Since Wednesday, little has happened; the vortex has mostly remained devoid of deep convection, despite sitting over the Gulf Stream. At 15Z today, the final advisory was written on the subtropical cyclone, barring any redevelopment. It was downgraded to a Subtropical Depression yesterday morning. Its intensity at the final advisory is 30kts and 1004mb, with a stubborn gasp of convection near the center. It's presently just a 80 miles east of Cape Canaveral, FL. You can track it on radar at http://radar.weather.gov/ridge/radar.php?rid=MLB&product=N0Z&overlay=11101111&loop=no
It's over 26C water, and in 10kts of westerly vertical shear. Several reliable models do regenerate it, so we may not have heard the last from Andrea. Even if it does manage to make a comeback, it should begin to drift back east toward the open (and much colder) Atlantic.
This system will doubtlessly stir up some confusion in the future. It never was a tropical cyclone (as of now), yet was named because of the convention of naming subtropical systems. For the purists who count only tropical cyclones, this won't count. For the rest, who go solely by the number of named systems, it will count toward the seasonal totals.
Please visit my tropical Atlantic headquarters.
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