• Winter Storm Key Msgs Pt1

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Friday, January 03, 2025 10:02:00
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    QPFHSD

    Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    400 AM EST Fri Jan 3 2025

    Valid 12Z Fri Jan 03 2025 - 12Z Mon Jan 06 2025

    ...Western U.S.... Days 1-3...

    Precipitation will continue to spread inland across western Oregon
    and northwestern California ahead of an occluded low approaching the
    coast this morning. Deep, moist southwesterly flow ahead of the
    boundary, along with strong forcing will support an uptick in
    precipitation, with orographically focused moderate to heavy amounts
    forecast to develop along the coastal ranges into the southern
    Cascades and northern Sierra Nevada. However, high snow levels are
    expected to confine any heavy snow accumulations to the highest
    peaks early on. Then, as the upper trough and associated cold front
    begin to move inland, snow levels will begin to lower, expanding the
    potential for heavy snow along the southern Cascades, the
    northwestern California ranges, and the northern Sierra later today.
    Meanwhile, a well-defined warm front, lifting across the northern
    Cascades, Intermountain West, and Rockies, will be a focus for
    organized precipitation and locally heavy mountain snow as well today.

    Meanwhile to the east, moisture focused by low-to-mid level
    convergence along the western periphery of strong high pressure
    extending from central Canada into the Northern Plains will support
    a swath of light to moderate snows extending from central Nebraska northwestward through the High Plains and into the northern Rockies.
    Upslope flow is expected to help enhance amounts across the central
    to the northwestern Montana ranges.

    By early Saturday, the upper trough is expected to bring high
    elevation snow into the central Rockies as it moves across the Great
    Basin into the region. This will be followed by a second system,
    which is forecast to bring additional orographically focused heavier
    amounts into the Olympics and the northern Cascades Saturday into
    early Sunday.

    Conditions will remain unsettled across the Northwest into Monday,
    as a third shortwave impacts the region. However, a building
    upstream ridge will preclude any long fetch of deep moisture and the
    threat for widespread heavy amounts across the region.

    WPC probabilities indicate that three day totals exceeding 8 inches
    will be mostly confined to the higher elevations of the Cascades,
    northern Sierra Nevada, and portions of the Rockies from
    northwestern Montana to northern Utah and Colorado. Widespread, but
    lighter amounts are expected across central and southeastern
    Montana, with high probabilities for accumulations greater than 4
    inches covering much of the region.


    ...Great Lakes and Northeast... Days 1-2...

    The strengthening -NAO block over Greenland and the North Atlantic
    is aiding a mature surface cyclone to stall over Quebec and help
    produce persistent cold northwest flow between it and a strong
    surface high over Saskatchewan. This will prompt favorable LES on
    northwesterly flow along with a few upper level disturbances
    traversing the Great Lakes over the next few days. The Great Lakes
    will gradually cool as a result, but the lapse rates will remain
    steep enough over and downwind of the lakes to where lake-induced
    instability could top 500 J/kg on occasion. The snow belts of the
    Michigan U.P., northern portion of Michigan's Mitten, from
    northeast Ohio on north east along the Chautauqua Ridge, and from
    the shores of eastern Lake Ontario to the Tug Hill will be most
    favored for heavy snow through early Sunday AM. Favorable fetch
    connecting a band from lakes Superior, Huron, and Ontario will help
    produce the most significant amounts (1-2ft+) in Upstate NY between
    Syracuse and the Tug Hill. Snow could also be measured in feet
    from northeast OH, northwest PA, and western NY (south of Buffalo).
    Snowfall rates in these areas of 1-2"/hr are expected and could
    come in waves over the next few days. The WSSI shows Major Impacts
    for these areas with even a small Extreme area (extremely
    dangerous to impossible travel and widespread closures) in the Tug
    Hill through Sunday AM.


    ...Central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic... Day 1...

    A compact wave of low pressure moving across the Ohio Valley early
    this morning will move progressively eastward beneath a modest
    shortwave racing southeast within the broad trough amplifying
    across the eastern CONUS. Immediately in the wake of this
    shortwave, a potent jet streak reaching 150kts will dig rapidly out
    of the Northern Plains, producing a narrow but intense corridor of
    overlapping ascent through height falls, PVA, and LFQ diffluence.
    This will help at least subtly deepen the low and the accompanying baroclinicity/attendant fronts as it moves eastward to off the VA
    coast Friday night.

    The system is compact and progressive, so snowfall in general is
    expected to be low outside of the Central Appalachians. Here,
    despite the modest forecast depth of the DGZ, appreciable upslope
    flow will drive ascent favorably into the DGZ, while some moisture
    enhancement occurs on post-frontal NW flow from the Great Lakes.
    This suggests an extended period of moderate to heavy snow,
    especially D1, with the higher elevations receiving the most
    significant snow accumulations. Event total snow here could reach
    double- digits in the higher terrain.

    Finally, although total accumulations are expected to be minimal, some
    snow showers or convective snow showers moving along the cold front
    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 into the DGZ, which could promote brief
    snowfall rates above 1"/hr as shown by low probabilities in the WPC
    snowband tool. Low-level temperatures will be slightly above
    freezing from Richmond, VA to Philadelphia, PA, but wet-bulb
    temperatures below 0C could allow any heavier rates to accumulate
    on roads and elevated surfaces, causing hazardous travel despite
    minimal accumulations, during the Friday aftn/eve commute.
    Additionally, where low-level instability is the greatest,
    especially overlapping the higher moisture content focused along
    the MD/PA line, isolated snow squalls are also possible.


    ...Northern High Plains... Days 1-2...

    The forecast remains on track and very similar to the previous
    issuance as an amplified upper level trough moving into the
    Pacific Northwest this evening will spread downstream ascent
    through increasing divergence into the Northern High Plains by
    Saturday morning. This feature is progged to split into dual
    vorticity lobes, with the primary one swinging into the Central
    Rockies, while a secondary impulse lifts into Alberta/Saskatchewan.
    Downstream of this trough, weak shortwave ridging will initially
    be placed over the region, but this will gradually become displaced
    by the approaching trough, leading to increasingly strong deep-
    layer ascent. This forcing will act upon a saturating column as
    290K isentropic ascent maximizes in a narrow corridor from NW to SE
    from the foothills of central MT east into the High Plains of SD,
    which will effectively overlap with a stripe of robust 700-600mb
    fgen. The overall setup is not ideal for extremely heavy snow, but
    an expanding footprint of snowfall is likely, and rates will be
    enhanced by a cold column with very fluffy SLRs expected.
    Additionally, the guidance has become more excited about snowfall
    potential as reflected by an EFI of 0.8 to 0.9, primarily due to an
    extended period of moderate to at times heavy snow. WPC
    probabilities have increased as well, and now feature a 70-90%
    chance for 4+ inches across central MT, with locally up to 10
    inches possible in some of the higher terrain, and a 30-50 chance
    for 4+ inches across far NW SD.

    ...Continued...

    ...Winter Storm Key Messages are in effect. Please see current
    Key Messages below...

    https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/LatestKeyMessage_1.png

    $$
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