Tropical Cyclone Discussion
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
796 WTPZ45 KNHC 160238 TCDEP5 Tropical Storm Elida Discussion Number 6 NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL EP052026 800 PM PDT Wed Jul 15 2026 The satellite presentation of Elida has improved this evening. Earlier AMSR-2 passive microwave images showed a formative inner core could be taking shape over the eastern part of the circulation. Within the past few hours, new deep convection has developed much closer to the circulation center. Based on a blend of the latest subjective Dvorak classification (T3.5/55 kt) and UW-CIMSS objective estimates, the initial intensity is raised to 50 kt. The center of Elida has been adjusted a bit farther south of previous estimates using 20 UTC OSCAT wind data and the 37 GHz AMSR-2 imagery. Elida is moving westward (275 degrees) at 11 kt while being steered by a subtropical ridge to the north of the storm. An upper-level trough over the eastern Pacific is forecast to create a weakness in this steering ridge during the next few days. As a result, Elida is predicted to turn west-northwestward on Thursday and then move northwestward through the weekend. While there remains some cross-track model spread at later forecast periods, overall the models are in fairly good agreement on this scenario. The updated NHC track forecast has been nudged to the right of the previous prediction from 48-120 h, following the multi-model consensus (HCCA) and in the direction of the latest Google Deep Mind ensemble mean. If convection continues to consolidate closer to the center of the storm, Elida may be able to solidify an inner core and quickly strengthen during the next day or two. The storm is embedded within a moist, unstable environment over 29-30 C waters, and the updated NHC forecast shows Elida becoming a hurricane by Thursday night and reaching a peak intensity of 80 kt in 48 h. This forecast trends on the higher side of the guidance, generally close to HCCA but lower than some of the statistical-dynamical aids (SHIPS/LGEM). Elida will reach much cooler waters by Saturday and then encounter a drier, higher shear environment through early next week. Thus, steady weakening is predicted from 60-120 h, and Elida is expected to lose organized convection and become post-tropical by day 5. FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS INIT 16/0300Z 15.4N 115.2W 50 KT 60 MPH 12H 16/1200Z 15.7N 116.7W 60 KT 70 MPH 24H 17/0000Z 16.2N 118.6W 65 KT 75 MPH 36H 17/1200Z 17.0N 120.0W 75 KT 85 MPH 48H 18/0000Z 18.1N 121.4W 80 KT 90 MPH 60H 18/1200Z 19.3N 122.8W 75 KT 85 MPH 72H 19/0000Z 20.6N 124.0W 65 KT 75 MPH 96H 20/0000Z 23.1N 126.4W 50 KT 60 MPH 120H 21/0000Z 25.5N 129.0W 35 KT 40 MPH...POST-TROPICAL $$ Forecaster Reinhart