Just a sample of the Echomail archive
[ << oldest | < older | list | newer > | newest >> ]
|  Message 40673  |
|  COD Weather Processor to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu  |
|  HVYSNOW: Probabilistic Heavy Snow And Ic  |
|  24 Jan 26 20:13:12  |
 TZUTC: 0000 MSGID: 168876.weather@1:2320/105 2ddcf18e PID: Synchronet 3.21a-Linux master/123f2d28a Jul 12 2025 GCC 12.2.0 TID: SBBSecho 3.28-Linux master/123f2d28a Jul 12 2025 GCC 12.2.0 BBSID: CAPCITY2 CHRS: ASCII 1 FORMAT: flowed FOUS11 KWBC 242013 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 313 PM EST Sat Jan 24 2026 Valid 00Z Sun Jan 25 2026 - 00Z Wed Jan 28 2026 ...Ongoing major winter storm to bring crippling icing,=20 significant sleet, and heavy snow from the Southern Rockies/Plains=20 through the Southeast and up the Atlantic Coast into New England... Meteorological Overview... Forecast remains on track as a massive winter storm, set to=20 produce a swath of heavy snow, significant sleet, and dangerous ice accumulations, continues across the Southern Plains and begins to=20 expand into the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys this afternoon. By=20 tonight, wintry precipitation is expected to lift into the Mid-=20 Atlantic, and reach New England on Sunday. By the time this event=20 winds down late Monday, it will leave a trail of more than 2000=20 miles of wintry precipitation, in a nearly continuous path, from=20 New Mexico to Maine. The driver of this event will be the interaction of a northern stream trough diving out of Canada with a southern stream impulse ejecting from near Baja California. As these features move eastward through the weekend and interact into a more amplified and larger trough over the eastern CONUS, impressive subtropical moisture=20 will spread east/northeast both from the Pacific and the Gulf, with IVT exceeding the 97th climatological percentile according to NAEFS. The rich moisture from the south will accompany strong=20 850-700mb WAA that results in classic over-runing along an area of=20 850-700mb FGEN stretching from atop the Southern Plains to the TN=20 VLY and southern Mid-Atlantic by tonight, reaching New England Sunday, and then finally exiting the Atlantic Coast on Monday. In addition to the classic overrunning/WAA precipitation, the placement of the upper jet as it strengthens and pivots poleward, will support intense bands of snowfall (cross sections suggest a high threat for CSI and even potential CI within the strongest WAA) which will support snowfall rates of 1-2+"/hr at times where it is all snow, and intense sleet/freezing rain rates in mixed zones. Farther to the east, an intense CAD (Cold Air Damming) signature=20 will develop east of the Appalachians, with intense dewpoint depressions of 20-30F during precipitation overrunning. While it will take a while to saturate this to result in precipitation at the surface, the intensity of this high with cold isallobaric drainage aided both by mid-level confluence to the north and precipitation falling into this wedge will enhance the CAD and result in long duration mixed precipitation as the WAA pushes a warm nose aloft (generally 800-700mb). This will support heavy icing and sleet lifting northward into the Mid-Atlantic on Sunday, and potentially as far as the south coast of New England as well. With intense IVT pushing PWs to above the 99th percentile, there will be plentiful moisture to work with everywhere from Texas through New England. This will support heavy precipitation accumulations regardless of p-type, so substantial impacts are expected for a large swath of the nation. The heaviest snow is expected from the Ohio Valley into the Northeast (more outlined below), but an impressive jet-forced band of snow is also likely from the Texas Panhandle through the Mid-Mississippi Valley. Farther south, crippling icing is expected for parts of AR/LA/MS/TN, as well as the Carolinas, with exceptional sleet accumulations of several inches progged in between the snow and ice from Arkansas through Kentucky, and then for portions of the Mid- Atlantic as well.\ Heavy Snow/Sleet... Snow will be winding down across the Southern Plains after 00Z=20 this evening (the start of the forecast period) but remain across=20 NM and of course farther east into AR/MO. This still supports an=20 astonishingly long swath of >6" of snowfall from NM to ME.=20 =46rom the Southern Plains through the Ohio Valley, 72-hr WPC probabilities (so the entire forecast period although snowfall should generally be a 24-hr period, a heavy band of snowfall on the NW side of the low and within the strengthening jet streak will support 1+"/hr snowfall as reflected by the WPC prototype snowband tool. With this band likely translating along its long axis, heavy snowfall will have a temporal extent sufficient for more than 8 inches (30-50% chance from the TX Panhandle through SW MO, increasing to 90%+ in the Ohio Valley where more than 12 inches is also likely (50-70% chance) before snow wanes from SW to NE on Sunday. Locally 15+ inches is possible across southern OH.=20 The heaviest snow is likely from Pennsylvania through New England where p-type changes are not likely. This is also where the longest duration of heavy snowfall within both WAA banded structures and then potentially a more pivoting/translating band will develop as secondary low pressure skirts off the Mid-Atlantic coast and just inside the Benchmark (40N/70W). This will support a longer duration of 1-2+"/hr snowfall, and WPC 72-hr probabilities reach above 70% for 12+ inches, and locally as much as 2 feet is possible (especially in the Worcester Hills, Berkshires, and Catskills, as well north of Boston along the coastal front) where WPC probabilities for 24" are 10-30%. However, this will be a widespread 12+" snowfall event for most of southern and central New England as well as PA. In addition, with the intense WAA, a warm nose aloft (generally 800-700mb) will gradually create a warm nose above 0C shifting through the Mid-Atlantic, with additional warm nose/sleet impacts expected from AR and into TN and KY. The cold depth below this warm nose appears to be in many places above the 75th-90th percentile for freezing rain, indicating primary sleet for these areas as p-type transition occurs, with significant sleet accumulations of multiple-inches expected. This will result in tremendous impacts to travel in these areas. The WSSI shows widespread Major Impacts (considerable disruptions to daily life: dangerous to impossible driving conditions,=20 widespread closures, and disruptions to infrastructure) from the TX Panhandle on east to the Ozarks, through the OH Valley, and all the way to New England. Every major market along the I-95 metropolitan corridor (Washington D.C. to Boston and even as far north as Portland, ME) are expecting major impacts due to snow. The=20 D.C/Baltimore area on north to Philly and NYC are likely to see=20 some inclusion of sleet, but it will still result in significant=20 impacts when accounting for heavy snowfall that is expected to exceed warning criteria (5-6"). A reminder that bitterly cold=20 temperatures will follow in wake of this storm through the middle=20 of next week throughout the eastern U.S., so snow/sleet impacts=20 will linger for many days even after precipitation ends. Freezing Rain... The most lasting impact will come as a result of significant to=20 locally catastrophic ice accumulations due to prolonged periods of=20 freezing rain. Just like the swath of >6" of snowfall, the areal=20 coverage of high chances (>50%) in WPC's ice probabilities=20 exceeding one-quarter inch of ice accumulation is expansive from=20 eastern TX through southern KY, with a secondary area east of the=20 Cumberland Gap from northern GA through southeast VA and including=20 much of the Carolinas. In these regions, at least 0.25" of ice is=20 expected to be widespread, with a more narrow corridor embedded=20 within of at least 0.5" (50-90%), highest in northern MS and=20 western TN, but some higher potential also exists in GA/SC where=20 locally more than 1 inch (a catastrophic accumulation for damage=20 and prolonged impacts of a week or more) is possible (10-30%=20 chance). For LA, MS, TN, this ice accumulation is "additional" beyond what will occur before 00Z (6pm CST), so local amounts above 1" are actually expected to be more widespread than the updated probabilities suggest. This produces a 20-40% chance of Extreme impacts (extensive and widespread disruptions to infrastructure) and these impacts could linger for a week or more where icing is most significant. With very cold weather in place, this will become a life-threatening situation, with potentially impossible travel due to downed trees and power lines. Key Messages for this system are linked below (Key Message 2). Key messages for the widespread extreme cold are linked below as well (Key Message 1). ...Great Lakes... Day 3... Broad cyclonic flow will persist across the east, but an embedded shortwave within this trough will dig out of Alberta Monday night and then cross the Great Lakes from northwest to southeast during Tuesday. This will enhance CAA, leading to another round of lake effect snow (LES), although the duration and intensity of this event should be modest overall, some moderate accumulations are still expected beginning D3 /00Z Tuesday to 00Z Wednesday/ and lingering beyond this forecast period. LES from Lake Erie should be minimal as that lake is now ice covered according to GLERL, but elsewhere, WPC probabilities are moderate for 4+ inches near the Tug Hill Plateau, and moderate (10-50%)for 2+ inches along the=20 western shore of the L.P. of MI as well as parts of the U.P. Snell/Weiss ...Winter Storm Key Messages are in effect. Please see current=20 Key Messages below... https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/Late= stKeyMessage_1.png__;!!DZ3fjg!5W-O6S2TsavdXtQOUAK8oUfK4CWv9hDLB6maEn-RBEC8z= dxGx2_1hRti8HNuSE65ZONdrM6PSUgE9zjorHLbn-2g7N0$=20 https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/Late= stKeyMessage_2.png__;!!DZ3fjg!5W-O6S2TsavdXtQOUAK8oUfK4CWv9hDLB6maEn-RBEC8z= dxGx2_1hRti8HNuSE65ZONdrM6PSUgE9zjorHLbAtBCRDQ$=20 $$ =3D =3D =3D To unsubscribe from WX-STORM and you already have a login, go to https://lists.illinois.edu and use the "Unsubscribe" link. Otherwise email Chris Novy at cnovy@cox.net and ask to be removed from WX-STORM. --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux * Origin: Capitol City Online (1:2320/105) SEEN-BY: 19/10 104/119 105/81 106/201 114/10 120/302 128/187 129/14 SEEN-BY: 153/757 7715 154/10 30 50 110 700 218/700 840 220/10 20 70 SEEN-BY: 220/90 221/1 6 360 226/17 18 30 44 50 227/114 229/110 134 SEEN-BY: 229/206 300 307 317 400 426 428 470 664 700 705 266/512 267/800 SEEN-BY: 291/111 301/1 320/219 322/757 335/364 341/66 342/200 396/45 SEEN-BY: 460/58 633/280 712/848 770/1 100 340 350 772/210 220 230 SEEN-BY: 902/26 2320/0 105 304 3634/12 5020/400 5075/35 PATH: 2320/105 154/10 221/6 218/840 770/1 633/280 229/426 |
[ << oldest | < older | list | newer > | newest >> ]