MARINE WEATHER REVIEW – NORTH PACIFIC AREA
September to December 2003
George P. Bancroft, National Center for Environmental Prediction
Introduction
The weather of the period featured tropical activity in the western North Pacific,
most of which occurred in September and October, but some activity was noted in
November and December. Most of this involved storms recurving north and then
northeast into the westerlies near Japan and soon becoming extratropical. Only
Parma in late October actually entered OPC's high seas area which is north of 30N
and east of 160E, as a tropical cyclone, actually accomplishing it twice (see below).
Two of the tropical cyclones redeveloped as hurricane-force storms after becoming
extratropical, and are described in this article. Non-tropical weather became more
active in October, especially in the east. The period from late November through
December was very active, with the most intense storms occurring in this period.
Tropical Activity
Typhoon Maemi: Maemi appeared well south of Japan on OPC's oceanic
analysis charts as a tropical storm on September 6, then tracked west-northwest
and became a typhoon while passing west of OPC's map area early on the 7th.
Maemi struck South Korea before recurving north and then northeast and weakening,
and became an extratropical gale crossing northern Japan early on September 13.
The remains of Maemi then moved northeast toward the Kamchatka Peninsula, briefly
becoming a storm at 0000 UTC September 14, before turning east along 50N and
crossing the Pacific with winds of gale force or less, taking a week to do so.
Typhoon Choi-Wan: At the time that the remains of Maemi were moving
into the south-central coast of Alaska at 0000 UTC September 21, Typhoon Choi-Wan
appeared about 180 nmi south of Japan, heading northeast and becoming extratropical
near 41N 157E 48 hours later. The maximum strength as a typhoon was 95 kt sustained
winds with gusts to 115 kt while south of Japan, before weakening occurred. The ship
Aquarius Ace (3FHB8) reported from about 250 nmi southeast of Choi-Wan near 30N
145W with a south wind of 40 kt at 0000 UTC on the 22nd. The remains of Choi-Wan
weakened to a gale while passing about 420 nmi south of the western Aleutians early on
the 23rd, but reintensified to a storm-force low (979 mb) near 51N 159W at 1800 UTC on
the 24th before weakening onshore in Southeast Alaska on the 25th.
Typhoon Koppu: Tropical Depression 17W appeared on the southwest corner of
the OPC oceanic analysis area at 1200 UTC September 25, drifting north-northeast. The
cyclone became Tropical Storm Koppu near 21N 139E at 0000 UTC September 27, then a
typhoon near 26N 141E 36 hours later. The maximum intensity reached was 90 kt maximum
sustained winds with gusts to 110 kt near 28N 142E at 0600 UTC September 29, before
weakening and becoming extratropical 24 hours later. Figure 1 shows Koppu about to
merge with a frontal zone at 0000 UTC on the 30th, and then become an intense 958-hPa
low 24 hours later. The QuikSCAT image of extratropical Koppu in Figure 2 reveals winds
of 60 kt or higher around the west and south semicircles of the center, with a maximum
of 75 kt northwest of the center, in a part of the ocean with sparse conventional data.
The Paris Express (DIHE) reported a north wind of 50 kt at 45N 151E at 0000 UTC
October 1.
 | Figure 1. OPC North Pacific Surface Analysis charts (Part 2) valid 0000 UTC
September 30 and 0000 UTC October 1, 2003, showing Typhoon Koppu becoming an extratropical
hurricane-force storm. | |
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 | Figure 2. QuikSCAT scatterometer image of satellite-sensed winds around
extratropical Koppu. The valid time of the pass is 1914 UTC September 30, 2003, or less
than five hours prior to that of the second part of Figure 1. Image is courtesy of
NOAA/NESDIS/Office of Research and Applications. |
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The storm then began to weaken and turn east, and passed just south of the Aleutians
as a gale-force low from the 2nd to the 4th, before moving to the south coast of mainland
Alaska and weakening on October 7.
Tropical Depression 19W: This tropical cyclone made a brief appearance as it
entered the oceanic analysis area just south of Japan at 0000 UTC October 13, with maximum
sustained winds of 25 kt and gusts to 35 kt. The cyclone became absorbed by a frontal
zone to the north twelve hours later.
Typhoon Parma: Long-lived Parma originated from Tropical Depression 21W which
formed near 20N 143E early on October 20 and drifted north and then northeast, becoming
Typhoon Parma near 24N 147E 48 hours later. Parma continued a northeast track and
intensified as a cold front approached from the north, developing maximum winds of 130
kt with gusts of 160 kt upon reaching 31N 162E at 1800 UTC October 24. The front
failed to "pick up" Parma and accelerate the cyclone into the westerlies. Instead,
Parma looped back to the southeast, then southwest and west along 22N by the 26th.
The intensity was down to a minimal typhoon by the 27th before the cyclone turned
northwest and reintensified to 85 kt with gusts to 100 kt near 23N 152E at 1800 UTC
October 28. On the 29th Parma turned north along 150W, with the intensity increasing
to 115 kt sustained winds with gusts to 135 kt as the center reached 27N 150E at 0000
UTC October 30.
Parma then turned northeast and weakened as another cold front approached, finally
becoming extratropical near 32N 167E at 1200 UTC on the 31st. At this time Parma was
an extratropical 993-hPa storm, with a ship nearby Careen Point (WCY4148) at 33N
164E reporting a northeast wind of 55 kt. The remains of Parma then weakened to a gale
while heading east-northeast on November 2, before turning southeast on the 6th off the
U.S. Pacific Northwest coast and dissipating southwest of California on the 11th.
Typhoon Ketsana: Ketsana was short-lived as a tropical cyclone over OPC's
map area, appearing south of Japan near 23N at 1800 UTC October 24 while Parma was a
typhoon well southeast of Japan. The intensity was 85 kt with gusts to 105 kt, with
Ketsana heading northeast and becoming a compact extratropical hurricane-force storm at
0000 UTC October 26. Figure 3 depicts this transformation over a twelve-hour period
resulting in the 986-hPa extratropical low east of Japan. The scatterometer data in
Figure 4 reveal winds as high as 65 kt southwest of the center. There is a ship east
of the center Mayview Maersk (OWEB2) near 34N 151E reporting south winds of 45
kt in the second part of Figure 3. The cyclone then moved northeast and weakened to a
gale in the Bering Sea on the 28th. The highest wind reported by a ship was a south
wind of 55 kt from the Stimson (WCY2270) near 52N 180 at 0600 UTC October 28.
 | Figure 3. OPC North Pacific Surface Analysis charts (Part 2) valid 1800 UTC
October 25 and 0600 UTC October 26, 2003, showing Typhoons Ketsana and Parma, with
Ketsana becoming extratropical. | |
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 | Figure 4. QuikSCAT scatterometer image of satellite-sensed winds around
extratropical storm, formerly Typhoon Ketsana. The valid time of the pass is 0824 UTC
October 26, 2003, or less than two and one-half hours later than that of the second part of
Figure 3. Image is courtesy of NOAA/NESDIS/Office of Research and Applications. |
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Typhoon Lupit: Lupit, formerly a super typhoon west of the OPC analysis
area on November 27, recurved northeast to near 26N 137W at 1800 UTC November 30 with
maximum sustained winds of 70 kt with gusts to 85 kt. Lupit then weakened to an
extratropical storm (982 mb) near 31N 143E at 1200 UTC December 1. Re-intensification
occurred after 0000 UTC on the 2nd, with the central pressure lowering to 958-hPa and
the center moving to near the Kamchatka Peninsula by 0000 UTC December 5. The storm
then stalled and weakened over the Bering Sea by the 7th. Available ship reports in
the storm were mostly 50 kt around the center until the 4th.
Other Significant Events
Eastern North Pacific Storm, 7-8 October 2003. Figure 5 displays this rapid
development of a hurricane-force storm off Vancouver Island from an open frontal wave
over a 24-hour period. The second part of the figure shows the storm at maximum
intensity (966-hPa). The central pressure fell 28-hPa in the 24-hour span of the figure.
The second part of the figure shows the storm at maximum intensity (966-hPa). The
central pressure fell 28-hPa in the 24-hour span of the figure. The ship ZIM Israel
(4XGX) reported a west wind of 50 kt near 48N 134W at 1800 UTC October 8 and again
at 0000 UTC on the 9th near 48N 132W, with the latter having 15-meter seas (51 feet).
The Sea-Land Anchorage (KGTX) encountered north winds of 40 kt and 10.5-meter
seas (34 feet) near 52N 135W at 1800 UTC October 8. The Canadian buoy 46132 (49.7N
127.9W) reported a southeast wind of 45 kt with gusts to 56 kt and 5.5-meter seas (18
feet) at 1200 UTC on the 8th, and maximum seas 10.5 meters (34 feet) thirteen hours
later. The maximum wind reported by a buoy was a northwest wind of 52 kt with gusts to
70 kt from the buoy 46036 (48.4N 133.9W). The highest seas reported by this buoy was
10.0 meters (33 feet) at 1500 UTC October 8. Buoy 46005 (46N 131W) reported a peak
gust of 64 kt from the south at 0700 UTC on the 8th, and maximum significant wave
heights of 12.0 meters (39 feet) at 1800 UTC on the 8th. The QuikSCAT data in Figure
6 reveals winds of 65 and 70 kt south and southwest of the storm center near the time
of maximum intensity. The storm then moved inland and weakened by the 9th.
 | Figure 5. OPC North Pacific Surface Analysis charts (Part 1) valid 1200 UTC
October 7 and 8, 2003. | |
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 | Figure 6. QuikSCAT scatterometer image of satellite-sensed winds. The valid
time of the pass is 1405 UTC Octover 8, 2003, or about two hours later than that of the
second part of Figure 5. Image is courtesy of NOAA/NESDIS/Office of Research and
Applications. |
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Eastern North Pacific Storm of 10-11 October 2003. A second storm followed
a track similar to that of the storm above, and was almost as deep, developing a
lowest pressure of 970-hPa near 49N 136W at 1200 UTC October 11. The ship APL
Singapore (WCX8812) encountered southwest winds of 55 kt and 9.5-meter seas (31
feet) near 43N 138.6W at 0600 UTC on the 11th. Twelve hours later the same ship
reported west winds of 35 kt and 12.0-meter seas (39 feet) at 44N 140w at 1800 UTC
October 11.Buoy 46005 (46N 131W) at 2300 UTC October 11 reported a southwest wind of
39 kt with gusts to 54 kt and 11.5-meter seas (38 feet). Maximum seas at this buoy
were 13.0 meters (43 feet) at 0300 UTC October 12. To the south, winds at the
coastal buoys along the Washington and Oregon coasts only topped out in the 30s in
gusts, but swells reached 9.5 meters (31 feet) at Buoy 46029 (46.1N 124.5W) at 0900
UTC October 12.This storm then moved inland over Vancouver Island and weakened early
on the 12th.
Eastern North Pacific Storm of 3-6 December 2003. This storm was noteworthy
because of the rapid intensification and some impressive ship reports. Figure 7
displays this development over a 24-hour period from the merger of a low coming up
from the south and a larger northern storm system dropping southeast from Alaska, with
the pressure of the southern low dropping 35-hPa. The result is the hurricane-force low
west of British Columbia with a very strong occluded front approaching the coast. The
President Adams (WRYW) reported an east-southeast wind of 80 kt near the front
(49N 133W) at 1200 UTC December 4, while the Horizon Kodiak (KGTZ) encountered
an east wind of 65 kt at 1800 UTC on the 4th (plotted in Figure 7). At the same time
the Santa Barbara (ELOT3) experienced east-southeast winds of 60 kt near
Vancouver Island. The storm subsequently stalled near Vancouver Island and weakened
by the 7th.
 | Figure 7. OPC North Pacific Surface Analysis charts (Part 1) valid 1800 UTC
December 3 and 4, 2003. | |
 | Figure 8. OPC North Pacific Surface Analysis charts (Part 2 - west and
Part 1 - east) valid 0600 UTC December 13 and 14, 2003. | |
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North Pacific and Aleutians Storm of 13-15 December 2003. This was the most
intense of a series of storms that tracked northeast across the North Pacific with
many turning east and beginning to weaken after reaching the Aleutians. Figure 8 shows
the deepest of these, attaining a 943-hPa central pressure (27.85 inches) upon reaching
the central Aleutians. This was the deepest low of the period in both oceans. The
system was labeled hurricane force by OPC on the 14th. Available sparse ship data
showed 50 to 55 kt with Swift Arrow (C6NI7) (49N 179W) reporting northwest winds of 55
kt at 0000 UTC December 14. QuikSCAT data was available for this storm and showed 65
kt south of the center (not displayed here) but was similar to data from a storm of
similar intensity that occurred on December 17 farther west (Figure 11).
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Figure 9 - GOES10 infrared satellite image valid at 1030 UTC December 14, 2003, showing
storm of Figure 8 near maximum intensity. Satellite senses temperature on a scale from
warm (black) to cold (white) in this type of imagery. | |
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 | Figure 10 - OPC North Pacific Surface Analysis charts (Part 1 - east) valid
1800 UTC December 16 and 17, 2003. | |
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A satellite image of this storm near maximum intensity (Figure 9) reveals the
well-defined center marked by frontal clouds with relatively cold tops wrapping around
the center near 51N 168W. The storm subsequently weakened to a gale in the Gulf of
Alaska by the 16th, followed by dissipation over Alaska by the 18th.
North Pacific Storm of 16-18 December 2003. This system originated near
Japan like the previous one and tracked north-northeast to the western Aleutians on the
17th where it developed a 946-hPa central pressure. The largest pressure drop in a
24-hour period was 39-hPa in the period ending at 1200 UTC December 17. The ship
DGDD (48N 155E) reported a northwest wind of 55 kt at 0600 UTC December 17.
QuikSCAT winds shown in Figure 11 reveal 65 kt south of the western Aleutians. The
cyclone then turned east and weakened, and became absorbed by another storm to the
southeast on the 20th.
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Figure 11 - QuikSCAT scatterometer image of satellite-sensed winds around a storm of
similar intensity which immediately followed the storm shown in Figure 8. The
valid time of the pass is 1719 UTC December 17, 2003. Images is courtesy of NOAA/NESDIS/
Office of Research and Applications. | |
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 | Figure 12 - OPC North Pacific Surface Analysis charts (Part 2 - west and
Part 1 - east) valid 0000 UTC December 28 and 29, 2003. | |
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Figure 13. QuikSCAT scatterometer image of satellite-sensed winds around the storm shown in
Figure 12. The valid time of the pass is approximately 1700 UTC December 28, 2003, or seven
hours prior to valid time of second surface analysis in Figure 12. (From NOAA/NESDIS/Office
ef Resesarch and Applications).
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Eastern North Pacific Storm of 16-18 December 2003. This was an intense
system associated with the southern branch of the jet stream, originating from a
frontal wave out near the dateline on the 15th. Much of the development occurred at
relatively far southern latitudes, west of California (Figure 10). This occurred
concurrently with the northern storm above. The second part of Figure 10 shows the
storm at maximum intensity. The strongest winds as reported by ships occurred at this
time and in the twelve hours following. The ship P&O Nedlloyd Southhampton (XBC6)
(36N 142W) reported south winds of 60 kt at 1800 UTC North Pacific Storm of 28-30
December 2003. Like other lows of the period, this one moved on a southwest to
northeast track from off Japan from December 26 to near the Aleutians late on the 28th
(Figure 12) with the low depicted at maximum intensity (960-hPa) in the second part of
the figure. Not apparent from available sparse ship data, Figure 13 shows QuikSCAT
winds of up to 70 kt southwest of the center in a pass taken about seven hours prior to
the analysis time in the second part of Figure 12. The storm then continued on a
northeastward heading into the Gulf of Alaska, where it weakened to a gale-force low
off Southeast Alaska by the 31st.
References
From Tropical Prediction Center website, www.nhc.noaa.gov/
Vukits, Paul (OPC), E-mail communication, September 20, 2003)
Avila, Lixion A. Tropical Cyclone Report, Hurricane Juan 24-29 September
2003 (Tropical Prediction Center website, www.nhc.noaa.gov.
Bowyer, Peter, The Storm Surge and Waves at Halifax with Hurricane Juan,
Environment Canada Hurricane Center website www.atl.ec.gc.ca/weather/hurricane/index_e.html.
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