ORLANDO, Fla. — Meteorologists are once again tracking a system in the northern Atlantic with a 50% chance of becoming a subtropical system, according to the National Hurricane Center.
The system returned to the NHC’s attention with odds of development while it’s several hundred miles east-northeast of Bermuda and producing a large area of showers, the NHC said in its 2 p.m. EST update.
The storm-force nontropical area of low pressure still has not developed sufficient characteristics to be classified as a subtropical, but there will be a brief pocket of opportunity Wednesday night for the system to become subtropical before reaching cooler waters Friday morning.
“By this weekend, the system is expected to be absorbed by a larger nontropical low,” the NHC said.
If the system forms into a tropical storm, it will pull a name from an auxiliary alphabet set up by the World Meteorological Organization, starting with the name Adria. Only two other seasons have had to venture into a supplemental alphabet: 2005 and 2020.
Earlier this year, the World Meteorological Organization retired its use of the Greek alphabet to designate storms due to confusion over similar sounding letter: Eta, Theta and Iota.
The end of hurricane season is Nov. 30.
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