In the long range PWAT animation in the quoted thread above you can see one possible outcome, a massive cyclone embedded in a gyre which nearly covers the entire Gulf of Mexico.
But that is still a long way off and can probably be considered a worst case scenario.
Hurricane's are not predictable at such long ranges. But large scale dynamics about atmospheric water dynamics are fairly reliable at range.
At this point the NHC remains unconvinced by Invest91L itself. And gave it just a 20% probability of formation only this morning.
However in the long range model runs, Invest91L is not the only candidate for development in the very wet atmospheric buildup which is expected in the Carribean over the next 10 days.
Here's a selection of spaghetti model runs - many of which take any storm into the Pacific.
The red one here from the GEFS is far and away the most alarming. For the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico and the United States.
This is the latest GFS model run 04/06 and shows the next 16 days. A colossal buildup of atmospheric water is forecast in this run, and as I said above, the long range fluid dynamics part of these model forecasts is often right.
This sequence of images shows the forecast Atmospheric Water situation at:
150 hours
198 hours
252 hours
300 hours
And what you can see here is a storm roughly 2000kms in diameter which crosses the Central American isthmus drawing water from the Pacific into its core.
The remnants of Hurricane Ian are showing little sign of abandoning the Tri State area. This is from this morning CEST before sunrise.
And here we see #HurricaneIAN this evening. In the morning Ian had developed a distinct visible rotation at its center. And this evening this started to move south downthe coast rather than East as it has been forcasted to do for some time.
NOAA has published a remarkable tool to allow you to look at #HurricaneIAN damage in Florida and beyond.
This image shows the heart of the coverage of the satellite data - From Naples up to Venice. Imagery reveals how concentrated extreme damage is. oceanservice.noaa.gov/news/sep22/ngs…
The unusual, unpredictable and #ExtremeWeather of #HurricaneIAN is still continuing in the North East of the US. The remnant low has strengthened and remains parked off the Maryland coast.
This storm has now spent nearly a week over the US.
Last night I posted a fairly discursive thread looking at the Tropical Atlantic, and some threats in the long range GFS forecast - including the threat posted by the remnants of #HurricaneIan
Here we are looking in particular at the stationary low pressure center off the coast of Maryland (Top Left) in the animation above. The impacts are becoming more significant now as the remnants of #IAN - back over the Atlantic are strengthening again.