Society of Weather Amateurs

Society of Weather Amateurs This page is for all weather amateurs

Severe thunderstorm warnings for Fayetteville to Goldsboro NC.
04/07/2025

Severe thunderstorm warnings for Fayetteville to Goldsboro NC.

5:00 Advisory of hurricane Milton.Milton is nearing the west coast of Florida. 65 nautical miles from Tampa. Minimum cen...
10/09/2024

5:00 Advisory of hurricane Milton.

Milton is nearing the west coast of Florida. 65 nautical miles from Tampa. Minimum central pressure 947 mb. 120 mph sustained winds movement northeast at 16 miles an hour latest satellite picture shows that Milton is weakening as upper level shear from the west and a frontal boundary from the north. Hurricane force wins extend out 65 miles out from the center. tropical storm force winds 116 miles. Current projections show the eye crossing just south of Tampa Bay. The highest storm surge will be to the northern part of the storm persons that were deciding to stay should find higher ground. Milton will come on shore as a category three hurricane storm surge values north of Tampa Bay could be 8 to 13 feet above average tide level. Hurricane Milton will continue across the Florida Peninsula on the northeastward bound, projectory quickly, losing wind speed. Mel will become extra tropical in about 36 hours over the Atlantic person alone the East Coast of Florida from Jacksonville to Savannah Georgia. Should see about 4 to 6 ft of beach inundation.

10/09/2024

Hurricane Milton update.

As of 8:00am hurricane hunters measured winds at 155 mph minimum central pressure of 917 mb. Slow weakening of Milton is anticipated due to strong westward upper shear. Heavy thunderstorms are already impacting parts of western Florida as the outer most rain bands move in. Spin up tornadoes and water spouts will be possible along the west coast today as Milton gets closer. The storm has increased in forward speed of 14mph. Moving NE.

9 PM advisory on hurricane Milton.Hurricane Milton has now left the influence of land and in the open waters of the Atla...
10/09/2024

9 PM advisory on hurricane Milton.

Hurricane Milton has now left the influence of land and in the open waters of the Atlantic basin. Milton has increased in forward speed to 10 mph. Movement ENE maximum sustained winds at 167 mph. Minimum central pressure at 900 mb. The hurricane hunters will be heading back out to the storm around 10pm. With a decreasing central pressure intensification is almost certain. Will know more at the 11pm hour. The track of Milton has shifted just a little bit south and now forecast south of Tampa bay, Sarasota area. Miltons wind field will start to grow overnight because of a strong deepening trough over the southern states. Regardless of where Miltons eye wall crosses storm surge will be the biggest concern 15 ft inundation in some areas just south of where Milton comes ashore.

Update on hurricane Milton. Milton has had fluctuations all last night in wind speed due to eye wall reconstruction as o...
10/08/2024

Update on hurricane Milton.

Milton has had fluctuations all last night in wind speed due to eye wall reconstruction as of 11am Hurricane Milton is a strong category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 150 mph minimum central pressure 924 mb. Milton has now turned ENE and slowed to 9 mph. There is considerable shear to the west of Milton. This friction and a deep trough coming out Alabama is what is pushing Milton on his currnent path. Deep convection on the ESE semi cycle around the eye wall is where the hurricane hunters measured 150 mph sustained winds. The influence of land from the Yucatán peninsula is also allowing friction. As Milton moves away from Mexico intensification is likely.

The 7:00 pm advisory of hurricane Milton.Hurricane Milton is a very unique hurricane. The rapid intensification despite ...
10/08/2024

The 7:00 pm advisory of hurricane Milton.

Hurricane Milton is a very unique hurricane. The rapid intensification despite the hostile environment around the storm. Milton is the second hurricane on record with the second lowest central pressure of 897 mb. Wilma in 2005 holds the record at 882 mb.

Currently Milton has a wind speed of 180 mph minimum central pressure 897 mb. Eye wall reconstruction is taking place, which could indicate strengthening. Nevertheless a very serious situation unfolding. Milton has picked up speed to 11 mph currently heading east.

10/07/2024

Very powerful hurricane Milton, and very strong category 5 hurricane. Maximum sustained winds 175 mph minimum central pressure of 913 mb.

Hurricane force winds extends 30 mph from the center. Tropical storm force winds 65 mph outward past the eye wall. Milton will continue his current path for 8 hours before turning more eastward then northeastward. Persons along the western Florida peninsula should be making preparations or have already prepared. This storm is forecast to weaken slightly before landfall. This forecast is subject to change.

Courtesy National Hurricane Center

10pm advisory of hurricane Milton. Currently 983 mb maximum sustained winds 85 mph. Milton is encountering a little wind...
10/07/2024

10pm advisory of hurricane Milton. Currently 983 mb maximum sustained winds 85 mph. Milton is encountering a little wind shear on the northwestern part of the storm. This is due to a stationary front to the north. Despite the shear in place Milton will continue to strengthen due to the upper dynamics and strong jet stream In Tennessee valley. Expect Milton to be a cat 2 or better by Monday afternoon.

Category 4 hurricane Helene. 130 MPH minimum central pressure 954 mb.
09/26/2024

Category 4 hurricane Helene. 130 MPH minimum central pressure 954 mb.

05/10/2024

The sun is crackling with sunspot energy, and two particular have roared to life.

NOAA has upgraded a geomagnetic solar storm watch from a level 3 ("moderate") to a level 4 ("severe") on Thursday as several solar flares hurtle toward Earth and are expected to combine. That could grace the northern tier skies with brilliant auroras but also trigger GPS problems, hamper satellite communication, and cause blackouts of high-frequency radio.

"Watches at this level are very rare," NOAA stated in the watch. "This is an unusual event."

This is the first "severe" Geomagnetic Storm Watch issued since January 2005.

Sunspots merged

Over the past 24 hours, two massive sunspots have merged and spit out at least two X-class (largest) and several M-class (second-largest) solar flares. The explosive acceleration of charged and super heated plasma, known as a coronal mass ejection or CME, speeds through space and expands, according to NOAA.

The new sunspot is 16 times the diameter of the Earth.

WHAT IS A GEOMAGNETIC STORM?

NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory captured these images of the solar flares — as seen in the bright flashes in the left image (May 8 flare) and the right image (May 7 flare). The image shows a subset of extreme ultraviolet light that highlights the extremely hot material in flares and which is colorized in orange. (NASA/SDO / NOAA)

Another sun spot also let loose strong CMEs this week and continues to be active. The bulk of a total of five CMEs will collide with Earth in a glancing blow as early as midday Friday through Sunday, said NOAA.

"These two sunspot clusters are magnetically complex and much larger than Earth. Together they have been the source of frequent M-class flares (minor to moderate)," stated the Space Weather Prediction Center. "RGN 3664 (the combined sunspot region) continues to grow and increase in magnetic complexity and has evolved into a higher threat of increased solar flare risk."

How flares can set off geomagnetic storms

"Flares are when the sun brightens, and we see the radiation, and that's kind of the muzzle flash," explained Professor Peter Becker of George Mason University in an earlier interview. "And then the cannon shot is the coronal mass ejection (CME). So, we can see the flash, but then the coronal mass ejection can go off in some random direction in space, but we can tell when they're actually going to head towards Earth. And that gives us about 18 hours of warning, maybe 24 hours of warning, before those particles actually get to Earth and start messing with Earth's magnetic field."

SOLAR SUPERSTORM COULD ‘WIPE OUT THE INTERNET’ FOR WEEKS OR MONTHS, SCIENTIST SAYS

Geomagnetic Storm Illustration
An illustration of Earth's magnetic field shielding our planet from solar particles. (NASA/GSFC/SVS / NASA)

NOAA warns of a wide area blackout of high frequency radio communications for hours. The geomagnetic storm could also cause widespread voltage irregularities in power systems which trigger false alarms on security devices, cause drag on low earth orbit satellites preventing them from orienting and cause range errors and a loss-of-lock for GPS systems.

Residents as far south as northern California, Oklahoma, Alabama and Virginia could see the Northern Lights.

Forecasters estimate these conditions occur for about 60 days total over any given 11-year solar cycle.

Aurora cloud cover forecast for Saturday morning (5/11)
Aurora cloud cover forecast for Saturday morning (5/11) (NASA)

HOW TO WATCH FOX WEATHER

NOAA says scientists have only observed three Severe geomagnetic storms since the current solar cycle started in December 2019.

"The last (observed) Severe geomagnetic storm was on March 23, 2024, and the last Extreme was the Halloween Storms in October 2003," the SWPC stated. "That G5 (Extreme storm) resulted in power outages in Sweden and damaged power transformers in South Africa."

X-class solar flares are the largest explosions in the solar system. According to NASA, the biggest X-class flares can produce as much energy as 1 billion atomic bombs. M-class are the second-strongest flares that can cause minor radiation storms and can harm astronauts.

The solar cycle is peaking making solar storms more plentiful

Tree rings and ice cores are evidence of much larger solar superstorms in the past.

In 1859, the great Carrington Event, generally regarded as Earth's greatest solar storm in recent history, covered nearly the entire planet in aurora. About 14,000 years ago, a solar flare, possibly hundreds of times stronger than the Carrington flare, impacted Earth.

THE HISTORY OF EARTH'S GREATEST SOLAR STORMS

NOAA forecasts the current 11-year solar cycle to peak sometime in 2024 or early 2025 and solar activity is likely to remain active for the next several months or even few years.

NOAA PREDICTS STRONGER PEAK OF SOLAR ACTIVITY IN 2024 THAN ORIGINALLY ANTICIPATED

Fox Weather
About the App
Privacy Policy
Terms and Conditions
Your Privacy Choices
Media Relations
Corporate Information
Help
Facebook

Twitter

Instagram

Youtube

LinkedIn

TikTok

RSS
Download on the App Store

Get it on Google Play
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. ©2024 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved.

03/20/2024

The 2024 Hurricane season is expected to be rather active. The key factors to consider is a weakening El Niño and Strengthening La Niña. A strong La Niña will allow for weaker wind shear in the Atlantic and Atlantic basin, water temperatures have increased one degree Fahrenheit over the last 10 years. Warm water temperatures fuel the development of topical systems. Especially the gulf coast and eastern Florida and the Carolinas. My prediction is to see 4 major hurricanes cat 3 or better one which I expect to affect the Carolinas, one to impact Florida and one in the Gulf of Mexico. Expect to see 15 named systems or more this year, which may extend into the Greek alphabet.

Rainbow over Newport NC
10/20/2023

Rainbow over Newport NC

Address

160 Sandhills Drive
Newport, NC
28570

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Society of Weather Amateurs posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Society of Weather Amateurs:

Share