Hurricane Delta weakened significantly before making landfall at 6:30 a.m. EDT Wednesday, October 7, near Puerto Morelos, Mexico – 20 miles south of Cancun – as a category 2 storm with ...
Hurricane Delta weakened significantly before making landfall at 6:30 a.m. EDT Wednesday, October 7, near Puerto Morelos, Mexico – 20 miles south of Cancun – as a category 2 storm with 110 mph winds. Delta, emerging into the Gulf of Mexico early Wednesday afternoon, is expected to re-intensify before turning to the north on Thursday night and making landfall in Louisiana on Friday. A hurricane watch and storm surge watch are in effect from High Island, Texas, to Grand Isle, Louisiana, with the storm surge watch extending to the Alabama-Florida border.
At landfall on Wednesday morning in Mexico, a WeatherFlow observing site in Cancun, located in the stronger right eyewall of Delta, recorded sustained winds of 84 mph, gusting to 106 mph. Buoy 42056, located 138 miles southeast of Cozumel, went through Delta’s weaker southern eyewall on Wednesday morning. At midnight EDT, the buoy recorded sustained winds of 74 mph, gusting to 92 mph. Storm chasers Reed Timmer and Josh Morgerman documented by videos posted to Twitter considerable, but not catastrophic, damage in Cancun from Delta.
Rapid intensification, then rapid weakening, before landfall in Mexico
At landfall in Mexico, Delta remained a relatively small hurricane, with hurricane-force winds extending out 30 miles from the center and tropical storm-force winds extending out 140 miles. Small hurricanes, given their less mass to accelerate or decelerate when conditions for intensification change, are prone to rapid changes in intensity. Because of its small size and the near-ideal conditions for intensification, Delta was able to put on a rare feat of rapid intensification, going from a tropical depression with 35 mph winds at 5 a.m. EDT Monday to a category 4 hurricane with 145 mph winds at 5 p.m. EDT Tuesday.
Climate change is causing more rapid intensification of Atlantic hurricanes
However, on Tuesday evening, the Hurricane Hunters documented that a sneak attack on Delta’s southeast flank was occurring. As shown by Andy Hazelton, a narrow but strong burst of mid-level winds, blowing at up to 70 mph, impinged on the hurricane’s southeast side. These winds were strong enough to thoroughly disrupt the intense but relatively fragile hurricane, resulting in a complete collapse of Delta’s eyewall late Tuesday evening. As a result, Delta weakened from a category 4 to a category 2 hurricane before landfall in Mexico, sparing Cancun a more serious hit.
Track forecast for Delta
Steering of Delta on Wednesday and Thursday will be controlled by a ridge of high pressure to the storm’s northeast, which will keep Delta on a northwesterly track across the Gulf of Mexico. By Thursday night, Delta will draw close enough to a trough of low pressure over the south-central U.S. to begin being affected by the southwesterly winds of the trough. These winds will turn Delta sharply to the north and then north-northeast. The exact timing and location of this turn are crucial for determining where on the U.S. coast Delta will make landfall. A stronger Hurricane Delta will be more likely to turn sooner and make landfall farther to the east, over central Louisiana. A weaker storm will make the turn later, with landfall closer to the Texas-Louisiana border.
The European model, normally the best-performing track model, has the most westerly track, predicting a weaker storm and a landfall near the Texas-Louisiana border. However, this model does not make reliable intensity forecasts, and the intensity of Delta has to be correctly modeled in order to make a good track forecast in this case. The European model was out-performed by most of the other top track models during a similar situation during the landfall of Hurricane Laura in western Louisiana in late August (see more on Laura below).
The most likely landfall location from Delta therefore is in central Louisiana, as predicted by other top track models – the GFS, UKMET, COAMPS-TC, NAVGEM, and HWRF – and by the official National Hurricane Center forecast. It now appears that Mississippi and Alabama, which are no longer in the NHC cone of uncertainty, are at low risk of a direct strike. If the model consensus is accurate, Delta could make landfall near Lafayette, Louisiana, (metro population about 500,000). In a 2016 analysis by 24/7 Wall St., Lafayette was rated the 15th most vulnerable city to residential damage from hurricanes, and the second most vulnerable in Louisiana after New Orleans.
The NHC cone of uncertainty for Delta includes Lake Charles, Louisiana – the sixth time in 2020 this has occurred (with Cristobal, Laura, Marco, Sally, and Beta being the other storms). Thanks go to Heather Marie Zons for this stat. Figure 4. Predicted rainfall amounts from the 6Z (2 a.m. EDT) Wednesday, October 7, run of the experimental HAFS model, for the four-day period ending at 6Z Sunday, October 11. The model predicted that Delta would dump more than 10 inches of rain (yellow-brown colors) in much of Louisiana. (Image credit: NOAA/AOML)
Intensity forecast for Delta
Passage of Delta over the tip of the Yucatan Peninsula will disrupt the hurricane, potentially resulting in a weakening by a full Saffir-Simpson category. However, the terrain Delta will be passing over is not mountainous, and the hurricane likely will emerge over the Gulf of Mexico fundamentally intact.
In the southern Gulf of Mexico, Delta will be over shallow continental shelf waters with relatively low heat content; these waters will have also cooled as a result of the passage of Tropical Storm Gamma over the weekend. However, by Wednesday evening, Delta will be back over warm, deep waters with high heat content, providing it high-octane fuel through Thursday. Wind shear is predicted to be a low to moderate 5 – 15 knots through Thursday, and during this period, Delta likely will steadily intensify, peaking as a category 3 or 4 storm. Delta will also expand in size, with NHC predicting over a 25% expansion in the area experiencing tropical storm-force winds. It is possible that some of this enlargement will occur because Delta absorbed some of the spin from ex-Tropical Storm Gamma, which was over the Yucatan Peninsula when Delta made landfall. The expected increase in Delta’s size likely will lead to a large section of the U.S. Gulf Coast’s experiencing a damaging storm surge at landfall, with NHC predicting a storm surge of between seven and eleven feet.
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