• Winter Storm US Grt Plns

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Tue Jan 7 08:45:00 2025
    FOUS11 KWBC 070855
    QPFHSD

    Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    355 AM EST Tue Jan 7 2025

    Valid 12Z Tue Jan 07 2025 - 12Z Fri Jan 10 2025

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

    A large, sprawling, and multi-pronged circulation over
    southeastern Canada will send mid-level shortwaves into the eastern
    Great Lakes and Northeast over the next few days before finally
    sliding eastward south of Greenland by the end of D3. This will
    maintain high chances of at least light snow over the higher
    elevations (NY and northern VT/NH) and also downwind of the Great
    Lakes in general owing to the broad cyclonic flow.

    For D1, a compact closed low over northern VT early this morning will
    swing through the Northeast today with some terrain enhancement
    over the northern Adirondacks and into the Green Mountains.
    Additionally, another trailing shortwave diving out of Canada
    tonight over the Great Lakes and into the Northeast will contain a
    reinforcing shot of arctic air. Even with already cold 850mb temps
    below -12C or so this next surge of cold air will steepen lapse
    rates and reinvigorate lake effect snow off the western Great
    Lakes, especially along the western shore of Lower Michigan, and
    also off Lakes Erie/Ontario on NW flow. WPC probabilities for at
    least 4 inches of snow D1-D2 are 40-70% in the favorable northwest
    flow snowbelts, as well as over the northern Adirondacks and northern VT.

    By the end of D2 and start of D3, one last shortwave will push
    through the eastern Great Lakes and New England, maintaining
    additional light snow off Lake Ontario on NW flow and additional
    snow for the northern Adirondacks and Green Mountains. WPC
    probabilities for at least an additional 4 inches of snow are
    moderate (30-50%) over these areas.

    ...Rockies and Southwest... Days 1-3...

    Broad height falls moving through the Southwest today will sharpen
    into a closed low over northern Baja California tonight. With high
    pressure nosing down out of the northern Plains, upslope snow will
    continue across the CO Front Range via an easterly low level flow
    along with a relatively low DGZ on D1. However, the snow should
    not last too long as the upper low sinks further south over central
    Baja California. This will help to drag the snowfall southward as
    well through the Mogollon Rim, Sangre de Cristos, Sacramento
    Mountains, etc. Models continue to vary on the terrain influence on QPF
    (and thus snow) over parts of the Southwest but at least a large
    footprint of light snow is expected. For the D1-3 period, WPC
    probabilities for at least an additional 4 inches of snow are >40%
    over the Front Range into the CO Rockies, San Juans, and higher
    elevations in AZ/NM above 8000ft or so.

    Farther north, a shortwave moving out of Canada through Montana on
    Wednesday will touch off some light to locally moderate snow over
    much of the state that will push into Wyoming and the Black Hills
    on Thursday. WPC probabilities for at least 4 inches of snow are
    highest (>50%) over the Little Belts, Gallatin Range, and into the
    Bighorns. As this shortwave sinks southward and interacts with the
    upper low at the base of the trough, increasing snowfall is
    possible across the southern NM ranges. WPC probabilities are low
    (10-30%) across this region.

    ...Southern Plains... Day 3...

    As the aforementioned upper low over Baja California begins to
    eject northeast on Thursday and merge with the diving shortwave
    over the central Rockies, a strong 160-170kt southwest jet stretch
    surges north and bulges over ridging in the Gulf of Mexico. This
    will prompt rich moisture and prominent upper divergence from an
    increasingly buckled jet. In the right entrance region of this jet,
    surface cyclogenesis is expected along the western Gulf Coast by
    late Thursday night with a precipitation shield blossoming to the
    north. Given the strong high situated to the north over the Central
    Plains and a cold low- level airmass in place, light snow and
    mixed precipitation is expected over much of western and north-
    central TX starting Thursday morning, expanding eastward to the
    Ozarks by the end of the period. Thermal uncertainty is high (as
    expected) due to the upstream players (timing, depth, etc.) with
    recent trends suggesting a later start time and warmer low-level
    air. Additionally, the northern precipitation gradient across OK
    and northern AR will likely be sharp, with varying snowfall amounts
    across short distances.

    All ptypes are in play -- snow/sleet/freezing rain and plain rain
    to the south -- and each will likely not be stagnant in location.
    For now, the highest probabilities of snow lie on the northwest
    side of the precipitation shield in the deeper colder air from
    north-central TX (near and north of the D-FW Metroplex) through
    southeast OK and into central AR. There, WPC probabilities for at
    least 4 inches of snow through 12z Friday are around 50-70%. This
    area was a slight trend to the northwest, with the Texas Big
    Country seeing lower probs in response to a slower ejection of the
    upper low. To the southeast, within the zone of maximum
    uncertainty, probabilities for accumulating snowfall decrease while probabilities for ice increase. Areas from near Austin
    northeastward through the Piney Woods into the Hill Parishes of LA
    show the highest chance of at least 0.1 inches of ice accumulation
    (30-60%). Given this is the first widespread winter storm for this
    region, even light amounts of ice or snow could cause travel disruptions.


    This system has prompted the issuance of a new set of Key Messages
    which are linked at the bottom of the discussion.

    Fracasso/Snell


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

    https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/LatestKeyMessage_2.png

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