• Significant Winter System

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Mar 17 08:29:00 2025
    FOUS11 KWBC 170755
    QPFHSD

    Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    355 AM EDT Mon Mar 17 2025

    Valid 12Z Mon Mar 17 2025 - 12Z Thu Mar 20 2025

    ...Central Rockies, Central Plains, Upper Midwest... Days 1-3...

    ...Another significant winter system likely to bring blizzard
    conditions to portions of the Plains and Upper Midwest...

    This system manifests as two waves of low pressure, a modest lead
    wave, followed immediately by the more impressive cyclone. These
    will generate from an anomalous trough which will amplify across
    the Four Corners Tuesday /D2/ leading to impressive height
    anomalies that are progged to fall below the 1st climatological
    percentile between 700-500mb across the Central Plains by
    Wednesday. This deepening and intense amplitude will yield strong
    downstream ascent through height falls and mid-level divergence,
    and as the subtropical jet streak amplifies it will begin to shift
    almost due poleward, placing intense LFQ diffluence atop the region
    of greatest height falls.

    Together this will produce an environment extremely favorable for a
    rapidly deepening cyclone in the lee of the Rockies. However,
    before this occurs, a weaker wave is progged to develop near SE WY
    Tuesday morning in response to more modest height falls, but in the
    presence of increased baroclinicity as a cold front drops southward
    from the Northern Rockies/High Plains, aided by the ageostrophic
    response (fgen) of the RRQ of a departing jet streak into the Great
    Lakes. This first low will eject rapidly east and weaken, but the
    strong ascent and plentiful moisture will create heavy snow across
    the Central Rockies, especially in WY where low-level upslope
    ascent into the best frontogenesis will produce heavy snow rates.
    WPC probabilities for more than 4 inches of snow are high (>90%)
    across much of NW WY and into the Big Horns, with some elevated
    probabilities for 1-2" extending into the lower terrain of eastern
    WY as well.

    During D2, however, is when the significant low develops. As the
    synoptic pattern evolves as described above, lee cyclogenesis will
    occur, and this low will be located beneath extremely favorable
    synoptic ascent for rapid surface height falls, and nearly all the
    ensemble groupings suggest SLP falling to the 980s Wednesday
    morning over IA. There is generally good clustering of the ensemble
    member low-pressures, but D3 clusters still suggest that the GEFS
    is a bit deeper and faster with the progression, although the
    spread appears to have decreased in the past 24-hrs. This leads to
    high confidence in a rapidly strengthening low pressure, with
    moisture steadily increasing as 300K isentropic ascent surges
    theta-e northward and into the system, eventually lifting into a
    TROWAL to provide moisture and elevated instability.

    As has been the case with the past few of these March systems, the
    antecedent airmass is warm, and the moist/warm advection funneling
    in the higher PW air will cause the precipitation to begin as rain
    in many areas, especially outside of terrain and into the Plains.
    However, this should have minimal affect on snowfall accumulations,
    as extreme dynamic cooling combined with ageostrophic flow into
    low and cold advection as the low moves east will cause a rapid
    p-type transition from rain to snow, with snow likely becoming
    quite heavy within the deformation axis NW of the low Wednesday.
    Snowfall rates that may reach 1-2"/hr (or more? some signals for CI
    in a deep and saturated DGZ over IA indicating possible thunder-
    snow) will overcome the warm ground quickly. Thus, the limiting
    factor to snowfall amounts appears to be more the speed of this
    system as it remains progressive, and CIPS analogs indicate the
    75th% is only generally 4-8", higher into WI/MI where leading jet-
    streak snowfall may add on to amounts before the main system. This
    is additionally reflected by WPC probabilities for 4+ inches that
    are below 30% D2, but increase to greater than 70% from western IA
    northeast into the U.P. of MI D3. These probabilities have trended
    upward, and locally 6+ inches of snow is likely within this band.

    Finally, despite snowfall that may be modest in many areas outside
    of the Upper Midwest, the intense winds driven by 850mb northerly
    flow of 60 kts will produce strong gusts for which DESI indicates
    has a 90% chance of exceeding 35 mph, and even a 50% chance for 50
    mph across the Plains. This has led to high (>70%) probabilities
    for moderate blowing snow impacts from WSSI-P, and despite snow
    that may start as the heavier/wet variety, will transition to
    higher SLR and broken aggregates leading to likely blizzard
    conditions in some areas, especially from central Kansas northeast
    into southern Minnesota.

    By the end of the forecast period, this low will be well into
    Ontario, but lingering snow and gusty winds are expected to still
    be ongoing across MI, with some lake-enhanced snow across the U.P.,
    western L.P. and maybe even into northern Indiana into early D4.

    ...The West... Days 1-3...

    Shortwave trough positioned just west of northern CA at 12Z Monday
    will deepen into a closed mid-level low as it advects onshore and
    drops subtly southeast Monday morning. The core of this low is
    progged to track across the northern Great Basin this evening, but
    a strong lobe of vorticity immediately in its wake will dig farther
    south, amplifying the trough axis into southern CA by the end of
    D1. Downstream of this trough, squeezed mid-level flow will produce
    moisture confluence, lying directly beneath a strengthening and
    meridionally advancing subtropical jet streak. This setup will
    support impressive moist advection, reflected by PWs surging to
    above the 90th percentile across CA and the Great Basin according
    to NAEFS ensemble tables.

    Within this moistening column, and beneath the deep layer ascent, a
    wave of low pressure will move southeast along a baroclinic
    gradient/cold front that will be driven eastward by the parent
    trough evolution. This will maintain the focus of greatest moisture
    just south of the front, but will drive some enhanced mid-level
    isentropic ascent above and behind the boundary. This additional
    lift, combined with periods of upslope flow into terrain features,
    will result in widespread precipitation D1 from the Cascades
    southward through the northern CA terrain and into the Sierra, as
    well as points well east across the Great Basin and into the Wasatch/Tetons/Wind Rivers.

    Snow levels will vary considerably across the West during this
    period due to the passage of the cold front. However, within the
    region of greatest moisture/ascent and heaviest resultant snowfall,
    snow levels should be generally 4000-6000 ft from the Sierra
    through the Great Basin and into the Central Rockies. Snow levels
    crash behind the cold front, allowing for at least moderate
    snowfall but with more substantial pass level impacts in its wake.
    WPC probabilities for more than 6 inches of snow are moderate
    (30-50%) D1 across the Sierra and WA Cascades, but high (>70%)
    across the Wasatch and into portions of western WY.

    Additionally, along this front, impressive 0-2km fgen and increased
    low-level RH will move into a corridor of elevated instability (NAM
    SBCAPE 100-400 J/kg). This will occur within a region of high SnSq
    parameter above 2 from eastern NV Monday evening through UT, WY,
    and CO by Tuesday evening. This setup could produce convective
    snow showers or even snow squalls, which is additionally supported
    by simulated reflectivity in the high-res guidance. While any snow
    squalls won't produce tremendous snowfall amounts, dangerous travel
    is likely through snow-covered roads and rapidly changing visibility.

    This first system moves into the Central Rockies during D2,
    becoming a significant winter storm in the Plains, and leaving a
    brief respite much of D2 across the West within this otherwise
    continued active pattern. This break will be short lived, however,
    as yet another strengthening mid-level trough moves across the
    Pacific and approaches the Pacific Northwest D3, likely coming
    onshore Wednesday evening. Although the guidance varies
    considerably with timing of the associated mid-level waves within
    this next trough, they all agree that it will be potent, and
    potentially negatively tilted, as it moves onshore during D3. The
    downstream affects of this will be increased synoptic lift through
    mid-level divergence, height falls, and intensifying upper
    diffluence, all to pivot renewed moisture and forcing back onshore.
    The antecedent airmass is cool, so snow levels will are only
    expected to rise to around 3500 ft within the core of the strongest
    WAA, and otherwise be generally 2000-3000 ft, suggesting travel
    across area passes will again become problematic. This feature will
    likely be transient, but have sufficient moisture to produce heavy
    snow once again from the Olympics and WA Cascades southward into
    the Sierra, with some spill over occurring before the end of the
    period as far east as the Salmon River/Sawtooth/Northern Rockies.

    WPC probabilities for 6+ inches of snow on D3 feature a high risk
    70%) across the Olympics, Cascades, and Shasta/Trinity region of
    northern CA< with lower probabilities below 50% continuing into the
    Sierra and east across parts of the higher elevations of Idaho.

    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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