Tag Archives: Coral Sea

Tropical Cyclone Solo Passing Near New Caledonia

The center of Tropical Cyclone Solo is passing near New Caledonia.  At 10:00 p.m. EDT on Saturday the center of Tropical Cyclone Solo was located at latitude 19.7°S and longitude 164.6°E which put it about 200 miles northwest of Noumea, New Caledonia.  Solo was moving toward the southeast at 11 m.p.h.  The maximum sustained wind speed was 50 m.p.h. and there were gusts to 65 m.p.h.  The minimum surface pressure was 989 mb.

Strong northwesterly winds in the upper levels are generating significant vertical wind shear over the top of Solo.  The strong upper level winds are blowing the tops of thunderstorms to the southeast side of the circulation.  The wind shear is disrupting the circulation and the low level center is exposed on visible satellite images.  Solo is weakening and that trend is likely to continue as it moves farther southeast.

Tropical Cyclone Ola Intensifying Northwest of New Caledonia

Tropical Cyclone Ola intensified rapidly on Saturday as it moved over the Coral Sea northwest of New Caledonia.  At 8:00 p.m. EST on Saturday the center of Ola was located at latitude 19.9°S and longitude 162.9°E which put it about 260 miles northwest of Noumea, New Caledonia.  Ola was moving toward the south-southeast at 8 m.p.h.  The maximum sustained wind speed was 80 m.p.h. and there were gusts to 95 m.p.h.  The minimum surface pressure was 970 mb.

Ola is moving over warm Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs) and the environmental winds are generating upper level divergence to the southeast of the circulation.  The divergence pumped out mass and surface pressure decreased rapidly.  As a result, Ola intensified into the equivalent of a hurricane on Saturday.  Ola will remain over warm SSTs, but it will move into an area of stronger upper level winds when it moves farther southward.  It could intensify more during the next 24 hours, but it is likely to begin to weaken in 36 to 48 hours because of increasing vertical wind shear.

Counterclockwise flow around the western end of a subtropical ridge is steering Ola in a general southward direction.  That motion is expected to continue for another 24 hours.  A ridge of high pressure is expected to build south of Ola in a day or so.  The ridge could block Ola from moving any farther toward the south and turn it toward the southwest.  On the expected track, Ola would stay west of New Caledonia.  It is expected to weaken before it reaches Australia.