• Winter Storm Plains/MW

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Apr 1 07:42:00 2025
    FOUS11 KWBC 010804
    QPFHSD

    Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    404 AM EDT Tue Apr 1 2025

    Valid 12Z Tue Apr 01 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025


    ...Northern Plains & Upper Midwest... Days 1-2...

    A major winter storm is set to develop today and strengthen
    through Wednesday across the Northern Plains as a deep upper trough
    traverses across the Great Basin and ejects a closed low over the
    region. This upper level setup places a developing surface cyclone
    over the central Plains this afternoon into a favorable left-exit
    region of a potent 150kt 250mb jet diving across the Southwest.
    Throughout the day today, a strengthening LLJ, (NAEFS shows 850mb
    winds exceeding the 97.5 climatological percentile 18Z this
    afternoon from north Texas to eastern Nebraska), will deliver both
    rich moisture and increased levels of WAA aloft. The upper trough
    to the west will also direct an IVT of 300-500 kg/m/s into the
    Upper Midwest, which is approaching the 97.5 climatological
    percentile by late afternoon. This causes strong 300K isentropic
    ascent and 850-700mb WAA resulting in FGEN at those mandatory
    height levels. There also appears to be sufficiently cold enough
    air present, thanks to a nearby dome of Canadian high pressure, for precipitation to transition over from rain to snow from the Black
    Hills on east across South Dakota and as far east as central
    Minnesota by late this afternoon. Given the early-April sun angle,
    snowfall will struggle to accumulate during the day unless rates
    are >1"/hr. These rates appear most likely to occur tonight into
    early Wednesday once the deformation zone on the northern and
    western flanks of the 850mb low consolidates, allowing for
    treacherous travel conditions to rapidly unfold. 00z HREF depicts
    an initial wave of of WAA advection heavy snow (max rates around
    1"/hr) lifting northward this evening from the Dakotas across
    central MN into northern WI. Then by about 11z/Weds the surface low
    lifts north to become vertically stacked while anomalous IVT
    advect from the southeastern flank to produce heavy deformation
    snow bands with rates up to 2"/hr across the eastern Dakotas and
    northern MN.

    Guidance has consolidated on the heaviest snowfall occurring from
    the eastern SD-ND border through central/northern MN. The latest
    ECMWF EFI has shifted a strong signal (values of 0.8-0.95) for a
    potentially disruptive winter storm across much of northern
    Minnesota, but still sports modest 0.7-0.8 values in eastern North
    Dakota and even northeast WI.There also remains modest signal in
    hires CAMs and a few global models for QPF enhancement along the
    north shores of Lake Superior in the MN Arrowhead due to strong
    east-northeast flow and an associated upslope component. The 00z
    HREF was particularly aggressive (probably too much so) and will
    need to be monitored for an axis of particularly heavy snowfall.

    These aforementioned areas will contend winter hazards such as
    heavy snow, blowing snow, and snow load on tree branches and power
    lines today through Wednesday night. A few locations, including
    Fargo, ND (9.9") and Duluth, MN (12.7") could near 1-day April
    snowfall records per the 75th percentile NBM. Current WPC snowfall probabilities (through 12Z Thursday) for >8" are moderate- to-high
    (50-70%) across northeast SD, southeast ND, and northern
    Minnesota. High probabilities (70-90%) for >8" exist across the MN
    Arrowhead, where moderate probabilities (40-70%) for snowfall
    totals >12" exist as well. For WI and MI, moderate probabilities
    (40-60%) are found across northeast WI into the south-central MI
    U.P.. In terms of ice, impactful freezing rain is most likely on
    the eastern edge of the WAA across northern Wisconsin and into the
    MI L.P.. Most ice accumulations will be <0.1" due to the rapid
    warming of the low- mid levels, with the lone exception being
    northern Michigan Mitten, where there are low-to- moderate chances
    (30-60%) for ice accumulations >0.1" on Wednesday. Residents and
    those traveling to/from these regions should continue to monitor
    the forecast as additional changes in the types of impacts, the
    severity of those impacts, and where/when these impacts occur can
    still fluctuate.

    *Key Messages have been issued for this winter storm, and the link
    to view them is posted below.


    ...Northeast... Days 2-3...

    Farther east along and north of a lifting warm front, the
    aforementioned Canadian air- mass will be departing off the
    Atlantic Canadian Maritime Wednesday night, but boundary layer wet-
    bulb temperatures remain sufficiently cold enough for some wintry
    precipitation in northern New England and parts of the Interior
    Northeast Wednesday night and early Thursday morning. The WAA is
    quite strong and the air- mass in marginally cold, so ice
    accumulations will be limited to the northern Appalachian ranges
    (Adirondack, Green, White) and across northern Maine. WPC
    probabilities show moderate chances (30-60%) for ice accumulations
    0.1" through Thursday morning. By midday Thursday, rain will be
    the primary precipitation type throughout most of northern New
    England (far northern Maine the lone exception).


    ...California through the Intermountain West... Day 1...

    One additional day of heavy mountain snow is forecast across the
    CA ranges and Sierra Nevada through the central Great Basin as an
    upper low dives across northern California into the Southwest. This
    pattern during the Day 1 period provides broad onshore flow with a
    weak focus (and 300 kg/m/s IVT) into the Klamath Mts during the day
    today. Snow levels will also remain relatively low and around
    3000-4000ft (below major passes) given the upper low crossing
    directly overhead. Strong westerly flow also provides upslope
    enhancement across the central Great Basin ranges of NV and UT,
    where snow levels are expected to remain around 4000 ft. WPC
    probabilities for an additional foot of snow are high (70-90%)
    across the central Sierra Nevada. Moderate chances for >8" exist in
    the northern California Mts, central Nevada ranges, and into the UT
    ranges as well.


    ...Rockies... Days 1-3...

    Multiple systems are forecast over the next few days to impact the
    Rockies with moderate snowfall due to a deep upper trough entering
    the region and an associated upper low closing off/lingering over
    the Southwest through Thursday. For Day 1, strong westerly flow
    provides prime upslope potential across the CO Rockies,
    particularly for the first half of today. Snow levels start the day
    around 5000-6000ft crash to below 4000ft tonight, but also as
    Pacific moisture advection decreases and the column gradually dries
    out. Meanwhile, as an upper low ejects into the northern Plains a
    upper trough inflection leads to some modest convergence across the
    MT ranges into the Bighorns.

    For Day 2 there appears to be a bit of a lull in activity as the
    initial upper low ejects eastward and a trailing upper low digs
    into the Southwest (cutting off the greatest moisture flux to the
    south). However, deep troughing (200 mb heights below the 0.5th
    climatological percentile at the start of Day 2 per the 12z NAEFS)
    will allow for steeping lapse rates and scattered snow showers in
    the high elevations.

    By Day 3 a shortwave dives south into the northern Rockies and
    provides upslope flow in the western MT and northwest WY ranges,
    but with moisture relatively meager. Meanwhile, a lobe of vorticity
    rounding the base of the deep southwestern U.S. trough ejects into
    the central Rockies and spreads light-moderate snowfall potential
    into the region, with snow also possible into the CO Front Range on
    Thursday. Overall WPC probabilities for Day2-3 are moderate for >6"
    both days across most of the Northern and Central Rockies spanning
    from northwest MT to the San Juans of CO.

    Snell

    ...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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