Storm Active: October 25-28
On October 23, a non-tropical low centered several hundred miles west of the Azores began to deepen and produced strong winds and scattered rains over a large area of the northeast Atlantic. The low moved generally east-southeastward over the following days. On October 25, a small pocket of deep convection formed about the center of circulation. That afternoon, the system became Tropical Storm Pablo, a very small tropical storm in the middle of what appeared on a larger scale as an extratropical cyclone. Pablo was named at the same time as Tropical Storm Olga in the Gulf of Mexico, a new record for the latest in a season that two storms were named simultaneously. Though ocean temperatures were below the ordinary threshold for tropical cyclone development, a cool upper atmosphere gave the system enough instability to support tropical development.
Upon formation, the tiny Pablo had an even tinier eye feature on satellite imagery. Gale force winds associated with the tropical cyclone extended only a few dozen miles from the center, even though the parent extratropical system still was generating comparable winds in its much bigger northwest quadrant. On October 26, Pablo turned east and then northeast, strengthening a bit as it did so. Early that evening, the center passed close to the easternmost Azores islands, bringing additional rain, strong winds, and high waves. Defying expectations, the cyclone intensified further as the eye became better defined. During the morning on October 27, Pablo achieved hurricane status. At 42.8° N, 18.3° W, this was the furthest northeast any hurricane had ever formed on record. Pablo reached its peak intensity of 80 mph winds and a central pressure of 977 mb a few hours later. Meanwhile, the storm turned back toward the north and slowed down somewhat.
Soon after, even colder waters along Pablo's track at last caused convection to degrade. The small system suffered a rapid demise overnight, weakening to a low-end tropical storm and then becoming post-tropical early on October 28 when it degenerated into a swirl of low clouds. The remnant low drifted slowly northwest before it was absorbed by another low pressure system.
The above image shows Pablo near hurricane strength on October 27.
Pablo became a hurricane farther to the northeast than any previous cyclone on record.
Saturday, October 26, 2019
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