A surprise potential tropical cyclone popped up Friday off the East Coast that could affect weekend plans from North Carolina to Pennsylvania, including at least three pro football games.
By mid-afternoon it had become Tropical Storm Ophelia, one of several iterations forecast as it makes an expected landfall along the southern shore of North Carolina and moves northward, dissipating by Sunday.
With 50 mph winds, the system had already clocked wind speeds high enough for it to be classified as a tropical storm on Friday morning, but meteorologists said it had not developed other characteristics of a tropical cyclone. It was closely associated with a front and hadn't completed a closed center of circulation surrounded by deep convection.
Daniel Leathers, Delaware state climatologist, told USA TODAY Friday that the National Hurricane Center was being careful not to call the storm approaching North Carolina a tropical storm due to scientific definitions between the two.
The storm was a hybrid between systems and the hurricane center is careful to keep those separate to study the paths, characteristics and impacts of both types of storms, Leathers said.
"The big thing is for people to not get hung up on if it has a name or is a tropical storm, but it will have the same impacts which will be the same no matter what we call it," Leathers said, who also teaches at the University of Delaware's geography and spatial sciences department.
The storm is forecast to produce dangerous storm surge, flooding rainfall and damaging high winds in eastern North Carolina and regions to the north. It's expected to quickly weaken over land by Sunday as it's exposed to dry air and wind shear.
Storms that form in the Atlantic Ocean can be called a wide variety of names. Here's a guide to the terms the National Hurricane Center uses to describe these storms.
In the Atlantic Ocean, tropical depressions, tropical storms and hurricanes are all types of tropical cyclones.
That's because "tropical cyclone" is a generic term for the low pressure systems that form over warm tropical seas with a warm core, closed center of circulation and organized thunderstorm activity.
Here's a few useful definitions:
A system that doesn't have all the characteristics of a tropical cyclone can still be dangerous. Meteorologists have several terms to describe storm systems in this stage of their development.
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