• Winter Storm Msgs Pt 1

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Thu Jan 2 10:09:00 2025
    FOUS11 KWBC 020840
    QPFHSD

    Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    340 AM EST Thu Jan 2 2025

    Valid 12Z Thu Jan 02 2025 - 12Z Sun Jan 05 2025

    ...The West... Days 1-3...

    Persistent troughing across the Pacific will maintain broad SW flow
    into a modest ridge along the coast until Saturday when a
    pronounced closed low digs eastward towards OR forcing a trough to
    move inland to the Great Basin.

    Periodic impulses shedding through the flow will move into a region
    of greater mid-level divergence D1, leading to broad ascent and
    increasing precipitation coverage. For today, this will be most
    pronounced along a low-level warm front/baroclinic gradient lifting east/northeast from OR into the Central and Northern Rockies. This
    will result in a swath of precipitation, primarily as snow, but
    with snow levels rising to as high as 6000 ft in southern
    OR/northern Great Basin, with a sharp gradient to less than 1000 ft
    into the Northern Rockies and Columbia Basin.

    Heavier snowfall is likely at the very end of D1 into much of D2
    as more substantial moisture and ascent spread onshore Friday into
    Saturday. This more enhanced forcing/moisture is associated with
    the closed low moving onshore and causing the entire trough axis to
    pivot eastward. Impressive lift will be aided by the LFQ of a
    modest, but well placed, upper jet streak, and there is likely to
    be strong deep layer lift expanding across much of the Pacific and
    Interior Northwest Friday night, shifting as far as the Northern
    High Plains by Saturday night. The most impressive ascent will
    again be collocated with a secondary warm front lifting northward
    from OR to Canada on Friday, leading to enhanced WAA/isentropic
    ascent within the broad synoptic lift regime. While overall omega
    is modest, a swath of moderate to heavy snow is likely from the
    mountainous areas of northern CA through OR, WA, and into the
    Northern Rockies, with snow levels generally rising to 4000-6000
    ft. This is reflected by WPC probabilities which suggest a high
    risk (70-90%) for more than 6 inches of snow in the Cascades and
    Northern Rockies, with more general onshore flow leading to upslope
    snow across the typical terrain features D3 from the Sierra,
    Cascades, and into the Northern Rockies again.

    Additionally, the warm advection overrunning cold high pressure
    centered over Saskatchewan is progged to leave low-level cold
    easterly flow from the Columbia basin into the Columbia Gorge.
    Although eventually this will be scoured out, the setup appears
    favorable for a prolonged period of moderate freezing rain in the
    eastern foothills of the Cascades and into the Columbia
    Gorge/Basin. The heaviest icing is expected along the Hood River
    Valley and into the Gorge which will take a longer time to scour
    out the cold air, and this is reflected by WPC probabilities that
    reach as high as 30% for 0.1" of ice accretion.


    ...Great Lakes and Northeast... Days 1-3...

    Surface low pressure moving across eastern Maine early this morning
    will usher in a long duration lake effect snow (LES) event into
    the weekend. This surface low will be pushed northeast in response
    to a potent vorticity maxima rotating through the negatively tilted
    trough, which eventually swings northwestward towards the Hudson
    Bay as a larger upper level low and stalls. This allows for strong
    and persistent cold northwesterly flow over the currently ice-free
    Great Lakes and substantial snowfall likely associated with the
    LES, especially D1 and through D2 as lake-induced instability
    climbs above 500 J/kg. The pattern will support heavy LES in the
    favored W/NW snow belts from the U.P., across the L.P., and then
    downstream to east of Lakes Erie and Ontario, with a favorable
    upstream moisture connection from Lakes Superior and Huron
    enhancing LES off of Lake Ontario. LES is expected to be most
    widespread and heavy through Friday, when 1-2"/hr snows, possibly
    greater at times, cause WPC probabilities to be high (>70%) for 6+
    inches downstream of most Lakes, and reach above 90% for 8+ inches
    east of Lake Ontario D2. Total snowfall of multiple feet is likely,
    with the highest along the Tug Hill Plateau. LES will continue
    through D3 with just slightly lesser intensity and coverage as
    reflected by WPC probabilities for an additional 6+ inches being
    above 70% in just narrow channels near the Chautauqua Ridge and the
    Tug Hill Plateau.


    ...Midwest through Central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic... Days 1-3...

    An inverted surface trough sandwiched between a retreating high
    pressure over the Southeast and an incoming strong Canadian high
    pressure from Alberta will become a focus for a developing wave of
    low pressure and an associated stripe of snowfall from west to
    east. The sharpening of this trough will initially be in response
    to a subtle vorticity lobe swinging through the broad trough across
    the east, ejecting from the High Plains into the Upper Midwest
    today. Immediately following this impulse, a potent jet streak
    will drop southeast into the Northern/Central Plains while
    amplifying to 150 kts, providing favorable overlap for deep layer
    ascent. This will stem cyclogenesis along the inverted trough, with
    increasing downstream warm/moist advection surging moisture along
    the 280-285K isentropic surfaces into the Upper Midwest. This WAA
    will help deepen the DGZ to the east, while 925-850mb fgen
    increases, although only modestly.

    This will result in a stripe of moderate snow from Iowa this
    morning through the Ohio Valley, where at least brief snowfall
    rates to 1"/hr are possible, leading to a general 1-3" of snowfall accumulation, with locally up to 4" possible.

    Farther downstream, as the low coalesces to be more pronounced and
    has stronger frontal features accompanying it, a period of strong
    upslope flow will occur in its wake across the Central
    Appalachians. The DGZ is shallow and thin, but pronounced lift into
    it will result in a period of heavy snow, especially late Friday
    into Saturday, from the Laurel Highlands through southern WV.
    During this time, moisture will be enhanced as well from upstream
    Great Lakes connection, enhancing the potential for heavy
    accumulations, and WPC probabilities D2 are high (>70%) for 6+
    inches of snow, leading to local maxima around 12 inches by the end
    of the forecast period.

    Finally, although total accumulations are expected to be minimal, some
    snow showers and snow squalls may crest the Appalachians and move
    across the Mid- Atlantic states Friday afternoon as the vorticity
    max dives southeastward. The late afternoon timing of this vort max allows
    for steep lapse rates from the sfc all the way up to 500 mb and the
    potential for snow squalls to develop and potentially contain
    1-2"/hr snowfall rates. Surface temperatures in the Washington
    D.C. to Baltimore region will start out above freezing, but areas
    just north and west may be right around the freezing mark. Either
    way 850 mb temps of -5 to -6C will allow for the heavier precip
    rates to quickly fall as snow and surface temperatures to quickly
    crash as well. This may lead to potentially hazardous travel and
    rapidly deteriorating road conditions for the Friday evening
    commute depending on the strength of the snow showers/squalls and
    where exactly they impact in the Mid-Atlantic.

    ... continued ...
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