Gulf, Texas and Tropical cyclone
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KIAH Houston on MSN3h
Latest Weather Models Suggest Storm Could Become Tropical Cyclone By ThursdayThe latest grouping of meteorological computer models, referred to as "spaghetti plots", suggest the disturbance over the Florida Panhandle could become a tropical depression by Thursday night. The overall consensus of the spaghetti plots brings the area of disturbed weather into the Gulf waters by Wednesday night.
A high pressure system will remain in place north of the Hawaiian Islands through the weekend keeping moderate to locally breezy trade winds into the extended range forecast. A disturbance passing through the islands today will briefly increase shower activity through the morning hours.
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MySuncoast.com on MSNRain chances stay high as tropical system moves westInvest 93L still has a 40% chance of developing into a tropical depression over the next couple of days. It looks like it will move into LA around midday Thursday. It is expected to bring some heavy rain over parts of Louisiana and Mississippi over the next few days.
Regardless of how the system develops, the National Weather Service said in a Wednesday morning update that "a surge of tropical moisture could enhance the risk of showers and thunderstorms" in Southeast Texas by the end of the week.
Invest 93L is taking its time moving across Florida, and it could still become a tropical depression later this week.
On Tuesday CenterPoint Energy notified customers it is monitoring the low-pressure system offshore of Florida's east coast, designated as Invest 93L, as it moves over the Florida Peninsula toward the Gulf.
Reask, a provider of tropical cyclone risk intelligence, has launched a new global alert service aimed at helping insurers and catastrophe modellers track
The National Hurricane Center is tracking Invest 93L. Could tropical storm Dexter develop? What is the weather forecast for travel? What we know
Reask, the catastrophe modelling and climate analytics specialist, has announced that it has launched a new alert service that gives insurers and
Tropical cyclones typically drop large amounts of rain along and near the storm's path. The slower and more significant the storm’s size, the higher the likelihood of higher rainfall totals. Some storms can drop well over 30 inches of rainfall, like when Hurricane Harvey dropped over 60 inches near Nederland, Texas, in 2017.