Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Tropical Storm Narda Spins in the Eastern Pacific


Tropical Storm Narda, which formed as Tropical Depression Fourteen-E Sunday afternoon, is spinning over 1,200 miles west-southwest of the tip of Mexico's Baja California.
Narda is no threat to land as it moves in a generally westward direction over the next few days. It will eventually reach colder waters and dissipate later this week or this weekend.
Background

Projected Path

Projected Path

Projected Path

The latest forecast path and wind speeds from the National Hurricane Center.



Background

Storm Information

Storm Information

Current Information

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).

Background

Satellite

Satellite

Satellite

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.

http://www.weather.com/news/weather-hurricanes/tropical-depression-fourteen-storm-hurricane-narda-20131006

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