Tropical Storm Harvey Intensifying Rapidly, Hurricane Warning for Texas

Tropical Storm Harvey was intensifying rapidly on Thursday morning and a Hurricane Warning was issued portions of the coast of Texas.  At 11:00 a.m. EDT on Thursday the center of Tropical Storm Harvey was located at latitude 24.0°N and longitude 93.3°W which put it about 365 miles southeast of Corpus Christi, Texas.  Harvey was moving toward the north-northwest at 10 m.p.h. (16 km/h).  The maximum sustained wind speed was 65 m.p.h. (105 km/h) and there were wind gusts to 80 m.p.h. (130 km/h).  The minimum surface pressure was 982 mb.

A Hurricane Warning was in effect for the portion of the coast from Port Mansfield to Matagorda, Texas.  A Hurricane Watch was in effect for the portion of the coast from the mouth of the Rio Grande River to Port Mansfield.  A Tropical Storm Warning was in effect for the portion of the coast from the mouth of the Rio Grande River to Port Mansfield and from Matagorda to High Island, Texas.  A Tropical Storm Watch was in effect for the portion of the coast from Boca De Catan, Mexico to the mouth of the Rio Grande River.

Tropical Storm Harvey intensified very rapidly on Thursday morning.  An eye with a diameter of 18 miles (29 km) formed at the center of circulation.  The eye was surrounded by a ring of very strong thunderstorms.  Additional bands of strong thunderstorms were revolving around the core of Tropical Storm Harvey.  The thunderstorms were generating very strong upper level divergence which was pumping away large amounts of mass in all directions from the tropical storm.  The strong upper level divergence was causing the surface pressure to decrease rapidly.  The minimum surface pressure decreased from 1002 mb to 982 mb in 12 hours.  The rapid decrease in pressure was increasing the pressure gradient force and the winds speeds were increasing accordingly.

Tropical Storm Harvey is in an almost perfect environment for rapid intensification.  Harvey is moving over water where the Sea Surface Temperature is near 31°C.  The upper level winds are very weak and there is almost no vertical wind shear.  Tropical Storm Harvey should continue to intensify rapidly for another 24 to 36 hours.  Harvey will become a hurricane later today and it will likely become a major hurricane before it makes landfall.  Tropical Storm Harvey has the potential to intensify to a Category 4 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale.

Harvey is being steered toward the north-northwest by a subtropical ridge to the east of the tropical storm.  A general northwesterly motion is forecast continue for another 36 to 48 hours.  On its anticipated track the center of Harvey will approach the coast of Texas on Friday night.  The steering currents are forecast to weaken as Harvey nears the coast.  Some models are forecasting that Harvey drifts slowly toward the west.  Other models stall Harvey and then turn it northeastward.  There is a large degree of uncertainty about the future track of Harvey after it nears the coast.

Based on current projections the forecast Hurricane Intensity Index (HII) for Harvey at landfall is 22.1.  The forecast Hurricane Size Index (HSI) is 18.0 and the forecast Hurricane Wind Intensity Size Index (HWISI) at landfall is 40.1  Those indices indicate that Harvey could cause regional major damage in Texas.  The indices may be conservative if Harvey continues to intensify rapidly up until it makes landfall.  Harvey would be stronger, but a little smaller, than Hurricane Ike was when Ike made landfall in Texas in 2008.  The HII for Ike was 19.2, the HSI was 22.5 and the HWISI was 41.7.

Harvey will bring strong damaging winds to Texas.  Harvey will also cause a dangerous storm surge at the coast.  The storm surge could approach 12 feet (4 meters) in some locations.  Harvey will also drop very heavy rain, if it stalls after it moves inland.  Serious fresh water flooding is possible under that scenario.