Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,607
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    NH8550
    Newest Member
    NH8550
    Joined

Winter 2020-21 Medium/Long Range Discussion


Hoosier
 Share

Recommended Posts

The pattern coming up is going to feature plenty of cold / Arctic air over North America to tap, along with a continued tendency for blocking over the Atlantic. 

14-km_EPS_Global_Globe_500_hPa_Height_Anom_(1).gif.708c963f1c23494fb7b28727d57c4ff3.gif

A Rossby wave making machine will be in place over the western Pacific, encouraging persistent north Pacific blocking and a cross polar flow into Canada. This is occurring while a tendency for high latitude blocking continues across the board for multiple reasons. 

gfs_DTpres_nhem_fh-72-384_(2).thumb.gif.f80deebf3a22b6fd29577a3af992142d.gif

This loop of the GFS helps show the continued cross polar flow into Canada, and how the retrograding -NAO helps shove the tropospheric polar vortex towards the CONUS this weekend and next week, bringing a cold snap to much of the Lower 48. With the Pacific blocking likely continuing for the forseeable future, the model shows Arctic air reloading towards the end of the run in mid-late February. 

One of the reasons we will remain "blocky" for the forseeable future is the continued downwelling of the weakened stratospheric polar vortex into the troposphere, which encourages a -AO and blocking:

gfs_nh-namindex_20210204.png.5251545a172b007669181ec8e922dbe6.png

 

On top of that, there's been a recent uptick in tropical forcing across the western hemisphere, and western Pacific forcing will continue until further notice:

2144475422_chi200_cfs.eqtr(1).thumb.png.df8a2bac7b354432faec6eb8dc6d2534.png

This deposits momentum in the tropics and subtropics (enhances the sub-tropical jet). Because momentum is a conserved quantity, the increase in momentum in the tropics and subtropics results in a decrease in momentum in the higher-latitudes, which causes a tendency for blocking. The 12z GFS is shown as an example of this, note how the stronger sub-tropical jets over the eastern Pacific and eastern Atlantic occur beneath weaker higher-latitude flow, and how this encourages high latitude blocking:

gfs_uv250_global_fh-72-384_(1).thumb.gif.56c98fdb93a70accba8d5a7f932625b3.gif

The persistent western Pacific forcing will keep our Pacific blocking in place for most of February, and the Arctic air dropping into North America will encourage continued cyclogenesis near the east coast, which will help encourage Atlantic blocking as well. 

Basically, the US will lean cold for much of February. There will be a baroclinic zone across the southern / eastern US, though the cold will seep south and east at times given the -NAO and the quality of the cold that will be available. The Arctic air may lead to near to below average precipitation for a lot of the CONUS (save for perhaps the southeast/east coast), but the pattern will stay at least somewhat active given the baroclinic zone and hints of a subtropical jet. The GEFS and EPS weekly forecasts for the next 30 days speak for themselves: 

ecmwf-weeklies-avg-namer-t2m_f_anom_30day-4988800.thumb.png.152f7c8fe57decbbd2f53928e18fbbc3.png

gfs-ensemble-extended-all-avg-namer-t2m_f_anom_30day-4988800.thumb.png.0b995eee8f0977f068989ff7b7cf447c.png

While suppression and lack of moisture may be a problem at times, we are already in a rather wintry stretch that will probably last through all of February, and perhaps into early March. 

  • Like 4
  • Thanks 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, OHweather said:

The pattern coming up is going to feature plenty of cold / Arctic air over North America to tap, along with a continued tendency for blocking over the Atlantic. 

14-km_EPS_Global_Globe_500_hPa_Height_Anom_(1).gif.708c963f1c23494fb7b28727d57c4ff3.gif

A Rossby wave making machine will be in place over the western Pacific, encouraging persistent north Pacific blocking and a cross polar flow into Canada. This is occurring while a tendency for high latitude blocking continues across the board for multiple reasons. 

gfs_DTpres_nhem_fh-72-384_(2).thumb.gif.f80deebf3a22b6fd29577a3af992142d.gif

This loop of the GFS helps show the continued cross polar flow into Canada, and how the retrograding -NAO helps shove the tropospheric polar vortex towards the CONUS this weekend and next week, bringing a cold snap to much of the Lower 48. With the Pacific blocking likely continuing for the forseeable future, the model shows Arctic air reloading towards the end of the run in mid-late February. 

One of the reasons we will remain "blocky" for the forseeable future is the continued downwelling of the weakened stratospheric polar vortex into the troposphere, which encourages a -AO and blocking:

gfs_nh-namindex_20210204.png.5251545a172b007669181ec8e922dbe6.png

 

On top of that, there's been a recent uptick in tropical forcing across the western hemisphere, and western Pacific forcing will continue until further notice:

2144475422_chi200_cfs.eqtr(1).thumb.png.df8a2bac7b354432faec6eb8dc6d2534.png

This deposits momentum in the tropics and subtropics (enhances the sub-tropical jet). Because momentum is a conserved quantity, the increase in momentum in the tropics and subtropics results in a decrease in momentum in the higher-latitudes, which causes a tendency for blocking. The 12z GFS is shown as an example of this, note how the stronger sub-tropical jets over the eastern Pacific and eastern Atlantic occur beneath weaker higher-latitude flow, and how this encourages high latitude blocking:

gfs_uv250_global_fh-72-384_(1).thumb.gif.56c98fdb93a70accba8d5a7f932625b3.gif

The persistent western Pacific forcing will keep our Pacific blocking in place for most of February, and the Arctic air dropping into North America will encourage continued cyclogenesis near the east coast, which will help encourage Atlantic blocking as well. 

Basically, the US will lean cold for much of February. There will be a baroclinic zone across the southern / eastern US, though the cold will seep south and east at times given the -NAO and the quality of the cold that will be available. The Arctic air may lead to near to below average precipitation for a lot of the CONUS (save for perhaps the southeast/east coast), but the pattern will stay at least somewhat active given the baroclinic zone and hints of a subtropical jet. The GEFS and EPS weekly forecasts for the next 30 days speak for themselves: 

ecmwf-weeklies-avg-namer-t2m_f_anom_30day-4988800.thumb.png.152f7c8fe57decbbd2f53928e18fbbc3.png

gfs-ensemble-extended-all-avg-namer-t2m_f_anom_30day-4988800.thumb.png.0b995eee8f0977f068989ff7b7cf447c.png

While suppression and lack of moisture may be a problem at times, we are already in a rather wintry stretch that will probably last through all of February, and perhaps into early March. 

Great post as usual. Any chance of a real clipper type pattern developing and not these Pacific Northwest impulses? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, pondo1000 said:

Great post as usual. Any chance of a real clipper type pattern developing and not these Pacific Northwest impulses? 

After the PV starts lifting out next week, there may be an opportunity for clippers if heights can rise on the west coast around mid February. 

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

man the 0z GFS gets weird in the extended.  By next weekend it basically sets up very little flow over the entire lower 48.  the 850 mb level just stagnates and the cold air just sits over the entire country.  Then afterwards we get a major chinook event and warm air floods in from the pacific

850stagnant.PNG

  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, Snownado said:

I don't know. I'm starting to believe that we are entering the next ice age.

Alaska was glacier free during the last ice age and roughly averaged two degrees WARMER than today. I guess even in extreme long term patterns, a warmer Alaska meant a colder CONUS. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, RobertSul said:

Alaska was glacier free during the last ice age and roughly averaged two degrees WARMER than today. I guess even in extreme long term patterns, a warmer Alaska meant a colder CONUS. 

Alaska was most definitely not ice-free. The mountains were glaciated, while the interior was ice-free because it was a desert. Moisture sources were farther removed due to much lower sea levels. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, purduewx80 said:

Alaska was most definitely not ice-free. The mountains were glaciated, while the interior was ice-free because it was a desert. Moisture sources were farther removed due to much lower sea levels. 

You’re right, I should’ve said /largely/ glacier free, especially in contrast to mid-latitude regions.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm almost tempted to make a thread, as February 12th - 13th seems to have good potential for a significant winter storm across the region. The GFS has been showing it for the past couple of runs, and there's good ensemble support. 

The setup has some similarities to the PV Blizzard back on 1/6/14.

That said, I would like to see some more agreement from the EURO and GGEM first.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, Powerball said:

I'm almost tempted to make a thread, as February 12th - 13th seems to have good potential for a significant winter storm across the region. The GFS has been showing it for the past couple of runs, and there's good ensemble support. 

The setup has some similarities to the PV Blizzard back on 1/6/14.

That said, I would like to see some more agreement from the EURO and GGEM first.

Before you know it were going to be worse than the Eastern subs when it comes to making storm threads lol. I do like the potential tho

  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...