Tropical depression forms, could become Hurricane Rafael and track toward US

Tropical depression forms, could become Hurricane Rafael and track toward US

A tropical depression formed in the Caribbean on Monday, one that could eventually intensify into a hurricane and threaten the Gulf Coast by this weekend, the National Hurricane Center said.

The system is forecast to strengthen into Tropical Storm Rafael and then Hurricane Rafael over the next few days as it moves into the Gulf of Mexico, forecasters said.

However, given significant uncertainties in the long-range forecast track and intensity, it is too soon to determine what, if any, impacts could occur in the U.S., the hurricane center said.

“There has never been a tropical storm or hurricane landfall in Texas, Louisiana or Mississippi during November and December. So that would be quite a milestone, but this does not mean that people along the central and western Gulf Coast should let their guard down,” AccuWeather lead hurricane expert Alex DaSilva said.

Jamaica, Cuba to see first impacts

As of Monday morning, the depression was located about 195 miles south of Kingston, Jamaica, and had maximum sustained winds of about 35 mph, with higher gusts.

“A northwestward motion is expected later today and forecast to continue for the next few days,” the hurricane center said in an advisory Monday morning. The system is expected to move near Jamaica Monday evening, be near or over the Cayman Islands on Tuesday and approach Cuba on Wednesday, according to the NHC.

Forecasters said Monday that “the system could be near or at hurricane intensity when it passes near the Cayman Islands and Cuba.”

The NHC said tropical storm conditions are expected in Jamaica by Monday evening and hurricane conditions are possible in the Cayman Islands by Tuesday afternoon. Heavy rainfall is expected to impact areas of the Western Caribbean. The heaviest rainfall is likely to occur over Jamaica and portions of Cuba through midweek.

Rainfall totals from 3 to 6 inches and local totals up to 9 inches are expected, and flooding and mudslides could occur over portions of Jamaica and Cuba, the NHC said.

In three or four days, when the system reaches the central Gulf, a sharp increase in southwesterly vertical wind shear, drier air and slightly cooler waters should end the strengthening trend and induce weakening, forecasters said.

Hurricane season still swirling: Rafael could threaten US later this week

Patty no longer a tropical cyclone

The hurricane center said Monday that Patty is no longer a tropical storm or cyclone in the far eastern Atlantic Ocean.

“The remnants of Patty will turn toward the east-northeast later today,” the hurricane center said. “Between tonight and Tuesday, heavy rainfall across portions of Portugal and western Spain is possible from the remnants of Patty.”

Atlantic storm tracker

Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter at USA TODAY. You can follow him on X @GabeHauari or email him at Gdhauari@gannett.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Storm tracker: Tropical depression could become Hurricane Rafael

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Publish date : 2024-11-04 05:08:00

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