National Hurricane Center, Invest 93L and Gabrielle
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Invest 93L and Invest 94L could become the next named storms of the hurricane season, according to the National Hurricane Center.
Spaghetti models—computer models that illustrate potential storm paths using meteorological data—suggested that Invest 94L could possibly track close to the southeastern U.S. from Florida to the Carolinas, while 93L could follow a northwestern path further out to sea.
Three of the last five years have seen two or more U.S. hurricane landfalls after Sept. 25. And a variant of tropical double trouble is upon us approaching the anniversary of Helene and Milton.
Satellite data indicates that Invest 93L over the central tropical Atlantic has now developed into Tropical Storm Humberto. The storm is not expected to impact SWFL.
What was Invest 93L developed into Tropical Storm Humberto on Wednesday afternoon. It’s expected to continue on a WNW track over the next several days... putting it into the Western Atlantic by early next week. Humberto is forecast to continue strengthening... eventually becoming a hurricane.
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National Hurricane Center: Tropical Storm Humberto forms in Atlantic; is Tropical Storm Imelda next?
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) is continuing to monitor the development of invests 93L and 94L in the Atlantic, and forecasters now say there’s a high chance they will become tropical depressions or tropical storms in the coming days.
One invest could very well play a role in Florida's weather, and today we're going to break down why that is and what we know up to this point.
FOX Weather Hurricane Specialist Bryan Norcross provides exclusive analysis on Hurricane Gabrielle and Invest 93L and 94L in the Atlantic. These new developments have potential impacts for Florida, the Southeast and Puerto Rico.