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Mike Powell | All | Winter Storm Key Messages |
January 27, 2025 8:47 AM * |
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FOUS11 KWBC 270856 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 356 AM EST Mon Jan 27 2025 Valid 12Z Mon Jan 27 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 30 2025 ...Great Lakes, Northeast, Mid-Atlantic... Days 1-3... An active period of winter weather is expected through mid-week as progressive flow drives multiple impulses with rounds of snow from the Great Lakes through the Northeast. The period begins with a lead shortwave exiting New England into the Atlantic, leaving sharp NW CAA in its wake. THe most impressive CAA is likely to linger primarily across Lake Ontario and into Upstate NY, at least early in the period before a subtle surge of WAA occurs ahead of the next front. This will result in a band of heavy LES waning right at the start of the period, with minimal additional LES accumulation. However, the respite will be short as a potent shortwave, basically demarcating the edge of the larger cyclonic gyre digging south from Hudson Bay will drop south Monday night. This will drive a potent cold front southward, first into the U.P and L.P. of MI late Monday evening, and then continue to race east through the interior Northeast and New England Monday night into Tuesday morning. Impressive CAA along the front will drive an intense baroclinic boundary, leading to a stripe of impressive low-level fgen, especially in the 925-850mb layer. This will drive strong mesoscale lift into a saturating column reflected by high low-level RH, and as lapse rates steepen, some weak to modest instability will develop. The high-res guidance has become more aggressive showing a band/corridor of convective snow showers and snow squalls, with HREF probabilities showing a 20-30% chance for 1"hr snowfall rates within these elements. The accompanying steep lapse rates will help mix down strong winds, encouraging the development of low visibility during heavy snow showers. The limiting factor to true snow squalls may be a relative dearth of 0-2km CAPE, and it is beneficial that the most significant impacts will occur at night, but still, convective snow showers and isolated snow squalls are expected Monday night into Tuesday morning from the U.P. of Michigan through much of the interior Northeast and New England, and potentially as far southeast as the Mid-Atlantic. Accumulations during this time will generally be minor, but some LES and some upslope flow with the front across the Adirondacks has resulted in WPC probabilities reaching 70-90% for 4 inches on D1, Some modest LES will follow in the wake of this front, but more significant and widespread snow will occur D2 into D3, as yet another fast moving impulse dives through the broad cyclonic flow across the east. This third impulse will track along the residual baroclinic gradient left by the potent cold front, and will be overlapped by a strengthening jet streak downstream of the trough axis to produce more robust deep layer ascent. This will support modest cyclogenesis as a clipper-type low swings southeast from Minnesota Tuesday aftn, to Upstate New York Wednesday morning, and then across New England, exiting into Atlantic Canada by Wednesday evening. Brief but impressive WAA downstream of this low will result in expanding precipitation falling as moderate to heavy snow across many areas. Then, in the wake of this system, additional LES will develop as NW flow causes additional accumulations in the favored NW snow belts, and with strong winds, some of this could push as far SE as the coastal Mid-Atlantic states by the end of the forecast period. WPC probabilities D2 are high (70-90%) for 4+ inches across the U.P., the NW L.P. near Traverse City, and east of Lakes Erie and Ontario, with a swath of moderate probabilities for 2+ inches surrounding those areas for the more synoptically forced snowfall. For D3, the greatest risk for 4+ inches of snow shifts into the Adirondacks and Greens where WPC probabilities feature a high risk (>70%) while additional modest LES occurs east of Lakes Erie and Ontario. Locally 1-2 feet is possible in some areas through the period. Finally, a second round of convective snow showers or snow squalls is becoming more likely on Wednesday, this time a little south of the event Tuesday morning. These convective snow showers will occur during a more favorable time of day to support better CAPE behind the secondary front, and the SnSq parameter is suggesting a risk across areas from eastern OH through southern Upstate NY and PA. This secondary set of squalls, if they occur, will again be accompanied by strong winds and heavy snow rates leading to the potential for significant travel impacts despite modest snowfall accumulations. The two rounds of potential snow squalls have prompted the issuance of Key Messages linked below. ...Southwest through the Four Corners... Days 1-3... The anomalous upper low pivoting slowly across CA will begin to slip east this week, bringing snowfall across the Southwest US through Thursday. This cutoff begins the period quite amplified, with 500-700mb heights as low as -2 sigma over CA according to the NAEFS ensemble tables. Two distinct spokes of vorticity will dance around the core of this upper low, helping to elongate it with time as it becomes stretched NE to SW into the Four Corners by Tuesday night. The interaction of these vorticity impulses rotating around the closed center will help keep the low amplified, but also very slow moving, reaching NM/CO by the end of the forecast period. During this synoptic evolution, the upper pattern will alter considerably as well. Initially, a strong 250mb jet streak will be arced downstream of the upper low, lifting northeast into the Southern Plains. However, this feature will weaken D1 as the upper low elongates, leaving less substantial diffluent-caused ascent into D2. However, a secondary surge of jet level energy will occur Wednesday into Thursday as the jet streak re-amplifies and arcs meridionally from the Gulf of California into the Southern Plains, placing intense LFQ diffluent ascent over the Four Corners. This jet evolution, combined with the mid-level closed low, and at least subtle low-level baroclinicity in the vicinity of a weakening front will cause waves of low pressure to move eastward from CA to the Four Corners D1-D2. This will cause periods of snowfall from the Transverse and Peninsular Ranges of CA eastward through the Mogollon Rim and Kaibab Plateau where WPC probabilities are moderate (30-50%) D1 for 4 inches of snow, and high (>70%, but only in higher elevations of AZ) on D2. However, the most significant snowfall is likely to begin D3 as a low pressure develops near the TX Big Bend and moisture advection surges on isentropic ascent across TX. The accompanying theta-e ridge is progged to lift cyclonically into a TROWAL, with the most intense theta-e advection being directed into the DGZ over NM/CO. There is still quite a bit of uncertainty regarding the placement and evolution of this system, but snowfall chances are increasing, especially in the higher terrain above 5000 ft in the Sangre de Cristos and San Juans. Here, WPC probabilities D3 are as high as 70% for 6+ inches, and impactful snow is becoming more likely for parts of this area Wednesday into Thursday. For the Days 1-3 period, the probability of significant icing greater than 0.10" is less than 10 percent. Weiss ...Winter Storm Key Messages are in effect. Please see current Key Messages below... https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/La... $$ --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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