Cyclone Numa in the Mediterranean Sea
A toggle between Terra MODIS and Suomi NPP VIIRS Red-Green-Blue (RGB) images, viewed using RealEarth (above), revealed the well-defined eye structure of Cyclone Numa over the Ionian Sea (between Italy and Greece) on 18 November 2017. Tracing its origin back to the remnants of Tropical Storm Rina (track), Cyclone Numa had acquired subtropical characteristics, making it a relatively rare Medicane.EUMETSAT Meteosat-10 High Resolution Visible (0.8 µm) images (below) showed the evolution of the storm on 18 November. Plots of hourly surface reports (in metric units) are plotted on the images.
Meteosat-10 Infrared Window (10.8 µm) images (below) showed cloud-top infrared brightness temperatures around -60ºC (darker red enhancement) associated with some of the convective bursts during the 18-19 November period, as the system eventually moved inland across Greece.Personal analysis of Tropical Storm #Numa's track and evolution. No official agency has classified this as a tropical storm; however, all data is in agreement with it being such. Phase diagrams depicted a deep warm core and strong convection was present around the center. pic.twitter.com/XNV5cyCXmw
— Brenden Moses (@Cyclonebiskit) November 22, 2017