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Here's the latest update from the NHC as of 8 a.m., Sept. 6: ... Invest 90L: Showers and ... Download your local site's app to ensure you're always connected to the news.
In meteorology, an invest (short for "investigative area") [1] is a designated area of disturbed weather that is being monitored for potential tropical cyclone development. Invests are designated by three separate United States forecast centers: the National Hurricane Center , the Central Pacific Hurricane Center , and the Joint Typhoon Warning ...
The NHC is also tracking two tropical waves: One in the Atlantic and another in the Caribbean. ... Invest 90L, which brought a deluge of rain — especially to Southwest and South Florida — is ...
On June 11, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) began monitoring a trough of low pressure over the Eastern Gulf of Mexico that was expected to produce heavy rainfall over the state of Florida. [3] Later that day, it was designated as Invest 90L, allowing for greater monitoring of the system. [4] [5] The invest then moved over Florida. [6]
The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season was the most active Atlantic hurricane season on record, in terms of the number of systems. It featured a total of 31 tropical and subtropical cyclones , with all but one cyclone becoming a named storm .
The National Hurricane Center said Thursday chances for development of a tropical depression in the Atlantic have decreased.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) is the division of the United States' NOAA/National Weather Service responsible for tracking and predicting tropical weather systems between the Prime Meridian and the 140th meridian west poleward to the 30th parallel north in the northeast Pacific Ocean and the 31st parallel north in the northern Atlantic Ocean.
The NHC official forecast is light blue, while the storm's actual track is the white line over Florida. The Automated Tropical Cyclone Forecasting System (ATCF) is a piece of software originally developed to run on a personal computer for the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) in 1988, [1] and the National Hurricane Center (NHC) in 1990.