Disturbance 3 Track Chart, Advisory #2
Current Location: 17.9N, 85.5W
Geographic Reference: 180 miles east of northern Belize
Movement: North-northwest at 7 mph
Max Winds: 30 mph gusting to 40 mph
Current Hurricane Severity Index: 0 out of a possible 50 points (0 size, 0 intensity)
Max Predicted Hurricane Severity Index: 2 out of a possible 50 points (1 size, 1 intensity)
Current Radius of Tropical Storm-Force Winds: 0 miles
Max Predicted Radius of Tropical Storm-Force Winds: 60 miles
Organizational Trend: Very slowly becoming better-organized
Forecast Confidence: Below Average

Key Points
1. Disturbance 3 is predicted to become a weak tropical storm in the eastern Gulf on Saturday.
2. Strong southwesterly wind shear should keep most squalls and stronger wind east of the track.
3. Heavy rain is possible from the Florida Peninsula north into Georgia and Alabama between Friday and Monday.
4. Little impact is expected from the mouth of the Mississippi west to Texas.

Our Forecast
Disturbance 3 (Invest 90L) remains a broad and weak area of low pressure in the western Caribbean Sea. The disturbance is moving slowly northward toward the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Our forecast takes the disturbance into the southeastern Gulf on Thursday afternoon. Moderate to strong southwesterly wind shear across the central and eastern Gulf through the coming weekend will be impacting the disturbance, keeping most of its squalls and significant winds east of the track.

We think that the disturbance may become organized enough by Fri day or Saturday that it is upgraded to a tropical depression. Development chances are estimated to be 60 percent that the disturbance develops into at least a tropical depression. Winds in squalls out over the water east of the center could reach tropical storm strength by Saturday afternoon as the center approaches the Florida Panhandle. Once inland, the storm should quickly weaken to a remnant low pressure area. The unfavorable upper-level environment across the eastern Gulf is expected to prevent this system from becoming a strong tropical storm or a hurricane.

Whether or not this disturbance is upgraded to a depression or a tropical storm, its impacts across the eastern Gulf and the southeast U.S. will be the same. Heavy rain is likely across the Florida Peninsula between Thursday night and Sunday. This heavy rain will spread north into Georgia and Alabama over the holiday weekend. No tropical storm-force winds are expected inland across Florida. All tropical storm-force winds will likely be confined to squalls out over the water to the east of the track.

Expected Impacts Offshore
Eastern Gulf of Mexico (east of 88W) – Widespread squalls Friday to Sunday morning with wind gusts to 50 kts possible, along with rough seas at times.

Expected Impacts Onshore
Florida Peninsula – Widespread heavy showers and thunderstorms Friday through Sunday, resulting in street flooding and travel issues.
Florida Panhandle to Southern Georgia and Alabama – Heavy showers and thunderstorms from Sunday through Monday, resulting in travel issues.

Our next advisory will be issued by 3AM CDT.

Meteorologist: Claude Aultman

Forecast Confidence:   Below Average Hurricane Severity Index
Fcst Hour Valid Lat. Lon. Max Sustained Winds Max Gusts Category Size Intensity Total
0 9PM CDT Tue May 22 17.90N 85.50W 30 mph 40 mph Tropical Disturbance 0 0 0
24 9PM CDT Wed May 23 20.20N 86.10W 30 mph 40 mph Tropical Disturbance 0 0 0
48 9PM CDT Thu May 24 22.90N 86.60W 35 mph 45 mph Tropical Disturbance 0 1 1
60 9AM CDT Fri May 25 24.50N 86.50W 35 mph 45 mph Tropical Disturbance 0 1 1
72 9PM CDT Fri May 25 26.10N 86.20W 35 mph 45 mph Tropical Depression 0 1 1
84 9AM CDT Sat May 26 27.40N 86.00W 40 mph 50 mph Tropical Storm 1 1 2
96 9PM CDT Sat May 26 28.60N 85.80W 40 mph 50 mph Tropical Storm 1 1 2
108 9AM CDT Sun May 27 30.00N 85.60W 40 mph 50 mph Tropical Storm 1 1 2
120 9PM CDT Sun May 27 31.40N 85.70W 30 mph 40 mph Tropical Depression 0 0 0
132 9AM CDT Mon May 28 32.80N 86.60W 25 mph 30 mph Remnant Low 0 0 0
144 9PM CDT Mon May 28 33.40N 88.00W 15 mph 25 mph Remnant Low 0 0 0

The yellow cone represents track error from the previous five hurricane seasons. Over the past five hurricane seasons, the center of the storm tracked within the yellow cone 75% of the time. The cone does not represent the forecast uncertainty in the current advisory for this storm. In addition, hurricane-force winds, very high tides, large waves, and heavy rainfall can often extend well outside the yellow cone.