• Winter Storm Gulf/SE US

    From Mike Powell@454:3/105 to All on Monday, January 20, 2025 08:48:00
    FOUS11 KWBC 200824
    QPFHSD

    Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    324 AM EST Mon Jan 20 2025

    Valid 12Z Mon Jan 20 2025 - 12Z Thu Jan 23 2025

    ...Great Lakes... Days 1-3...

    Broad cyclonic flow courtesy of a massive upper low over eastern
    Canada will direct a series of shortwave troughs over the Great
    Lakes and eastern U.S. the first half of the week. An exceptionally
    strong shortwave trough on Tuesday (500mb heights as low as the 1st climatological percentile 12Z Tuesday) will deliver 1000-850mb
    temps that are also below the 1st climatological percentile. While
    the Great Lakes are gradually icing over with each passing day, the exceptionally colder air-mass traversing the Great Lakes paired
    with the favorable upper-level synoptic-scale ascent will be more
    than enough to support persistent and potent lake effect snow (LES)
    bands. In fact, lake-induced instability of >500 J/kg would support
    exceptional LES bands, particularly downstream of Lakes Erie and
    Ontario where single-banded LES streamers are most likely. LES
    bands should finally weaken by Wednesday morning as high pressure
    moves over the Mid-Atlantic and a weak Alberta Clipper approaches
    from the northwest. This will weaken the pressure gradient and
    shift winds our of the southwest. Some light snow is possible in
    the Great Lakes region on Wednesday as a result of the Clipper, but
    snowfall rates will pale in comparison to the LES bands that will
    be around through Tuesday afternoon.

    WPC probabilities for Monday and Tuesday depict moderate chances
    (40-60%) for snowfall >8" along the western-most portions of
    Michigan's Mitten and along the northern coasts of the eastern
    Michigan U.P., The heaviest LES bands take shape Monday night and
    into Tuesday downstream of Lakes Erie and Ontario. By Wednesday
    morning, WPC probabilities show high chances (>70%) for snowfall
    18" in some of the South Towns near Buffalo and in the Tug Hill
    Plateau. The event total snowfall in the Tug Hill is likely to
    range between of 2-4 feet through Wednesday.


    ...Texas, Gulf Coast, and Southeast... Days 1-3...

    ...Significant winter storm likely across portions of the Southern
    U.S. this week...

    A rare Gulf-Coast and Southeast Atlantic Coast winter storm is
    becoming more likely beginning Tuesday as an anomalously cold
    airmass settles across the eastern 2/3 of the CONUS and sets the
    stage for the upcoming low pressure system.

    As this cold air floods across the region, an intensifying
    shortwave will dig out of the Great Basin and then sharpen as it
    pivots eastward from West Texas through the Gulf Coast Tuesday into
    Wednesday. As this occurs, some interaction with a northern stream
    impulse will yield a positively tilted full latitude trough
    shifting east, with the resultant downstream jet streak
    intensifying and shifting poleward to place the favorable RRQ atop
    the Gulf Coast. The overlap of height falls and upper diffluence
    will help spawn a wave of low pressure across the Gulf of Mexico,
    and as 300K isentropic ascent maximizes to the north, precipitation
    will begin to overspread eastern Texas Tuesday morning, before
    becoming more expansive across the Gulf Coast and eventually
    coastal Southeast Tuesday night into Wednesday.

    Guidance is keying in on the snow/sleet/freezing rain transition
    from south-central TX on east to along and south of the I-10
    corridor. The mechanisms for this vary, however, as in south-
    central TX, it has more to do with the lack of moisture above 700mb
    and an exceptional warm nose between 850-700mb, and from the Upper
    Texas Coast to the the FL Panhandle, there is no shortage of
    moisture but the warm nose is stronger. Some very cold and dry air
    to the north will likely cause a sharp precip gradient as well,
    but to the south of the precip gradient, a swath of heavy snow
    driven by strong WAA and 850mb FGEN will result in eastern TX/LA/MS/AL witnessing up to 1"/hr snowfall rates just north of the mixed
    transition zone, which is rare for the central Gulf Coast region.
    Guidance has continued to suggest more suppression of the QPF axis
    over the last 12 hours, and thus WSO and WSSI-P probabilities have
    decreased in parts of northern GA and the central Carolinas
    Tuesday night. That said, from the coastal Carolinas on south to
    northern Florida, a combination of snow and ice will make for
    treacherous travel conditions Tuesday night and likely into
    Wednesday morning stubbornly remaining below freezing.

    WPC probabilities indicate a moderate chances chance (40-60%) for
    at least 4" of snow from far eastern TX through south-central LA
    and into southern MS. Locally, 4-6" of snow is possible in south-
    central Louisiana with locations such as Lake Charles and Baton
    Rouge seeing such totals. These areas referenced above also ave the
    better chances of witnessing up to 1"/hr snowfall rates. The
    combination of the heavy snow, very cold temperatures, and the
    rarity of this event could result in major impacts and
    considerable disruptions to daily life. Elsewhere, WPC
    probabilities for 2+ inches of snow are as high as 40-60% from the
    northern Houston suburbs to as far east as just north of Mobile
    Bay. Farther east, recent trends in guidance has reduced snowfall
    probabilities in parts of GA and the central Carolinas with WPC
    probabilities showing low chances (10-30%) for over 2" of snow.
    Additionally, southeast of the heaviest snow, especially from the
    Florida Panhandle east to the northern Peninsula and parts of
    southern GA, freezing rain is expected with a 40-60% chance of
    producing at least 0.1" of ice. Most icing totals in South-central
    Texas should generally remain below 0.1", but these totals are
    still highly unusual for these parts of the Lone Star State and are
    likely to result in hazardous travel conditions Monday night and
    Tuesday morning.

    This event has prompted the issuance of collaborated Key Messages (KeyMessage_1) linked below.

    Mullinax/Weiss

    ...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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