940 mb would normally indicate a category 3 or 4 hurricane, but because Sandy was transitioning to an extra-tropical storm, the wind field was weaker but also much larger than with a normal hurricane.
Water vapor imagery shows dry air entrainment already occurring at least two days before landfall:
Radar imagery from 14 hours before, during, and 15 hours after landfall:
RUC analysis indicated that at the time of landfall, Sandy had a thermal structure consistent with a hybrid storm - a warm core becoming surrounded by cold air:
Two days before landfall (October 27th), tropical storm warnings (dark red) and hurricane warnings (lighter red) were active for waters off of almost the entire East Coast. Flood advisories (green) were issued for the Northeast, and Dallas was under a frost advisory:
One day before landfall, hurricane force wind warnings (brown) were issued from Cape Cod to northern Delmarva including part of Chesapeake Bay with storm warnings (purple) further south and hurricane force wind watches (slightly lighter purple) further north. High wind warnings were issued for most of the Northeast. Blizzard warnings (red) and winter storm warnings (pink) were issued for part of the Appalachians. A storm warning was issued as far west as Lake Michigan, and Chicago was (and still is) under a lakeshore flood warning.
So far Sandy has produced up to 12.55" of rain at a CoCoRaHS station at Easton, Md, 9.57" of rain at Oceana Naval Air Station, VA, and 26" of snow at both Redhouse and Garret in Maryland. The heaviest precipitation has been to the south of landfall, but the highest winds have been north of landfall. List of wind reports from HPC:
ISLIP NY 90 MPH 2 N TOMPKINSVILLE NJ 90 MPH SURF CITY NJ 89 MPH TUCKERTON NJ 88 MPH 1 N MONTCLAIR NJ 88 MPH MADISON CT 85 MPH PLUM ISLAND NY 84 MPH CUTTYHUNK MA 83 MPH DENNISVILLE 81 MPH SANDY HOOK NJ 81 MPH WELLFLEET MA 81 MPH JFK NY 79 MPH NEWARK NJ 78 MPH ATLANTIC CITY NJ 77 MPH GROTON CT 76 MPH HARVEY CEDARS NJ 75 MPH
A station at Eatons Neck, NY reported a 96 mph gust at an elevation of 71 feet.
Buoy 44065, 15 nautical miles southeast of Breezy Point, NY (outside of New York Harbor), reported 32.5 foot waves at the time of landfall. Buoy 4408, 54 nautical miles southeast of Nantucket, reported 36.1 foot waves few hours earlier.
It has been reported that the storm surge at Manhattan was almost 14 feet, beating the previous record of 10 feet set in 1960 by Hurricane Donna. Storm surge data from NWS NYC:
...MAXIMUM WATER LEVELS FROM POST-TROPICAL CYCLONE SANDY AND ACCOMPANYING SURGE... UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY GAUGES ....................MAXIMUM......ASTRONOMICAL..STORM LOCATION..........WATER LEVEL.....TIDE LEVEL...SURGE.....TIME FREEPORT..........10.12 FT NGVD..2.27 FT NGVD..7.85 FT...930 PM REYNOLDS CHANNEL..10.10 FT NGVD..2.32 FT NGVD..7.78 FT...906 PM LINDENHURST........7.73 FT NGVD..1.47 FT NGVD..6.26 FT..1006 PM EAST ROCKAWAY.....10.80 FT NGVD..2.72 FT NGVD..8.08 FT...842 PM JAMAICA...........11.65 FT NGVD..3.28 FT NGVD..8.37 FT...936 PM ROCKAWAY..........11.75 FT NGVD..2.81 FT NGVD..8.94 FT...924 PM NATIONAL OCEAN SERVICE GAUGES ....................MAXIMUM......ASTRONOMICAL..STORM LOCATION..........WATER LEVEL.....TIDE LEVEL...SURGE.....TIME BERGEN POINT......14.60 FT MLLW..5.15 FT MLLW..9.45 FT...924 PM BATTERY...........13.88 FT MLLW..4.65 FT MLLW..9.23 FT...924 PM KINGS POINT.......14.38 FT MLLW..5.60 FT MLLW..8.78 FT..1000 PM BRIDGEPORT........13.26 FT MLLW..5.31 FT MLLW..7.95 FT..1006 PM NEW HAVEN.........12.30 FT MLLW..3.97 FT MLLW..8.33 FT...930 PM NEW LONDON.........8.04 FT MLLW..2.08 FT MLLW..5.96 FT...812 PM MONTAUK............7.12 FT MLLW..1.88 FT MLLW..5.24 FT...812 PM NGVD = NATIONAL GEODETIC VERTICAL DATUM OF 1929 MLLW = MEAN LOWER LOW WATER
Wall Street was shut down for two days. The New York subway system which was flooded, has also been shut down for two days now. A fire at Breezy Point, NY has destroyed at least 80 homes. At least 33 people were killed in 7 states, 7.5 million people lost power, and 16,000 flights were cancelled. Websites for the National Weather Service's eastern region are down due to a cut fiber optic line.
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