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NorLun Trough's


Chrisrotary12

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Since we are in a boring (but active) time during the winter I am trying to better understand some of the atmospheric phenomena that impact our New England winters.

I have read and I understand this paper: http://www.weatheranswer.com/public/NORLUN2.pdf

I am curious to see if some of you guys have some other thoughts or forecasting tricks? Maybe some good memories that I could look at and perform my own case study.

Thanks in advance.

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One thing I think happens a bit is we tend to call a lot of inverted surface troughs a norlun and that's a bit deceiving.

They are a lot of fun though, IMO. A synoptic scale event playing itself out on the mesoscale level.

They can be prolific producers if you have the right ingredients in place.

Yeah and they'll always have a narrow area that just gets destroyed in a 6hr time. Models struggle with these convective snows.

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I don't know if there are any tricks to forecasting these. Usually, models will show some sort of an inverted trough....it's not something you can try to take a stab at....if conditions warrant, models will show it. They are very mesoscale and models may not always have the exact placement down, so a 20 mile shift means a 10" dump in 3hrs that originally looked like it could be over NE MA is now in BOS and you have huge bust potential. NORLUNs are one of those deals where a model like the NAM may spit out 6" of snow and you end up with 12".

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12/19-20/07 dropped 14.0" here...almost the 5 year anni.

That was a decent event...fairly widespread actually...but it had some very intense squall-like bands embedded in the lighter snows. BOS had over 7" and some of the northern towns up near the NH border had close to 10" IIRC.

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Some quick facts on Norluns, from me:

  • They are magical
  • They make it snow in my backyard
  • I like them
  • The GFS signals them too often
  • People also call something a Norlun too often when it's still directly associated with a low
  • You don't understand Norluns like I understand
  • Norluns

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