Cyclone Center Talk
Great #curvedband image
Great question. Nice #eye storm. This is where you will start to understand the patterns beyond the example image set. Keep asking ?s here!
Good question! I would have gone with an #eye. And selected the leftmost (weakest) eye pattern.
#false-eye.
Great #Curved-band image. Comma cloud!
#Curved-band? Doesn't look like the cloud free region is an eye. Thoughts?
Don't be fooled by the #false-eye, this is an #embedded center. The warm spot on the right is merely a gap and not an eye.
Wow! What an #eye. Should this be a new canonic image?
Yeah. The dark spot looks like a weak #eye, but I would go with #curved-band. I don't think Dvorak was made for this stage. 😉
Interesting. #Eye? #False-eye?
Huh? This is not the image I just classified or commented on ... #error ?
Wow. Three warm spots, but none are an eye #no-eye Happy St Patrick's Day
classic #curvedband
hey, embeded center?
Thoughts? The image on left isn't in the center. What would you put?
But this had an #eye!! Though the width was narrow in the south east.
OK. I didn't go with #eye since the warm spot was only one shade warmer. Thoughts?
Also, the dark blue portion looks likea nike swoosh
wow
#erc eyewall replacement cycle so either would be right since the larger eyewall is replacing the smaller eye
Almost looks like #Antarctica
The left image had an #eye. This was borderline. At the lower resolution shown to me, I chose #embedded center. At full res, it is an #eye
Diving scores 😉
What presentation! What skill! Circularity and style were just wonderful! I gave it a 6.0
Wow. such a clear surface circulation pattern! I went with #post-tropical
Whoa! Check out that #eye. ... just kidding.
Whoa nelly. Don't call that an #eye. That is tricky.
Tiny #eye. Tiny #eyewall. The 0.5 thickness hit a red. The symmetry, though, implies a stronger storm.
Blue region looks like a chicken? a snail?
Whoa! Someone cut this storm in half! That must have been one big samurai sword.
An #eye is about to pop out. The large convection in South East seemed to have blown away. Went with #embedded since center isn't too warm.
I don't remember what I classified, but it quickly dissipated as it moved over land.
YEah. Just looking at this one image, I'd say eye, but if you look at images around it, you can see more of an embedded center.
Ugh, What is this?
But interesting nonetheless
Difficult to classify as an #eye. What would be the coldest surrounding ring? #orange. and not sure any color is 0.5 thick.Not a classic eye
Sorry to hear it. How many have you done? Often storms that appear disorganized are weak curved-bands. Your eyes will begin to see patterns
Maybe an animal with horns.
Better than: http://www.clipartbest.com/clipart-4ibKMrpKT
This storm image looks almost exactly like the hurricane symbol (if rotated 90 degrees).
Looks like it is the edge of the world. calibration #error ? Perhaps just a really warm Australian surface
Where projects meet: This storm was happening (likely near this image) when #GalazyZoo launched on 11 Jul 2007 #dailyzoo
Where projects meet: This image is a storm on the day that GalaxyZoo launched: 7/11/07 #dailyzoo. Good #shear image.
#curved-band Another possibility for the #dailyzoo. Is this is how eyes form? Bands keep wrapping until the eye forms?
Another possibility for the #dailyzoo? Small #eye storm?
#error calibration
#error
This is a good one for the #dailyzoo
Not an eye. It looks like maybe, but the clouds aren't that circular around it. The clouds around the warm spot aren't an eyewall.
I would say not an eye. The eye is a clear region of in the midst of a storm. The warmest is a light blue which is still a pretty cold cloud
I went with embedded center since the eye disappeared a while ago.
First #eye in a while. ...
Is this a double #curved-band? One on bottom and top? Perhaps a #bunkbed #curved-band!
Full banding on this one.
My center would be just to the right of the dark blue arc. That warmer spot could become/once was an eye.
@struck - there is disagreement on intensity http://atms.unca.edu/ibtracs/ibtracs_current/browse-ibtracs/index.php?name=v03r05-2004164N06139
OK. I admit it, I called this an #eye. Given the storm's propensity for small eyes, and it's really cole #eyewall, thought it better choice
Also, those are two very large storms to the west. Do they rotate around and get entrained?
... and a very small storm!
A #ragged-eye, perhaps?
This is an #embedded-center, but I wonder if anyone will think the hole in the southeast is an #eye?
This is where the image resolution hurts. If truly a small eye, then each pixel being about 8 km kind of hurts. That said, I agree: no eye
This looks like the SAME image as the first #curved-band image!
So I went with the longer feature (this looks like it is halfway between). Also went with #eye since it looked like a #pinhole-eye
This looks like a classic #banding-feature. Some of the storms are kind of a guess, but this looks exactly like banding
Man. What an #eye! Nice symmetry
This is a weird one. The warm spot has no eyewall, so I went with #embedded-center. But I would also think it could have been a #curved-band
That eye is huge! Nice call. Needs a new hashtag if you ask me.
So close yet so far ... she was so close to landfall but the eye never made it ... though the Carolinas had plenty of rain and wind!
This storm looks like the middle thumbnail of the #banding question (a comma on its side)
What is this? Two #curved-bands? A split #embeded-center?
This is an interesting one. That blue dot almost looks like an #eye, but is colder. Either #embeded-center or #curved-band? ... went with CB
Interesting storm with some good imagery. This was a strange image ... possible #microeye
Check the IBTrACS map (link above). The storm spent quite some time in the North, so not likely errors, just bad luck for you.
The image looks like a #banding-eye but the progression (storm page above) shows an interesting development from #curved-band to #eye-storm
These look like two #curved-bands meeting. can you name that sea (without looking at a map 😉
My first unnamed storm! Thy name shall be Sherlocke!
I agree with #curved-band ... but might be an M
That would be tough to forecast.
Kind of hard to tell with only one #pixel. The #eyewall looks incomplete, too.
The image is nice, but the track (see the IBTrACS link) looks like the little dipper constellation.
Based on that IBTrACS data link (whatever that is) it looks like the storm did as much as this image: not a lot.
My first Storm in the Atlantic!
Great #curvedband image
Great question. Nice #eye storm. This is where you will start to understand the patterns beyond the example image set. Keep asking ?s here!
Good question! I would have gone with an #eye. And selected the leftmost (weakest) eye pattern.
#false-eye.
Great #Curved-band image. Comma cloud!
#Curved-band? Doesn't look like the cloud free region is an eye. Thoughts?
Don't be fooled by the #false-eye, this is an #embedded center. The warm spot on the right is merely a gap and not an eye.
Wow! What an #eye. Should this be a new canonic image?
Yeah. The dark spot looks like a weak #eye, but I would go with #curved-band. I don't think Dvorak was made for this stage. 😉
Interesting. #Eye? #False-eye?
Huh? This is not the image I just classified or commented on ... #error ?
Wow. Three warm spots, but none are an eye #no-eye
Happy St Patrick's Day
classic #curvedband
hey, embeded center?
Thoughts? The image on left isn't in the center. What would you put?
But this had an #eye!! Though the width was narrow in the south east.
OK. I didn't go with #eye since the warm spot was only one shade warmer. Thoughts?
Also, the dark blue portion looks likea nike swoosh
wow
#erc eyewall replacement cycle so either would be right since the larger eyewall is replacing the smaller eye
Almost looks like #Antarctica
The left image had an #eye. This was borderline. At the lower resolution shown to me, I chose #embedded center. At full res, it is an #eye
Diving scores 😉
What presentation! What skill! Circularity and style were just wonderful! I gave it a 6.0
Wow. such a clear surface circulation pattern! I went with #post-tropical
Whoa! Check out that #eye. ... just kidding.
Whoa nelly. Don't call that an #eye. That is tricky.
Tiny #eye. Tiny #eyewall. The 0.5 thickness hit a red. The symmetry, though, implies a stronger storm.
Blue region looks like a chicken? a snail?
Whoa! Someone cut this storm in half! That must have been one big samurai sword.
An #eye is about to pop out. The large convection in South East seemed to have blown away. Went with #embedded since center isn't too warm.
I don't remember what I classified, but it quickly dissipated as it moved over land.
YEah. Just looking at this one image, I'd say eye, but if you look at images around it, you can see more of an embedded center.
Ugh, What is this?
But interesting nonetheless
Difficult to classify as an #eye. What would be the coldest surrounding ring? #orange. and not sure any color is 0.5 thick.Not a classic eye
Sorry to hear it. How many have you done? Often storms that appear disorganized are weak curved-bands. Your eyes will begin to see patterns
Maybe an animal with horns.
Better than: http://www.clipartbest.com/clipart-4ibKMrpKT
This storm image looks almost exactly like the hurricane symbol (if rotated 90 degrees).
Looks like it is the edge of the world. calibration #error ? Perhaps just a really warm Australian surface
Where projects meet: This storm was happening (likely near this image) when #GalazyZoo launched on 11 Jul 2007 #dailyzoo
Where projects meet: This image is a storm on the day that GalaxyZoo launched: 7/11/07 #dailyzoo. Good #shear image.
#curved-band Another possibility for the #dailyzoo. Is this is how eyes form? Bands keep wrapping until the eye forms?
Another possibility for the #dailyzoo? Small #eye storm?
#error calibration
#error
This is a good one for the #dailyzoo
Not an eye. It looks like maybe, but the clouds aren't that circular around it. The clouds around the warm spot aren't an eyewall.
I would say not an eye. The eye is a clear region of in the midst of a storm. The warmest is a light blue which is still a pretty cold cloud
I went with embedded center since the eye disappeared a while ago.
First #eye in a while. ...
Is this a double #curved-band? One on bottom and top? Perhaps a #bunkbed #curved-band!
Full banding on this one.
My center would be just to the right of the dark blue arc. That warmer spot could become/once was an eye.
@struck - there is disagreement on intensity
http://atms.unca.edu/ibtracs/ibtracs_current/browse-ibtracs/index.php?name=v03r05-2004164N06139
OK. I admit it, I called this an #eye. Given the storm's propensity for small eyes, and it's really cole #eyewall, thought it better choice
Also, those are two very large storms to the west. Do they rotate around and get entrained?
... and a very small storm!
A #ragged-eye, perhaps?
This is an #embedded-center, but I wonder if anyone will think the hole in the southeast is an #eye?
This is where the image resolution hurts. If truly a small eye, then each pixel being about 8 km kind of hurts. That said, I agree: no eye
This looks like the SAME image as the first #curved-band image!
So I went with the longer feature (this looks like it is halfway between).
Also went with #eye since it looked like a #pinhole-eye
This looks like a classic #banding-feature. Some of the storms are kind of a guess, but this looks exactly like banding
Man. What an #eye! Nice symmetry
This is a weird one. The warm spot has no eyewall, so I went with #embedded-center. But I would also think it could have been a #curved-band
That eye is huge! Nice call. Needs a new hashtag if you ask me.
So close yet so far ... she was so close to landfall but the eye never made it ... though the Carolinas had plenty of rain and wind!
This storm looks like the middle thumbnail of the #banding question (a comma on its side)
What is this? Two #curved-bands? A split #embeded-center?
This is an interesting one. That blue dot almost looks like an #eye, but is colder. Either #embeded-center or #curved-band? ... went with CB
Interesting storm with some good imagery. This was a strange image ... possible #microeye
Check the IBTrACS map (link above). The storm spent quite some time in the North, so not likely errors, just bad luck for you.
The image looks like a #banding-eye but the progression (storm page above) shows an interesting development from #curved-band to #eye-storm
These look like two #curved-bands meeting. can you name that sea (without looking at a map 😉
My first unnamed storm! Thy name shall be Sherlocke!
I agree with #curved-band ... but might be an M
That would be tough to forecast.
Kind of hard to tell with only one #pixel. The #eyewall looks incomplete, too.
The image is nice, but the track (see the IBTrACS link) looks like the little dipper constellation.
Based on that IBTrACS data link (whatever that is) it looks like the storm did as much as this image: not a lot.
My first Storm in the Atlantic!