🚨 Cape Cod Bay; Nantucket Sound; Vineyard Sound; Buzzards Bay; Rhode Island Sound; Block Island Sound: Small Craft Advisory issued July 19 at 1:26AM EDT until July 19 at 2:00PM EDT by NWS Boston/Norton MA 🚨 Coastal waters east of Ipswich Bay and the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary; Massachusetts Bay and Ipswich Bay: Small Craft Advisory issued July 19 at 1:26AM EDT until July 19 at 2:00PM EDT by NWS Boston/Norton MA 🚨 Coastal waters from Provincetown MA to Chatham MA to Nantucket MA out 20 NM; Coastal Waters extending out to 25 NM South of Marthas Vineyard and Nantucket; Coastal Waters from Montauk NY to Marthas Vineyard extending out to 20 NM South of Block Island: Small Craft Advisory issued July 19 at 1:26AM EDT until July 19 at 8:00PM EDT by NWS Boston/Norton MA 🚨 Boston Harbor; Narragansett Bay: Small Craft Advisory issued July 19 at 1:26AM EDT until July 19 at 2:00PM EDT by NWS Boston/Norton MA 🚨 Montgomery: None 🚨 Bourbon; Crawford; Cherokee; Benton; Morgan; Miller; Maries; Vernon; St. Clair; Hickory; Camden; Pulaski; Phelps; Barton; Cedar; Polk; Dallas; Laclede; Texas; Dent; Jasper; Dade; Greene; Webster; Wright; Newton; Lawrence; Christian; Douglas; Howell; Shannon; McDonald; Barry; Stone; Taney; Ozark; Oregon: Heat Advisory issued July 19 at 12:25AM CDT until July 21 at 7:00PM CDT by NWS Springfield MO 🚨 Southern Bristol; Barnstable; Dukes; Nantucket; Washington; Newport; Block Island: Rip Current Statement issued July 19 at 1:23AM EDT until July 19 at 8:00PM EDT by NWS Boston/Norton MA 🚨 Guam, GU: Flood Advisory issued July 19 at 3:23PM ChST until July 19 at 6:15PM ChST by NWS Tiyan GU 🚨 Granville; Vance; Warren; Orange; Durham; Franklin; Nash; Edgecombe; Chatham; Wake; Johnston; Wilson; Moore; Lee; Harnett; Wayne; Anson; Richmond; Scotland; Hoke; Cumberland; Sampson: Heat Advisory issued July 19 at 1:17AM EDT until July 19 at 8:00PM EDT by NWS Raleigh NC 🚨 Larimer County Below 6000 Feet/Northwest Weld County; Boulder And Jefferson Counties Below 6000 Feet/West Broomfield County; North Douglas County Below 6000 Feet/Denver/West Adams and Arapahoe Counties/East Broomfield County; Central and South Weld County: Heat Advisory issued July 18 at 11:16PM MDT until July 20 at 9:00PM MDT by NWS Denver CO
Active Tropical Systems & Formation Outlook
A whole-basin summary of all active tropical cyclones and the NHC
Tropical Weather Outlook, generated with the
tropycal
package. Select a storm below for its official forecast and model guidance.
ZCZC MIATCDEP5 ALL
TTAA00 KNHC DDHHMM
Tropical Storm Elida Discussion Number 18
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL EP052026
800 PM PDT Sat Jul 18 2026
Satellite imagery indicates that Elida is beginning to lose
organization as it moves northward over sea surface temperatures
below 26 degrees C. Deep convection has become concentrated over the
southern semicircle, with warming cloud tops and diminishing
convection north of the center. The latest subjective Dvorak
intensity estimate from TAFB is T3.5/55 kt, in good agreement with
the latest objective intensity estimates from UW-CIMSS. Based on the
degraded satellite presentation and these intensity estimates, the
initial intensity has been lowered to 55 kt.
The initial motion is north-northwestward, or 330/11 kt. Elida is
forecast to continue turning northward while gradually accelerating
during the next couple of days as it becomes increasingly steered by
a deep-layer trough off the California coast. The track guidance
remains in good agreement, and only minor adjustments to the
previous NHC forecast were required.
Elida is beginning to move over sea-surface temperatures near 25
degrees C and will encounter progressively cooler waters during the
next couple of days. In addition, increasing southwesterly vertical
wind shear and drier mid-level air will lead to a steady weakening
trend. Elida is forecast to lose its deep convection and become a
remnant low in about 60 h. The remnant low should dissipate by day 4
well west of the California coast.
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
INIT 19/0300Z 20.6N 124.8W 55 KT 65 MPH
12H 19/1200Z 21.9N 125.7W 55 KT 65 MPH
24H 20/0000Z 24.0N 126.6W 50 KT 60 MPH
36H 20/1200Z 26.4N 127.3W 45 KT 50 MPH
48H 21/0000Z 29.0N 127.7W 35 KT 40 MPH
60H 21/1200Z 31.4N 127.8W 30 KT 35 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW
72H 22/0000Z 33.9N 127.8W 25 KT 30 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW
96H 23/0000Z...DISSIPATED
$$
Forecaster Gibbs (CPHC)
NNNN
ZCZC MIATCDEP1 ALL
TTAA00 KNHC DDHHMM
Tropical Depression Six-E Discussion Number 1
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL EP062026
800 PM MST Sat Jul 18 2026
Satellite imagery and scatterometer data indicate that the low
pressure area well south of the southern tip of the Baja California
peninsula now has a well-defined circulation and sufficient
organized convection to be designated a tropical depression. Thus,
advisories are being initiated on Tropical Depression Six-E. The
initial intensity is set at 30 kt based on a combination of the
earlier scatterometer data and a satellite intensity estimate from
TAFB.
The initial motion is 290/10 kt. The depression is on the south
side of a mid-level ridge that extends westward from northwestern
Mexico. This feature should steer the cyclone generally
west-northwestward for the next three days or so, followed by a
more westward motion as the ridge builds westward. The track
guidance is in good agreement with this scenario, although the HWRF
and HMON show a more westward track than the other models after 36
h. The track forecast is near the center of the guidance envelope.
The scatterometer data suggested that the depression's radius of
maximum wind is 70-100 n mi, and it may take some time for this
to contract or for the cyclone to form a new inner wind core.
Once the system gets better organized, though, the environment is
favorable for steady to rapid strengthening, particularly after 24
h. The intensity forecast calls for the system to strengthen to 80
kt by 60 h, and this is at the lower edge of the intensity
guidance. The forecast 95-kt peak intensity is more in the middle of
the guidance envelope, but there are several models calling for the
system to become a major hurricane at 72-96 h. Slow weakening is
expected to start by 120 h since the forecast track takes the
cyclone over cooler sea surface temperatures.
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
INIT 19/0300Z 11.3N 109.1W 30 KT 35 MPH
12H 19/1200Z 11.9N 110.7W 35 KT 40 MPH
24H 20/0000Z 12.6N 112.9W 45 KT 50 MPH
36H 20/1200Z 13.4N 114.7W 55 KT 65 MPH
48H 21/0000Z 14.6N 116.4W 65 KT 75 MPH
60H 21/1200Z 15.4N 117.9W 80 KT 90 MPH
72H 22/0000Z 16.0N 119.4W 95 KT 110 MPH
96H 23/0000Z 16.7N 122.8W 95 KT 110 MPH
120H 24/0000Z 17.5N 127.0W 90 KT 105 MPH
$$
Forecaster Beven
NNNN
ECMWF 10-m Streamlines
This map visualizes near-surface winds from the ECMWF operational model using streamlines — continuous curves that show the direction of the wind at every point. Streamlines help us visually detect patterns of atmospheric flow, such as jets, troughs, and areas of rotation.
Forecasters at the NHC monitor 10-meter wind fields for signs of a closed low-level circulation — a common feature of early tropical cyclone formation. When streamlines wrap into a tight, circular pattern and form a closed loop, it may signal that a system is transitioning from a disorganized disturbance into a structured cyclone.
This early organization of wind flow is a key threshold in classifying an area as a potential tropical cyclone. While other ingredients like convection and mid-level humidity are also necessary, closed low-level circulation is often the first structural milestone forecasters look for.
Look for small, circular loops in the streamlines over oceanic regions — especially where other environmental factors also align for storm formation.
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.
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: NW (320°), 7.8 kt | Gust: 9.7 kt
Pressure: 30.01 steady | Air Temp: 85.5 °F
Water Temp: 86.4 °F | Dew Point: 80.4 °F
Swell: 2.6 ft | Wind Wave: 1.0 ft
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.
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.
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.
Most recent GOES Band 13 image. Provided by NOAA/NESDIS/STAR.