On Wednesday morning,japanese teen sex video a tropical storm called Helene just off the coast of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula had just been upgraded to a hurricane — one all but certain to hit Florida on Thursday.
Now is the time when we all love to stare at cones and "spaghetti models" showing potential paths as the storm makes its approach, but right from the jump: Please be careful about how you consume this notoriously misunderstoodinformation.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.SEE ALSO: Why it's impossible to forecast the weather too far into the future
According to NOAA, as of 4:00 a.m. ET Wednesday, "There is a danger of life-threatening storm surge along the entire west coast of the Florida Peninsula and Florida Big Bend. The highest inundation levels are expected along the coast of the Florida Big Bend." In graphic form, that looks like this:
As a reminder, NOAA's cone graphic is a fairly reliable prediction of the range of paths the center of the stormmay take. The cone is not — as it may appear at first glance — a prediction of an ever-widening storm exploding into the inland United States. Severe wind and storm surge can, and probably will, occur outside the cone, and some areas inside the cone will emerge from the storm totally unscathed.
If you're reading this, and it turns out you end up directly in the path of a hurricane, an evacuation order will be hard to miss. At this phase, rather than speculating about whether your specific neighborhood will face the high winds and storm surge that come from a direct hit from a hurricane, in most areas it would be wiser to just heed NOAA's broader warning from Tuesday:
Heavy rainfall will likely result in locally considerable flash flooding across portions of Florida, with isolated flash and urban flooding possible across the Southeast, Southern Appalachians, and the Tennessee Valley Wednesday through Friday.
Spaghetti models, like the NOAA cone model, visualize mathematical possibilities.
Unlike the cone, they present the actual paths predicted by a collection of computer models, all spilling out like spaghetti from Strega Nona's magical pasta pot. And like the cone, the spaghetti model can be deceptive. All the paths in the spaghetti model are both speculative and contradictions of one another. The actual storm will only follow one path, and it's almost certain that none of the predicted paths in this splatter of noodles will be perfectly predictive.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The above model, posted online on the personal X account of Clark Evans, who works as a research physical scientist at NOAA, shows a fairly tight collection of paths. The storm appears to be headed to the Big Bend, and looks like it could easily thread the needle between Panama City Beach in the west and Tallahassee in the east — mostly avoiding heavily populated areas. But some paths in the spaghetti model do show the storm hitting those populous areas. If this spaghetti is to be believed, Tampa will not face a direct hit.
Outlier events most often do not come true. But events also don't conform to averages of predictions. Though top weather models can be astonishingly accurate, the weather simply occurs, and its precise schema is, and will always be, totally alien thanks to the incalculable number of tiny natural and man-made factors that contribute to outcomes.
You can track someone's live location and where they live for just a couple of dollarsTwitter is dragging Trump for this photo of his 'diverse' staffTwitter is dragging Trump for this photo of his 'diverse' staffAntarctica just shed a ManhattanKylie Jenner's 'Snap Opera' is back but this time it's in SpanishA new 'continent's' been found under the magical land of New ZealandWatch incredible footage of 88 satellites from historic launch enter orbitChill out, woolly mammoths aren't coming back just yetThe best early Prime Day book deals already live: Save on hardcovers, paperbacks, and Kindle booksFumed Indians continue to troll NYT over 2ProtectPax 'liquid glass' claims to toughen up your iPhone displayTake our money, Broadway: Sara Bareilles is joining the cast of 'Waitress'Ohio woman excellently trolls Trump from the graveApple TV might get 4K video streaming, but it'll still lag behindApple TV might get 4K video streaming, but it'll still lag behindAflac says cyberattack may have exposed customer dataA photographer used an iPhone 7 Plus to take this stunning 'Billboard' magazine coverUltimate bestie goes undercover to help friend on first dateUltimate bestie goes undercover to help friend on first dateSeth Rogen has a last Wordle today: Here's the August 27 Wordle answer and hints Mink Makeup Printer fuses 3D printing and beauty Great work, internet: Jeff Bezos' alleged sext is a meme now Trump’s fast food spread at the White House has the internet talking The most retweeted tweet ever is a billionaire's giveaway of free money Magical pooch performs tricks to 'Harry Potter' spells, deserves 10 points for Gryffindor A story of an online stalker takes a bizarre turn down the rabbit hole Watching these young sisters cover rock songs will make your day Warner Bros. is holding secret screenings of 'Batgirl' 8 organizations working to solve the gender gap in education — and how to help them Who's behind the egg that broke the Instagram world record? Etsy sellers are officially launching a guild to protect merchants Sony raises the PS5's price outside the U.S. 'Star Trek's Nichelle Nichols's ashes will be sent to space I went on a date with a CES robot. He was nice. A photo of an egg beat Kylie Jenner as the most Twitter is finally testing an edit button Australian woman allegedly received an accidental multimillion Kobo Clara 2E e The 'Killing Eve' moment at the Golden Globes that you may have missed
1.8349s , 10519.5703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【japanese teen sex video】,Pursuit Information Network