improve the model forecasts.


Figure 1. Wave forecast for Hurricane Bill from NOAA's Wavewatch III model. Beginning Saturday (right panel) large waves from Bill are expected to affect most of the U.S. East Coast. By Sunday, the model predicts waves of 10 - 15 feet may impact the offshore waters of New England.

Water vapor satellite loops show that a trough of low pressure is diving down towards Bill, and this trough will be able to turn Bill more to the northwest over the next two days, and Bill will miss the Lesser Antilles Islands. The main impact of Bill on these islands will be high waves. Yesterday, Bill passed just north of Buoy 41041, which recorded significant wave heights of 28.8 feet. Maximum wave height is typically a factor of 1.9 greater than the significant wave height, so Bill was likely generating waves up to 55 feet high. High waves from Bill are propagating across the Atlantic towards the U.S. East Coast, and will arrive there on Saturday, according to NOAA's Wavewatch III model (Figure 1). The highest waves spawned by Bill will affect the New England coast, where waves of 10 - 15 feet in offshore waters can be expected. The waves will cause significant erosion of beaches, and possible damage to shoreline structures.

A much larger trough of low pressure is expected to develop along the U.S. East Coast late this week, turning Bill to the north. Exactly where this turn occurs is still not clear, and both Bermuda and Cape Cod, Massachusetts will be in Bill's 5-day forecast cone of uncertainty. At present, it appears that the Canadian provinces of Newfoundland or Nova Scotia are at greatest risk from a strike by Bill, but New England and Bermuda cannot relax just yet.

Elsewhere in the tropics
The remains of Tropical Storm Ana are bringing heavy rain to Haiti, Cuba, and the Bahamas today, and this activity will spread over South Florida tonight. The remains are disorganized, and are not likely to re-develop. No models are calling for any new tropical cyclones to develop in the Atlantic over the next seven days.


Figure 2. Image from NASA's Terra satellite of air pollution haze over the Northeast U.S. on Monday, August 17, 2009.

First major air pollution episode of the summer for the Northeast U.S.
New England is currently experiencing a far more deadly weather event than a direct hit by Hurricane Bill would likely bring--a large dome of high pressure. The reason? The high pressure system camped over the Northeast U.S. has brought hot temperatures, stagnant air, and the summer's first major air pollution episode.

The event started on Sunday, when a high pressure system with light winds moved over the eastern U.S., limited mixing and leading to stagnation and a buildup of pollutants. Mostly sunny skies and high temperatures also enhanced formation of ground-level ozone gas, a dangerous pollutant. Furthermore, southerly winds brought high humidity into the Northeast, which is conducive to particle pollution formation in the atmosphere. Particle pollution is the most deadly form of air pollution in the U.S. The poor air quality led to issuance of air quality advisories and action days on Monday in more than 30 cities, including New York City, NY; Newark, NJ; Providence, RI; and Portland, ME.

Today's air pollution forecast
Today, similar conditions are expected across much of the region, and Air Quality Index (AQI) levels are forecasted to remain in the Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups (Code Orange) range for many areas in the Northeast. For a complete list of action/advisory days and their locations, visit the EPA AIRNow website.

Health Tip: Cut back on strenuous outdoor exercise when air quality is expected to be poor.

How You Can Help: Choose a cleaner commute - share a ride to work or use public transportation. Bicycle or walk when possible. Combine errands and reduce trips.

Mortality from air pollution
As I discussed in a previous blog post, air pollution is a far more deadly weather hazard in the U.S. than hurricanes. Sure, hurricanes have killed an average of 150 people per year in the U.S., and the "premature deaths" caused by air pollution are only partly attributable to breathing bad air, while drowning in a hurricane's storm surge is entirely due to the hurricane. Nevertheless, a great many children die of pollution-induced asthma attacks who would not have died otherwise, and the mortality due to air pollution in the general population is in the thousands or ten of thousands each year. Outdoor air pollution in the U.S. due to particulate pollution alone was estimated by the EPA in 1997 to cause at least 20,000 premature deaths each year. A 2005 study by EPA scientists (Particulate Matter Health Risk Assessment for Selected Urban Areas) estimated that over 4,700 premature deaths occur each year in just nine cities (Detroit, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Boston, Phoenix, Seattle, and San Jose)--even if those cities all met the current federal standards for particulate matter pollution. Extrapolating these data to the entire nation puts the annual death toll in the tens of thousands--but the EPA has not calculated that total. Some studies have placed the annual pollution death toll in the U.S. at 50,000 to 100,000 (Dockery, D.W., and C.A Pope III. Acute Respiratory Effects of Particulate Air Pollution. Annual Review Public Health, 1994, vol. 15,107-32.) The death toll is much higher in other parts of the world, where air pollution standards are not as stringent. Globally, about 800,000 people per year die prematurely due to outdoor air pollution, according to a 2005 study published in the Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health. This represents about 1.2 percent of total annual global deaths.

In the debate over the costs of switching over the cleaner energy sources, the huge costs and deaths attributable to air pollution are often ignored. Sure, it will be costly to move away from fossil fuels, but let's not forget that the price per gallon we pay at the pump does not include the billions in medical costs we pay for the effects of air pollution.

I'll have an update Wednesday morning.

Jeff Masters
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551. homegirl 05:00 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
JRRP, look where the eye starts and where it is when it's finished...looks more NW in the last couple frames, but overall I'd say WNW as a couple frames could constitute a wobble and not actual direction.

Also, another great loop to show the pull from the weakness in the ridge, see Bill's NE quadrant? NICE loop. Very cool.
Member Since: August 1, 2006 Posts: 45 Comments: 7425
552. canesrule1 05:01 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting JRRP:
west
yup
553. StormChaser81 05:01 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Member Since: August 11, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 2315
554. canesrule1 05:01 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
555. rwdobson 05:01 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
@548, the thing is, Ike was never forecast to be as far east as Bill is...in other words, it was never forecast to be a fish storm. despite the people on here who say it was.
Member Since: Juni 12, 2002 Posts: 0 Comments: 1574
556. largeeyes 05:02 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting rwdobson:


Ok, now, to show that you are correct, all you have to do is have some actual evidence to support your statement.

Since you are connected to the internet, you should easily be able to find this support. Then post it.


Look from September 4th, onwards. Link

It was to curve and parallel Florida on the east, then the west, then hit near NOLA. The same forward then north turn over and over.
Member Since: August 22, 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 1383
557. reedzone 05:02 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
If 12Z NOGAPS ( a major model) verifies.. Watch out New England.. wow



It weakens the trough before Bill reaches it. This is a possible scenario
Member Since: Juli 1, 2008 Posts: 13 Comments: 7249
558. TropicTraveler 05:02 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
There is a lot of calling folks "wishcasters"and other things but what I seee over and over is speculation - What if it does this or does that. We all know hurricanes wobble on their path. We also know that the further out the forecast, the less chance of dead on accuracy. So I think speculation with out being attacked for it is a good thing for the most part. Respect for each other is the key to good discussion - and some folks who are called names end up being right. None of us knows stuff for sure yet. Anyway, I love this blog. Keep it going!
Member Since: Juli 24, 2007 Posts: 2 Comments: 905
559. stormwatcherCI 05:03 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
n makes me
Quoting Prgal:

Because even if its not a "major hurricane" it could do a LOT of damage and those of us living in the island chain HAVE to follow the system carefully in case it changes the track. Its obvious!
I think you are banging your head on a brick wall. Some of us just don't happen to live on the US mainland so of course it "won't affect" us.
Member Since: Oktober 9, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 8058
560. Chiggy007 05:03 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
BILL is NOT moving WEST! You just don't look at couple of frames to determine this! Look at the 6 hour loop on NHC Sat images and you'll see that over all motion is WNW!!
You are just fooling yourself if you DO NOT SEE THIS..

THE END!! LOL!!
561. reedzone 05:03 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Member Since: Juli 1, 2008 Posts: 13 Comments: 7249
562. rwdobson 05:04 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Largeyes, you said the NHC forecasted IKE to threaten NC. that was never really true. the cone never got north of the FL/GA border.
Member Since: Juni 12, 2002 Posts: 0 Comments: 1574
563. reedzone 05:04 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting Chiggy007:
BILL is NOT moving WEST! You just don't look at couple of frames to determine this! Look at the 6 hour loop on NHC Sat images and you'll see that over all motion is WNW!!
You are just fooling yourself if you DO NOT SEE THIS..

THE END!! LOL!!


Agreed, a few west wobbles, but mainly a WNW trend.
Member Since: Juli 1, 2008 Posts: 13 Comments: 7249
564. canesrule1 05:04 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
hurricane hunters going towards the eye wall, right now finding 35 knot surface winds.
565. divdog 05:04 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting Elena85Vet:
Could somebody post the visable image. TIA

why its posted about every 5th entry.
Member Since: August 22, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 755
566. extreme236 05:06 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting Chiggy007:
BILL is NOT moving WEST! You just don't look at couple of frames to determine this! Look at the 6 hour loop on NHC Sat images and you'll see that over all motion is WNW!!
You are just fooling yourself if you DO NOT SEE THIS..

THE END!! LOL!!


Wasn't Bill only supposed be a weak hurricane near the Antilles? :p
Member Since: August 2, 2007 Posts: 19 Comments: 19234
567. presslord 05:07 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting reedzone:
If 12Z NOGAPS ( a major model) verifies.. Watch out New England.. wow



It weakens the trough before Bill reaches it. This is a possible scenario


On a brighter note...Won't this help with the pollution problems Dr. Masters discusses?
Member Since: August 13, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 10404
568. 69Viking 05:05 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting JRRP:
west


Just North of due West is what I'm seeing, definately not NW or North yet.
Member Since: August 25, 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 2268
569. homegirl 05:05 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
NOGAPS was the West outlier, but definately in the cone of probablility as that's still 5 days out.
Member Since: August 1, 2006 Posts: 45 Comments: 7425
570. crownwx 05:05 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Just did a comparasion between last night's 00Z GFS and the current 12Z run and at what longitude it is at when it is at 40 North Latitude. With the 00Z run it forecast a postion of 40 North, 62.5 West at 5 am Eastern Sunday. Now, with the 12Z model run it is forecasting a position of 40 North, 64.5 West at 9 am Eastern Sunday. So, the GFS model has shifted a bit to the west and is a tiny bit slower. I just thought I'd throw that out there for model analysis.
Member Since: December 27, 2004 Posts: 3 Comments: 207
571. drg0dOwnCountry 05:06 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting IMA:
It's time for Ima's/Ann's [first] stupid question of the day...

What does it mean when a HH flight is called a "non-tasked mission"? I'm on Google Earth, viewing the info from here

Thanks!
Thanks for the link IMA. The current mission is filled under "Mission 01 Bill" when i access the data.
Member Since: September 22, 2005 Posts: 11 Comments: 1957
572. scCane 05:06 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Looks like its still moving wnw we"ll find out later today if trough number 2 can pick bill up.

Member Since: Maj 9, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 152
573. yonzabam 05:07 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting StadiumEffect:


We'll have to wait for a couple more hours to see if this is a trend or just a wobble. My guess is that it's a wobble.


Well, it's getting further away from the influence of the weakness in the ridge, which I believe contributed to a slightly more northwards movement, recently.

It should now start to feel the pressure of the Bermuda High and I wouldn't be surprised if this more westward motion was maintained, seeing as that trough is still up off Maryland.
Member Since: Juli 20, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 1854
574. mikatnight 05:07 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting FLGatorCaneNut:
Can anyone on here post a link to radar out of Cuba ?



This address (http://www.insmet.cu/asp/genesis.asp?TB0=PLANTILLAS&TB1=RADAR&TB2=../Radar/05Pilon/plnMAXw01a.gif) used to work, but it's got this message now:
Member Since: Oktober 18, 2005 Posts: 3 Comments: 2152
576. JRRP 05:07 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting Prgal:
Hi there JRRP!

hey Prgal :D
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577. reedzone 05:09 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
NOGAPS is the western outlier and the EURO/GFS is the eastern outlier. We should have much better runs by tomorrow with the data put in from the Hurricane Hunters. I think a trend a bit more west is looking good. Anywhere from Bermuda to maybe even Long Island, NY - northward needs to watch this storm.
Member Since: Juli 1, 2008 Posts: 13 Comments: 7249
578. AllStar17 05:08 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Member Since: Juni 29, 2009 Posts: 13 Comments: 5145
579. canesrule1 05:08 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Can someone post the University of Miami stellite imagery link.
580. sfla82 05:08 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
The left over rain from Ana doesnt even look like it will make it to S Fla now.... We need the rain too.
582. largeeyes 05:09 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
562. rwdobson 5:04 PM GMT on August 18, 2009
Largeyes, you said the NHC forecasted IKE to threaten NC. that was never really true. the cone never got north of the FL/GA border.


A cane moving northward a long FL coast would, by definition, be a threat to NC!
Member Since: August 22, 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 1383
583. Chiggy007 05:09 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Extreme: What a rebuttal..hmmm!!

At that time models were all over the place and I just said what I saw at the time! yup I was wrong - of course your predictions come true every time huh!? LoL!
Currently what I see is that BILL is NOT moving West! Now of course you can believe that if you guys want! :)
And YES it is FISH too..
584. saintsfan06 05:09 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Don't like the latest NOGAPS run. Does not bode well for our restaurant on the cape.
Member Since: September 18, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 164
585. canesrule1 05:09 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting AllStar17:
mine says reporting 34knot winds.
586. StadiumEffect 05:09 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting Chiggy007:
BILL is NOT moving WEST! You just don't look at couple of frames to determine this! Look at the 6 hour loop on NHC Sat images and you'll see that over all motion is WNW!!
You are just fooling yourself if you DO NOT SEE THIS..

THE END!! LOL!!


You are correct. The trend is still WNW, and the system seems to be simply wobbling on a slightly more westward course. But some people on here see what they want to see, and create scenarios for what they want to see.
587. edmac 05:10 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
IKE was forecasted to hit S. Florida, and that being said, the NHC was off by several, several hundred miles, and Ike traveled well outside the forecasted 5 day cone. The NHC could be wrong on Bills track as well, we will just have to see if the timing is there. Right now it seems Bill is still moivng in the NWN direction. When, and if it turns N, then we will know that the trough, and the ridge have done what is forecasted, however I do remember severeal storms that have done circles in the atlantic, and turn back west again.
Member Since: Februar 27, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 31
588. IMA 05:10 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
546. HurricaneCavalier Do they go back and pick the monkeys up after they've collected their data?? They really shouldn't make them get their own umbrellas.

Member Since: Juli 8, 2005 Posts: 22 Comments: 1261
589. Prgal 05:10 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
JRRP, is a trof a "vaguada"? By the way, good to see a familiar avatar around :)
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590. mikatnight 05:10 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting StormChaser81:
Cuba Radar


Thanks!
Member Since: Oktober 18, 2005 Posts: 3 Comments: 2152
593. juniormeteorologist 05:11 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Bill may track Just like Donna did in 1960
594. IKE 05:11 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
System is at 16N....51.4W....moving WNW....
Member Since: Juni 9, 2005 Posts: 23 Comments: 37070
595. 1088391 05:11 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
P451 and AllStar17
where did you get those images
596. chevycanes 05:11 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting yonzabam:


Well, it's getting further away from the influence of the weakness in the ridge, which I believe contributed to a slightly more northwards movement, recently.

It should now start to feel the pressure of the Bermuda High and I wouldn't be surprised if this more westward motion was maintained, seeing as that trough is still up off Maryland.

look on water vapor loop and you can see another weakness at 60W and dropping down eroding the eastern part of the Bermuda High.

that is what's gonna make it turn more NW later today or early tomorrow.
Member Since: August 6, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 687
597. Chiggy007 05:11 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
I have been observing the new wave that just came off Africa? Convection and rotation persisting nicely!
Anyone else had a chance to look at that?
598. AllStar17 05:12 PM GMT on August 18, 2009    
Quoting canesrule1:
mine says reporting 34knot winds.


I have 25 knot winds reported, my bad, not 25 mph....it is 30 mph.
Member Since: Juni 29, 2009 Posts: 13 Comments: 5145

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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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