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Maps: Tracking Tropical Storm Gabrielle
By William B. Davis, Madison Dong, Judson Jones, John Keefe, Joey K. Lee and Bea Malsky
Gabrielle was a tropical storm in the Sargasso Sea early Friday Eastern time, the National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory.
Gabrielle is the seventh named storm to form in the Atlantic in 2025. Follow updates here.
When a storm comes close enough to land, signals from the United States radar network will begin to bounce off the rainfall within a tropical cyclone, making it easier to locate the more intense section of the storm and the heaviest rainfall. During hurricanes, the storm's center will be the area on radar void of rain called an eye and completely encircled by the most intense winds and rain called the eye wall. Spiraling out from the center will be bands of rain that vary in intensity.
See spaghetti models for Tropical Storm Gabrielle. What impacts possible in Florida?
Tropical Storm Gabrielle is expected to strengthen soon, and become a hurricane by Sunday afternoon, Sept. 21, according to the latest advisory from the National Hurricane Center.
Gabrielle is now forecast to become a Category 2 storm, with maximum sustained winds of 105 mph in the next 96 hours.
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Forecasters continue to predict Gabrielle will stay away from Florida and the United States.
Gabrielle is the seventh named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season. Once maximum sustained winds reach 74 mph, it will be classified as a hurricane.
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Maps show the forecast track of Tropical Storm Gabrielle, the 7th named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season
Tropical Storm Gabrielle formed Wednesday morning over the central Atlantic Ocean, becoming the seventh named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season. Forecasters expect the weather system to remain over open waters for the next several days and haven't yet warned of any hazards that could potentially affect land. But it may become a low-grade hurricane as it intensifies over the weekend.
The storm's current forecast predicts that Gabrielle's track will carry it north of the Caribbean and away from land, but the system could reach Bermuda next week as it continues to strengthen over the open waters of the central Atlantic Ocean, CBS News meteorologist Nikki Nolan said.
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