Hurricane Irene: Northeast Now Bracing For Rare Brush With A Powerful Hurricane
August 24th, 2011
Hurricane Irene: Northeast Now Bracing For Rare Brush With A Powerful Hurricane
Published on August 24th, 2011 @ 11:04:06 pm , using 879 words
The Weather Channel
Hurricane Irene, a large, powerful Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind scale, continues to plow through the Bahamas, with more impacts in its sights.
As you can see on our projected path map below, Hurricane Irene will track towards the East Coast this weekend.
Interactive map: Hurricane Irene interactive projected path
To access our full collection of maps to track Hurricane Irene and its threats, use the links below or scroll down.
Click to access: Status | Satellite | Model Tracks | Watches & Warnings | Threat Level | East Coast Threats | What people are saying | Get prepared!
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Find out the potential impacts from Hurricane Irene in the Bahamas and the U.S. on The Weather Channel's exclusive threat level graphics below.
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We've added an "EXTREME" threat level category from eastern North Carolina to southern New England. According to Hurricane Expert, Dr. Rick Knabb and Sr. Meteorologist, Stu Ostro, "this is a particularly threatening situation and it's best for people to be on alert."
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Computer models are currently trending toward a forecast solution of rare potency for portions of the Northeast.
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Irene has the potential to be a serious and multi-hazard threat for the major metropolitan areas of the Northeast along and east of the I-95 corridor. This includes Philadelphia, New York City, Hartford, and Boston. This hurricane has the potential to produce flooding rains, high winds, downed trees (on houses, cars, power lines) and widespread power outages. Significant impacts along the immediate coast include high waves, surge and beach erosion. The severity of the impacts will be determined by Irene's exact path and intensity, which remain uncertain at this time.
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For North Carolina, odds are increasing that the main impact will be confined to the Outer Banks and elsewhere in extreme eastern NC
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Timing: Irene will make its closest approach to the Carolinas late Friday night through Saturday. Northeast U.S. impacts would be this weekend into early Monday of next week.
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We remain several days away from Irene's direct impacts along the US East Coast and critical uncertainties remain. Stay tuned to The Weather Channel and right here on weather.com for further updates.
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The threat level in portions of the central and northern Bahamas is extreme. Hurricane Irene will track from the southern Bahamas to the northern Bahamas late Tuesday through early Friday morning. This is a potentially very dangerous situation and preparations should be rushed to completion. Extreme wind damage and destructive storm surge flooding are possible.
> See Current Threat Level |
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The threat level from the Outer Banks of N.C. to southern New England is extreme. The potential for widespread damaging winds, flooding rain, and, in some locations, coastal flooding and storm surge is very real this weekend.
> See Current Threat Level |
What could Irene bring to the Northeast United States? Below is an early look at the potential threats this weekend.
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Potential impacts on the Northeast from Hurricane Irene.
> Read Article > See what is steering Irene north |
So, where exactly is the cyclone's center located now? If you're plotting the storm along with us, click on the "Current Information" map below to get the latitude/longitude coordinates, distance away from the nearest land location, maximum sustained winds and central pressure (measured in millibars).
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Latest status including wind speed, location, movement and pressure.
> See Current Storm Information |
How does the system look on satellite imagery. Click on "infrared" satellite imagery, to see how "cold" the cloud tops are. Brighter orange and red shadings concentrated near the center of circulation signify a healthy tropical cyclone.
The second link below is a link to a clickable, zoomable "interactive satellite" loop. Finally, we have a visible satellite loop, available only during daylight hours.
You will also find a link to the current wave heights in the vicinity of Irene.
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Latest infrared and visible satellite imagery.
> See Infrared Satellite Loop > See Interactive Satellite Loop (clickable/zoomable map) > See Visible Satellite Loop (daylight hours only) > Current Wave Heights |
Meteorologists have a variety of numerical models to use as guidance in forecasting the track of tropical cyclones. Get an "inside look" at what these various models are saying regarding the track of this current system. (Important note: These model tracks should not be considered an official forecast. For the official forecast, see our current forecast swath.)
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See where the various models forecast the center of this system to track.
> Enlarge Model Forecast Tracks |
Are there any tropical storm or hurricane watches or warnings posted? You can see the latest watches and warnings in the maps below. If there are no advisories, the maps will say, "This graphic is currently not available." This doesn't necessarily mean these conditions will not affect any locations. Rather, it may be beyond the 48-hour window to issue advisories.
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Join in the conversation about this tropical threat, both with the TWC hurricane team and with others via our new TWC Social page.













