🚨 Madison: Special Weather Statement issued June 19 at 1:12PM EDT by NWS Tallahassee FL     🚨 Mobile, AL: Flood Warning issued June 19 at 12:11PM CDT by NWS Mobile AL     🚨 Bowie, TX; Red River, TX: Flash Flood Warning issued June 19 at 12:11PM CDT until June 19 at 3:15PM CDT by NWS Shreveport LA     🚨 Mojave Desert: Red Flag Warning issued June 19 at 11:09AM MDT until June 20 at 12:00AM MDT by NWS Salt Lake City UT     🚨 Western Uintah Basin; Tavaputs Plateau; Manti National Forest; San Rafael Swell; Central Utah Mountains; Henry Mountains; Color Country Mountains; Grand Staircase: Red Flag Warning issued June 19 at 11:09AM MDT until June 20 at 10:00PM MDT by NWS Salt Lake City UT     🚨 Central Utah West Desert; Color Country West Desert: Red Flag Warning issued June 19 at 11:09AM MDT until June 20 at 3:00AM MDT by NWS Salt Lake City UT     🚨 Salt Lake Desert: Fire Weather Watch issued June 19 at 11:09AM MDT until June 20 at 10:00PM MDT by NWS Salt Lake City UT     🚨 Montgomery: None     🚨 Upper Arkansas River Valley Including Lake County and Chaffee County; Teller County/Rampart Range Including Pikes Peak and Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument; Fremont County Including Canon City/Howard/Texas Creek; Eastern San Juan Mountains and La Garita Mountains Including Wolf Creek Pass and Creede; San Luis Valley Including Alamosa/Del Norte/Fort Garland/Saguache; Southern Front Range Including Sangre De Cristo Mountains/Wet Mountains/La Veta Pass; Southern El Paso County Including Fort Carson and Colorado Springs; Pueblo County Including Pueblo; Huerfano County Including Walsenburg; Western Las Animas County Including Trinidad and Thatcher; Crowley County Including Ordway; Otero County Including La Junta and Western Comanche Grasslands; Eastern Las Animas County Including Pinon Canyon: Red Flag Warning issued June 19 at 11:08AM MDT until June 20 at 10:00PM MDT by NWS Pueblo CO     🚨 Pamlico Sound; S of Currituck Beach Light NC to Oregon Inlet NC out to 20 NM; S of Oregon Inlet NC to Cape Hatteras NC out to 20 NM; Croatan and Roanoke Sounds: Special Marine Warning issued June 19 at 1:03PM EDT until June 19 at 1:30PM EDT by NWS Newport/Morehead City NC    

NHC Eastern Pacific Outlook

NHC Eastern Pacific

Written by: NHC Forecaster

2-Day Outlook
2-Day Forecast
7-Day Outlook
7-Day Forecast
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CPHC Central Pacific Outlook

CPHC Central Pacific

Written by: NHC Forecaster

View Full Advisory

ECMWF Predictions

No active storm found in ECMWF data at this time.

Environmental Indicators

Hypothetical TC Drift Paths

This map displays hypothetical tropical cyclone (TC) paths projected from genesis-favorable zones identified by an environmental mask. These paths are computed using the Emanuel Beta and Advection Model, a physically based framework that estimates the motion of nascent cyclones by combining steering-level winds and planetary rotation effects.

The model blends winds from two critical pressure levels — 850 hPa (lower troposphere) and 250 hPa (upper troposphere) — weighted toward the lower level where most of a tropical cyclone's mass resides. It also incorporates a background component associated with beta drift, which arises from the variation of the Coriolis force with latitude.

Each pink trajectory represents a storm initialized from a grid cell where all five environmental thresholds were favorable: high CAPE, low vertical wind shear, high mid-level humidity, warm SSTs, and positive low-level vorticity. Arrows darken with time, tracing the cyclone’s evolution in 6-hour steps. These tracks can move over land given the steering winds, but in reality these storms weaken quickly when no longer over warm water. This means the tracks that move over significant would likely die out quickly and are not well represented in this model.

Hypothetical storms often drift westward and poleward, steered by large-scale tropical flow and Earth's rotation — this helps forecasters anticipate where early-stage disturbances might evolve into organized storms.

TC Drift Path Map

Pressure & Rainfall (hPa)

This chart shows 24-hour forecasts of surface pressure (in hPa) and precipitation (in mm) for select U.S. cities. The data comes from the Open-Meteo API, which sources its predictions from high-resolution numerical weather models like ICON (from the German Weather Service) and ECMWF's IFS. These are advanced general circulation models (GCMs) that solve physical equations governing the atmosphere — including thermodynamics, fluid motion, and radiation — to simulate and forecast future states of weather.

A sudden drop in pressure may signal the approach of a developing storm system. Increasing rainfall intensity often tracks with tropical activity or frontal systems. These paired indicators help visualize evolving atmospheric instability and potential hazards.

NBDC Gulf Buoy Data

This data comes from the National Data Buoy Center (NDBC), a division of NOAA responsible for monitoring ocean and atmospheric conditions using moored buoys, coastal stations, and drifting floats. These sensors play a vital role in tracking tropical cyclone development by recording variables like wind speed, barometric pressure, air & sea surface temperatures, and wave height — all of which help determine storm structure and intensification.

A sudden drop in sea-level pressure or a spike in wind gusts can signal rapid cyclone strengthening. Water temperature above ~26°C is a key fuel source for tropical cyclones. Wave and swell height give insight into the storm’s reach and energy transfer across the ocean. Monitoring these in real time helps improve forecasts and early warnings.

Wind:   |   Gust:

Pressure:   |   Air Temp:

Water Temp:   |   Dew Point:

Swell:   |   Wind Wave:

NWS U.S. Radar

The National Weather Service (NWS) collects radar data using the NEXRAD (Next Generation Radar) network — a nationwide system of over 150 high-resolution Doppler radar stations. Radar works by emitting pulses of energy that bounce off precipitation (like raindrops, hail, or snow) and return to the radar dish. Doppler radar not only detects the location and intensity of storms, but also their motion — by measuring shifts in frequency caused by movement of particles toward or away from the radar site. This allows meteorologists to spot rotating storms and potential tornadoes in real time.

US National Radar Loop

GOES 15-min Satellite

The GOES (Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite) system is operated by NOAA and provides continuous weather observation over the Americas. Orbiting 22,300 miles above Earth, GOES satellites deliver high-resolution imagery every 15 minutes, helping track tropical systems, cloud formation, and atmospheric motion in real time. The Geocolor imagery shown here combines visible and infrared data to highlight clouds, land, and sea in a natural-looking format.

Satellite

GOES Band 13 – Infrared (IR) Imagery

Band 13 (10.3 µm) is one of the most important infrared channels for tropical meteorology, measuring emitted radiation from cloud tops. Colder colors (red, yellow) signal deep convection, where strong thunderstorms punch through the upper atmosphere. These features often indicate the early stages of tropical cyclone formation.

GOES IR Band 13

Most recent GOES Band 13 image. Provided by NOAA/NESDIS/STAR.

ECMWF Surface Pressure Anomaly

This map shows deviations in surface pressure from a standard atmospheric baseline of 1013.25 hPa, using ECMWF’s high-resolution forecast. Negative anomalies (dips below this value) often signal the presence of developing low-pressure systems — a common signature for tropical cyclogenesis, especially when paired with other favorable environmental conditions like low shear, high humidity, and strong convection. These TC-associated dips will be over the water; we will see these lows also over high terrain such as mountain ranges.

Limitations: This plot currently uses a constant global baseline rather than a climatological average, which may obscure local-scale anomalies. We are actively working on integrating a true pressure climatology to enable a more robust and regionally contextualized analysis of pressure anomalies.

Watch for large, circular low-pressure dips (deep pink zones), especially in the subtropics — these can be early signatures of developing cyclonic activity.

Surface Pressure Anomaly