Highlights
- Hurricane Danny continues to slowly weaken. Maximum sustained winds were estimated at 90 mph as of 11 a.m. EDT Saturday.
- Tropical storm watches have been posted for the Leeward Islands. This means tropical storm-force winds are possible within 48 hours.
- Danny was located about 660 miles east of the Leeward Islands in the eastern Atlantic Ocean.
- Danny will track west-northwest, reaching the Leeward Islands Monday, then Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands Tuesday.
- A weakened Danny should bring welcome rainfall to drought-stricken Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
- Danny peaked as a category 3 hurricane with maximum sustained winds up to 115 mph Friday afternoon, becoming the first major hurricane of the 2015 Atlantic hurricane season.
Storm Stats and Satellite
Tropical Storm Watches, Warnings
Hurricane
Danny is continuing to weaken, but has now moved sufficiently close
enough to prompt the first watches in parts of the Leeward Islands.
Tropical
storm watches were posted late Saturday morning for the following
locations: Antigua, Barbuda, Montserrat, St. Kitts, Nevis, Anguilla,
Saba, St. Eustatius and St. Maarten. This means tropical storm
conditions are possible within 48 hours. Additional watches may be
issued soon for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
Danny
has started to move into an environment with more wind shear, or change
in wind speed with height either in speed and/or direction, and this
has caused the hurricane to be downgraded from Category 3 to Category 1
intensity.
(MORE: Expert Analysis | Hurricane Central)
Danny's
eye is no longer distinct in satellite imagery, and its convection near
its center is less vigorous. A pair of reconnaissance aircraft from
both the U.S. Air Force Reserve and NOAA will fly into Danny Saturday
afternoon to better diagnose Danny's current intensity.
(INTERACTIVE: Satellite Loop of Danny)
Friday afternoon, a NOAA research plane not only sent back near real-time radar images from a hurricane for the first time.
Danny
remains a tiny tropical cyclone, with tropical storm-force winds
extending up to only about 60 miles from the center of circulation.
Comparisons were made Thursday to the much larger west Pacific typhoons Goni and Atsani.
Water Vapor Image: Danny
Current Wind Shear Analysis
Small circulations such as Danny are prone to sudden changes in intensity, which can be difficult to forecast.
(MORE: Track Danny with our Interactive Storm Tracker)
The
large-scale atmosphere Danny is moving into, as well as its potential
track over land areas of the Caribbean, will induce further weakening
the next several days.
Danny will encounter an ample reservoir of dry air extending westward into the Caribbean Sea.
Dry
air hampers tropical cyclones by encouraging the development of
stronger thunderstorm downdrafts, which then either squelch nearby
thunderstorms from forming or push them away.
This dry air is also stable, meaning it suppresses upward vertical columns of air needed to maintain or form new thunderstorms.
Danny
is also moving into what has been so far this season a figurative
Caribbean "wall of wind shear". According to tropical meteorologist Phil
Klotzbach, wind shear over the Caribbean Sea had been at record levels
from mid-July through mid-August.
Wind
shear can blow convection away from the center from a tropical cyclone.
If strong enough, it can rip apart existing tropical cyclones. In
addition, those increasing west to southwest winds aloft will transport
more dry air into the circulation of Danny.
(MORE: Satellite Maps)
While
weakening, Danny will move generally toward the west-northwest the next
several days. Our latest forecast indicates the center of Danny would
approach the Leeward Islands sometime Monday, most likely as a tropical
storm.
Given Danny's small wind
field, the exact track of the center of circulation will determine who
will see tropical storm-force winds in the Leewards Monday.
Projected Path
It remains to be seen how quickly Danny weakens in the hostile environment described above. It is possible Danny weakens faster than forecast, and may become an "open wave" -- a tropical wave without a closed center of circulation -- toward the end of the forecast period, or sooner.
(NCEI/NESDIS/NOAA/NDMC)
Danny Rainfall Outlook
the drought-stricken region.
(FORECAST: San Juan | St. Croix)
NBC News reported six more municipalities in Puerto Rico were declared federal disaster areas Wednesday, bringing the total number of municipalities declared a disaster area to 36.
The U.S. Geological Survey says roughly 45 percent of the public water supply in Puerto Rico is supplied by reservoirs.
The eastern half of the island territory, as well as the U.S. Virgin Islands, are classified as in either severe or extreme drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor analysis.
San Juan, Puerto Rico, (-10.70 inches) and St. Croix (-11.59 inches) have significant year-to-date rain deficits through Thursday, a large chunk of those since June 1. Dating to 1951, it has been the driest year-to-date on record at Henry E. Rohlsen Airport on St. Croix, picking up only 7.31 inches of rain through August 20.
Stay tuned to The Weather Channel and check back with weather.com for updates on this system.
(MORE: Heart of the Hurricane Season is Here)
Incidentally, while small, Danny isn't the smallest tropical cyclone on record. According to the NOAA's Hurricane Research Division, Tropical Storm Marco in 2008 had gale-force winds extending only 12 miles from the center. Danny's tropical storm-force winds extended up to an estimated 60 miles from the center, as of Friday morning.
Danny became only the fourth named storm to become a hurricane in the strip of the Atlantic Ocean from off west Africa to the Lesser Antilles since the start of the 2011 season. Gonzalo (2014), Humberto (2013) and Katia (2011) were the only others to do so in that stretch of over four seasons.
Friday, Danny was the first hurricane to strengthen to Category 3 intensity in that Lesser Antilles to west Africa strip of ocean since 2010's Julia.
Senior meteorologists Nick Wiltgen and Jonathan Erdman and meteorologists Chris Dolce and Quincy Vagell contributed to this report.
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