Tropical Storm Imelda Forecast Discussion Number 9

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Tropical Storm Imelda Forecast Discussion Number 9

Issued at 500 PM EDT Sun Sep 28 2025

000
WTNT44 KNHC 282053
TCDAT4
 
Tropical Storm Imelda Discussion Number   9
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL       AL092025
500 PM EDT Sun Sep 28 2025
 
In the last outbound northeast leg, the Air Force reconnaissance 
flying through the system found 850 mb flight level winds of 43 kt, 
high enough to support upgrading Tropical Depression 9 to Tropical 
Storm Imelda at the 18 UTC intermediate advisory. On that last fix, 
a dropsonde launched in the center had a 1000 mb pressure, but with 
a 34 kt surface wind gust that could be related to a nearby 
convective feature, and a 998 mb pressure is used as the minimum 
pressure. The initial intensity remains at 35 kt this advisory, 
which is on the low side of the mean of the satellite estimates, 
which range from 35-45 kt.
 
A more established motion with Imelda appears to finally be occuring 
this afternoon, due northward at 360/8 kt. A general northward 
motion is expected to continue over the next day or so as southerly 
steering persists from both an upper trough over the southeastern 
United States and the subtropical ridge centered just east of 
Bermuda. After that period of time, the subtropical ridge's steering 
influence decreases as Hurricane Humberto's larger outer circulation 
creates a large weakness. The end result of this pattern change is 
that Imelda is now forecast to turn sharply east-northeastward into 
this weakness, starting on Tuesday and continuing through the 
remainder of the forecast period, following behind Humberto. The 
track guidance this cycle has finally started to stabilize near the 
previous forecast track, though is still a tick faster than the 
previous forecast cycle, and quite a bit of along-track spread 
remains in the 4-5 day time frame. The NHC track forecast lies in 
between the GFS and ECMWF track solutions, closest to but not quite 
as fast as the Google DeepMind ensemble mean (GDMI). 

Imelda's structure is gradually becoming better organized, with more 
curvature in the convective bands on its eastern side, though the 
earlier burst closer to the center has waned. Assuming a better 
developed core forms soon, low to moderate vertical wind shear 
between 15-20 kt, warm 28-30 C sea-surface temperatures, and 
sufficient mid-level moisture should promote steady intensification 
over the next 2-3 days. In 3-4 days, the cyclone is expected to find 
itself in the right entrance region of an intensifying upper-level 
jet, and the enhanced upper-level divergence in that time may help 
support additional intensification even as the shear begins to 
increase at this period. After the system passes Bermuda, a strong 
baroclinic zone is expected to interact with the system, resulting 
in extratropical transition by day 5 as it gets tangled up with a 
frontal boundary. However, as stressed previously, this is a low 
confidence forecast at long range given the recent large track 
changes. In fact, simulated satellite imagery from the 12 UTC ECMWF 
still suggests Imelda may produce significant convective bursts 
while still over warm ocean waters in the day 4-5 forecast period. 

 
KEY MESSAGES:
 
1. Imelda is expected to strengthen and bring tropical storm 
conditions to portions of the central and northwestern Bahamas 
through Monday.
 
2. Rainfall associated with Tropical Storm Imelda will continue to 
impact eastern Cuba and the Bahamas through Tuesday, which will 
likely produce flash and urban flooding.  Mudslides are possible in 
the higher terrain.  Heavy rainfall across the coastal Carolinas 
could cause isolated flash, urban, and river flooding through 
Tuesday. 
 
3. The risk of significant wind impacts along the southeastern
United States coast is decreasing, but interests in that area should
continue to monitor the latest forecast updates.
 
4. Swells and high surf from both Humberto and Imelda are expected 
to produce dangerous marine conditions and rip currents along the 
east coast of Florida and the Georgia coast through Monday.  These 
conditions are expected to spread northward along much of the east 
coast of the United States early this week.
 
 
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
 
INIT  28/2100Z 24.2N  77.3W   35 KT  40 MPH
 12H  29/0600Z 25.5N  77.4W   45 KT  50 MPH
 24H  29/1800Z 27.2N  77.4W   55 KT  65 MPH
 36H  30/0600Z 28.4N  77.2W   60 KT  70 MPH
 48H  30/1800Z 29.2N  75.8W   65 KT  75 MPH
 60H  01/0600Z 29.8N  73.9W   70 KT  80 MPH
 72H  01/1800Z 30.7N  70.7W   80 KT  90 MPH
 96H  02/1800Z 31.8N  63.2W   80 KT  90 MPH
120H  03/1800Z 33.5N  58.5W   65 KT  75 MPH...POST-TROP/EXTRATROP
 
$$
Forecaster Papin
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