Tropical Storm Gordon forecast to become depression Sunday

Tropical Storm Gordon forecast to become depression Sunday

Tropical Storm Gordon on Saturday was forecast to weaken into a depression Sunday in the Atlantic. Image courtesy of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Organization.

Sept. 13 (UPI) — Tropical Storm Gordon, which became a named storm Friday, was forecast to weaken into a depression on Sunday.

In its 5 p.m. AST update, the National Hurricane Center said Gordon had maximum sustained winds of 45 mph. Gordon was located about 1,275 miles west-northwest of the Cabo Verde Islands. It is moving west-northwest at 9 mph and there are no coastal warnings. The stormis not a threat to land.

The center said tropical storm-force winds were extending up to 140 miles from its center.

A slightly slower westward or west-southwestward motion is forecast over the next several days as it “continues to experience moderate shear and a drier and more stable airmass,” NHC said.

In the 11 a.m. update, NHC said “gradual restrengthening is possible by the middle part of next week,” but in the later update said Gordon “may degenerate into a remnant low or surface trough.”

Gordon is the seventh named storm in the Atlantic.

Hurricanes were Beryl, Debby, Ernesto and Francine. Tropical storms were Alberto and Cindy.

Elsewhere in the Atlantic, a non-tropical area of low pressure, a few hundred miles off the Carolina coast, is expected to form this weekend, the NHC A depression or storm could form early next week as the system moves generally northwestward toward the coast.

Formation chance through 48 hours is 40% and through seven days it is 50% in the 2 p.m. EDT update.

“As the storm approaches the Carolinas Sunday night and Monday morning, heavy rain will spread northward across eastern North Carolina and eastern Virginia,” AccuWeather.com senior meteorologist Alex Sosnowski said.

The next named storm would be Helene.

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