Hurricane Pablo
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Hurricane Pablo was a late-season Category 1 hurricane that became the farthest east-forming hurricane in the North Atlantic tropical cyclone basin on record, beating the previous record set by Hurricane Vince in
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. The seventeenth tropical/
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cyclone and sixteenth
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of the active
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, Pablo originated from a
baroclinic cyclone Extratropical cyclones, sometimes called mid-latitude cyclones or wave cyclones, are low-pressure areas which, along with the anticyclones of high-pressure areas, drive the weather over much of the Earth. Extratropical cyclones are capable of ...
a few hundred miles west of the Azores Islands. The precursor cyclone formed on October 22, traveling eastward towards the island chain. The system initially had multiple centers of circulation, but they consolidated into one small low-pressure system embedded within the larger extratropical storm. On October 25, the embedded cyclone developed into a subtropical cyclone, receiving the name Pablo. The cyclone continued eastwards, transitioning into a fully-tropical storm later that day. Pablo quickly intensified between October 26 and 27, forming an
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and spiral rainbands. At 12:00  Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) on October 27, Pablo intensified into a Category 1 hurricane. The storm continued to strengthen, reaching its peak intensity of 80 mph (130 km/h) and a minimum central pressure of at 18:00 UTC on the same day. The storm quickly weakened the next day, becoming extratropical again, and dissipated on October 29. Pablo and its parent low-pressure system brought gale- and
storm-force The Beaufort scale is an empirical measure that relates wind speed to observed conditions at sea or on land. Its full name is the Beaufort wind force scale. History The scale was devised in 1805 by the Irish hydrographer Francis Beaufo ...
winds to portions of the Azores. A total of 12 landslides were reported in the island chain. Regional weather centers issued a yellow alert for several islands. A traffic incident in Sao Miguel injured three people. In the British Isles, Pablo's remnants merged with another extratropical cyclone, which caused heavy rain and wind gusts over . Overall damage was minimal, and no deaths were reported.


Meteorological History

The origins of Pablo can be traced to a
baroclinic cyclone Extratropical cyclones, sometimes called mid-latitude cyclones or wave cyclones, are low-pressure areas which, along with the anticyclones of high-pressure areas, drive the weather over much of the Earth. Extratropical cyclones are capable of ...
that developed on October 22. The system developed gale-force winds soon after formation, and multiple centers of vorticity formed on the next day. The easternmost vorticity center became dominant and developed a small radius of
storm-force The Beaufort scale is an empirical measure that relates wind speed to observed conditions at sea or on land. Its full name is the Beaufort wind force scale. History The scale was devised in 1805 by the Irish hydrographer Francis Beaufo ...
winds, which were winds greater than 55 mph (88.5 km/h). On October 23, clusters of convection, or showers and thunderstorms, materialized at the center of the cyclone. The small storm traveled southwestward, then southeastward, around the larger baroclinic low on October 24. Central convection associated with the storm increased, and at 00:00  Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) on October 25, the embedded low transitioned into a subtropical storm with winds of 50 mph (85 km/h). Operationally, it was believed that Pablo formed later at 21:00 UTC on the same day. Pablo moved generally northeastward on October 25, while convective activity continued to become better organized. ASCAT data showed that Pablo contained a well-defined circulation, and satellite imagery revealed that the storm developed a central dense overcast with occasional hints of an eye. Based on this information, the NHC determined that Pablo had transitioned into a fully tropical cyclone at 18:00 UTC on October 25. Despite the increase in organization, data from a
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showed that Pablo had weakened slightly down to 45 mph (75 km/h). The eye disappeared early on October 26, although convection persisted, due to an unstable environment. Later that day, the storm's eye became better-defined as it accelerated northeastward. The storm passed about south-southwest of Santa Maria Island in the Azores at 21:00 UTC on October 26, and made its closest pass to the archipelago around 00:00 UTC on October 27. Early on that day, an ASCAT pass showed that Pablo had intensified further to 65 mph (100 km/h), despite the storm's cloud pattern deteriorating slightly. A few hours later, the structure of the storm improved again, and the Pablo's eye was evident on infrared imagery. Satellite estimates based on the Dvorak technique were as high as 85 mph (140 km/h).  At 12:00 UTC on October 27, the NHC upgraded Pablo to a Category 1 hurricane at , marking the easternmost intensification into a hurricane since reliable records began in 1950. Pablo defied predictions and continued to intensify, reaching its peak intensity of 80 mph (130 km/h) and a minimum central pressure of at 18:00 UTC that same day. The NHC described Pablo's appearance as ""remarkably impressive", and a ring of -58 °F (-50 °C) cloud tops surrounded the distinct eye of the hurricane. The storm was still minuscule, with hurricane-force winds reaching outward only 10 mi (16 km) from the center. Soon after peak intensity, Pablo began weakening rapidly due to water temperatures of only 62.6 °F (17 °C). The storm also began to slow down and travel northward. The storm quickly approached the northeastern side of the parent baroclinic low, nearing a frontal area. The remaining convection was limited to the southeastern quadrant of the storm, and overall convective activity decreased significantly in depth. Pablo subsequently degenerated into a weak extratropical cyclone, after merging with the aforementioned front at 12:00 UTC on October 28. At this time, the storm consisted of low- and mid-level clouds with showers, with no convection left over the center. Pablo's center dissipated the next day, at 06:00 UTC. On October 30, the remnant front interacted with a stronger extratropical cyclone to the west, which would later become Windstorm ''Zed'', named by the Free University of Berlin on the next day, on October 31. A new center of formed west of Ireland on the same day. The remnants were absorbed by the eastward-moving Zed on November 1.


Background, forecasting and records

The previous record of the easternmost intensification into a hurricane was held by Hurricane Vince, forming at . Pablo formed only 0.1 degrees east of Vince's former record. In addition to becoming the farthest-east intensification into a hurricane, Pablo was also the second farthest-north intensification into a hurricane, after an unnamed hurricane in 1971, which developed at 46° North. According to Phil Klotzbach of
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, Pablo was also the strongest tropical cyclone that far north since 1894. Water temperatures under Pablo were only around 64 °F (18 °C) throughout its path, which was far lower than the average 79 °F (26 °C) needed for tropical cyclogenesis. This was also under the 72.5 °F (22.5 °C) required for subtropical development, according to a study by McTaggart-Cowan et al. (2015). Despite this, sea surface temperatures below Pablo were 1.8 °F (1.0 °C) higher than usual. Additionally, throughout the storm's life, very cold air high in the atmosphere increased instability, which allowed for convection to encircle Pablo's eye. Pablo's northeasterly forward motion concurred with southwesterly upper-level wind flow, minimizing the effects of wind shear on the system. The
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also provided good
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for the storm. Prior to post-analysis, Pablo was never designated as a subtropical storm, as the NHC had classified it as fully tropical by its first advisory. Additionally, Pablo was revealed to have formed 12 hours before Tropical Storm Olga. It was operationally believed that Olga formed at 15:00 UTC on October 25, six hours before Pablo. Thus, Pablo received the "P" name instead of the "O" name.


Preparations and impact

Hurricane Pablo was poorly-forecast, and developed into a subtropical cyclone before the NHC mentioned its possibility of tropical cyclogenesis in their Tropical Weather Outlook. Advisories were not issued on the storm until 21 hours after it formed. The Portuguese Institute for the Sea and Atmosphere (IMPA) warned of strong winds and high waves from Pablo and its parent extratropical cyclone. A yellow warning was issued. The United Nations' Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System (GDACS) issued a green alert for portions of the eastern Azores. Pablo and its parent low-pressure system caused gale-force and storm-force winds over the Azores Islands. GDACS estimated that 140,000 people were affected by tropical storm-force winds and
storm surge A storm surge, storm flood, tidal surge, or storm tide is a coastal flood or tsunami-like phenomenon of rising water commonly associated with low-pressure weather systems, such as cyclones. It is measured as the rise in water level above the n ...
of . There were twelve reports of flooding and mudslides, with eight occurring on the island of Graciosa and four occurring on São Miguel Island. In the former, houses and businesses were flooded, and a structure collapsed. In the latter, two landslides occurred in the capital city of Ponta Delgada and two floods occurred elsewhere. A 29-year-old woman and two children were injured in a car accident on São Miguel. They were transported to the hospital. The Regional Service of Civil Protection and Firefighters of the Azores recorded no people displaced or dead. The remnants of Pablo were absorbed by another extratropical cyclone, which in turn affected the British Isles. A Met Eireann meteorologist noted that the moisture associated with the new system was tropical in nature, and warned of heavy rains. A yellow warning was issued by the
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on October 31 for most of Wales, except Anglesey and
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. Parts of England also received yellow warnings. High wind gusts of 83 mph (133 km/h) were recorded in
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, and another gust of 82 mph (132 km/h) was recorded in Culdrose. A total of 265 flights were delayed at London's
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, and thousands of people were affected by power outages in Cornwall and
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. The new storm also affected France with a wind gust of 101 mph (162 km/h).


See also

*
Tropical cyclones in 2019 During 2019, tropical cyclones formed within seven different tropical cyclone basins, located within various parts of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans. During the year, a total of 150 systems formed with 102 of these developing further a ...
* List of Azores hurricanes * Tropical cyclone records *
Tropical Storm Christine (1973) Tropical Storm Christine was the first tropical cyclone to form as far east as longitude 30° W in the Atlantic Ocean since Tropical Storm Ginger in 1967. Forming as a tropical depression over the country of Guinea on August 25, 1973, the ...
- easternmost forming tropical cyclone in the Atlantic on record * Tropical Storm Grace (2009) - took a similar track to Pablo *
Hurricane Alex (2016) Hurricane Alex was the first Atlantic hurricane to occur in January since Hurricane Alice of 1954–1955. Alex originated as a non-tropical low near the Bahamas on January 7, 2016. Initially traveling northeast, the system passed by Bermuda ...
- a rare Category 1 hurricane in January that affected similar areas *
Subtropical Storm Alpha (2020) Subtropical Storm Alpha was the first subtropical or tropical cyclone ever observed to make landfall in mainland Portugal. The twenty-second tropical or subtropical cyclone and twenty-first named storm of the extremely active and record-breakin ...
- made landfall in mainland Portugal


References


External links

*The NHC'
advisory archive on Hurricane Pablo
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pablo (2019) 2019 Atlantic hurricane season Category 1 Atlantic hurricanes Hurricanes in the Azores Hurricanes in Europe October 2019 events in Europe October 2019 events in Spain 2019 in Portugal Pablo