Saturday, February 9, 2013

February 10: Snow, Ice Rain Upper Midwest (New England digs out after record snowfall for some cities)



Tracking "Bubba"

This naming of winter storms has gotten out of hand. Nemo. A creative product placement from Disney? There's a reason why NOAA names hurricanes: when there are multiple storms in play assigning a name cuts down on public confusion.Today's storm reminds me a little of a college buddy: since this system is also big, slow, sloppy - approaching from the south - let's call it "Bubba".
I promise not to make this a habit, but we can do better than Nemo.

A surge of warm air aloft will spark a little freezing rain this morning (glaze ice possible, especially outside the metro). A burst of wet snow may spark 2-4 inches of metro slush, but dry air sweeping in by evening should cause any mix to taper. Deeper into the cold air a foot of snow may fall from Pierre to Moorhead, maybe 6" at St. Cloud.

Travel during this almost March-like storm gets worse the farther north/west you drive away from the metro area today - blowing and drifting an issue over western Minnesota by tonight. Skies clear by late Monday; a quiet week on tap. Another clipper pulls more frosty air arrives by late week, but not nearly as cold as a few weeks ago.

The maps look chilly - no early spring this year.

* ECMWF (European) forecast map valid midday today courtesy of WSI, showing a sloppy storm centered near Omaha, tracking northeast.

Predicted Snowfall: NAM. Expect a sharp gradient across the metro, maybe an inch southern suburbs, to 3" far northern and western suburbs. The St. Cloud area may pick up 4-6" with some 10-12" amounts closer to Detroit Lakes and Moorhead. Well over a foot of snow may pile up over the eastern Dakotas.

Predicted Snowfall: RPM. WSI's 12 km. RPM model shows only 2" of snow for much of the metro (which I tend to agree with), some 5-6" amounts near St. Cloud, maybe 8" for Duluth and 16" over west central Minnesota, near Breckenridge and Wheaton. The farther north/west you drive up I-94 or I-35 today the worse travel conditions will become.

Winter Storm Warning. I expect a mish-mash of ice, rain and snow in the metro today, possibly a burst of 2" of slushy snow, maybe 3" far northern and western suburbs. By the time it's cold enough aloft for all-snow a surge of dry air aloft (the dreaded "dry tongue") will cause precipitation to taper off. Map above courtesy of NOAA. For more details on the various advisories, warnings (and blizzard warning far western counties) click here.

On The Edge. Deep into the cold air, where precipitation will fall as all snow, over a foot of accumulation is likely across much of the Dakotas, maybe 5-10" for far western Minnesota, whipped up by 30-40 mph winds, creating white-out conditions by tonight. Map: NOAA.

31.9" snow at Portland, Maine. This breaks the old record of 27.1" set on January 17-18, 1979. This makes it the greatest snowstorm on record at Portland, Maine. Source: Gray, Maine office of the National Weather Service.

* photo above showing 6 foot drifts in Glenburn, Maine - courtesy of Angie Whittington and WeatherNation TV.

My Car's In There Somewhere. Seeing is believing; over 25" of snow in Boston. This photo was taken in South Boston by @Casieg.

Blizzard Paralyzes Connecticut. The Associated Press has an eye-opening YouTube clip showing what happens when you mix 24-36" and 55 mph winds. Serious drifts.

Thunder-Snow? When the air is rising violently, in a thunderstorm (or a blizzard) it's possible to get lightning and thunder. In winter it means snow is usually falling at the rate of 2-4"/hour. Such was the case Friday night in Middle Island, New York, courtesy of YouTube and Christine Heeren.

Snowbound. Stephanie from Hyannis, Massachusetts shared this photo of a small tree down on their minivan, after 18-24" snow and 60 mph. wind gusts. She explained that her family had to crawl out of a window to get outside - there was too much snow blocking the front door!

Mixed Bag. At times today's weather may look like something out of early March, with wet snow spiked with rain, even sleet (ice pellets). A period of light rain may freeze on cold surfaces this morning (freezing rain). The predicted sounding for 9 am (above) shows temperatures above 32 F. about 2,000 to 3,000 feet above the ground. A change back to wet snow is likely later today.





Climate Stories...

Climate Change And The Blizzard: Nor'easters More Fierce With Global Warming, Scientists Say. Did warmer sea surface temperatures (and thus the availability of more water vapor) turbocharge the blizzard? Professional climate science deniers scoff at the idea, but there's sound science to back up the claim. Here's an excerpt from Huffington Post: "Climate change may or may not have helped generate the nor'easter lashing the East Coast this weekend. Such storms happen with some regularity, after all. But the amount of snow the storm called "Nemo" ultimately dumps, and the extent of flood damage it leaves in its wake, may well have ties to global warming, climate scientists suggested. Michael Mann, a climatologist who directs the Earth System Science Center at Pennsylvania State University, compared a major storm like Nemo -- or Hurricane Irene or Superstorm Sandy, for that matter -- to a basketball slam-dunk with a lower net. "If you take the basketball court and raise it a foot, you're going to see more slam-dunks," Mann said. "Not every dunk is due to raising the floor, but you'll start seeing them happen more often then they ought to..."

Climate Change Is Serving Up Doses Of Extreme Weather. Even In Winter. It's basic physics: warmer air holds more water vapor, more potential fuel for major rainstorms (and snowstorms). If we reach the point where it's too warm for midwinter snows from Minnesota to New England it's game over; we're truly living on a different planet, and no amount of technology, clean energy or political decrees will help. We're not there yet. Here's another perspective from The Daily Climate: "As the Northeast digs out from under a mammoth blizzard, it might seem easy for climate change skeptics to point to such intense storms as evidence that global warming isn't real. They would be wrong. "Climate change contrarians and deniers love to cherry-pick individual events to argue that they are somehow inconsistent with global warming, when they are not," said Michael Mann, director of the Earth System Science Center at Pennsylvania State University.  "As long as it's cold enough to snow – which it will be in the winter – you potentially will get greater snowfalls...."

Photo credit above: "Snow blankets Boston on Friday, Feb. 8, 2013. Heavier winter storms fit a pattern predicted by climate scientists as the world warms." Photo by Christopher Petroff/flickr.

Study: Global Warming Causes Most Monthly Heat Records Today. Here's a clip from a story at Think Progress and Skeptical Science: "A new paper published in Climatic Change by Coumou, Robinson, and Rahmstorf (CRR13) examines the increased frequency of record-breaking monthly temperature records over the past 130 years, finding that these records are now five times more likely to occur due to global warming, with much more to come“..worldwide, the number of local record-breaking monthly temperature extremes is now on average five times larger than expected in a climate with no long-term warming. This implies that on average there is an 80% chance that a new monthly heat record is due to climatic change … Under a medium global warming scenario, by the 2040s we predict the number of monthly heat records globally to be more than 12 times as high as in a climate with no long-term warming...”

Graphic credit above: "Observed record ratio (the increase in the number of heat records compared to those expected in a world without global warming) for monthly heat records as it changes over time (thin red line is annual data, thick red line smoothed with half-width 5 years). This is compared with predictions from a simple stochastic model based only on the global mean temperature evolution (blue line with uncertainty band directly comparable to the smoothed red curve)"

Global Warming Brings Severe Rainstorms. No, when it does rain, it's not falling as gently as it did for our grandparents. Here's an excerpt from tgdaily.com: "Extreme rainfall events are becoming more and more commmon across the globe as climate change brings higher temperatures, researchers say. The University of Adelaide team looked at extreme rainfall and atmospheric temperatures at more than 8,000 weather gauging stations around the world between 1900 and 2009. "The results are that rainfall extremes are increasing on average globally. They show that there is a seven percent increase in extreme rainfall intensity for every degree increase in global atmospheric temperature," says Dr Seth Westra. "Assuming an increase in global average temperature by three to five degrees Celsius by the end of the 21st century, this could mean very substantial increases in rainfall intensity as a result of climate change..."

See The Trailer. The movie comes out next month (no, Al Gore has nothing to do with this one). The thrust of the movie: the Koch brothers and other key fossil fuel companies have trillions of dollars on the line - so there is incentive to push back on climate science, and do (or say) anything to create doubt and confusion about what's really going on. I'm keeping an open mind - but right now it appears that the uptick in severe storms, more persistent droughts and rising sea levels is probably a symptom of greenhouse gas levels approaching 400 ppm (parts per million) in the atmosphere, a byproduct of burning fossil fuels. A natural cycle? Over the eons greenhouse levels have fluctuated between 180 and 280 ppm. No. This is not a natural cycle.

Climate Change Means More Fires, Insects In Forests, USDA Warns. Here's a clip from registerguard.com: "Big changes are in store for the nation’s forests as global climate change increases wildfires and insect infestations, and generates more frequent floods and droughts, the U.S. Department of Agriculture warns in a report released Tuesday. The compilation of more than 1,000 scientific studies is part of the National Climate Assessment and will serve as a roadmap for managing national forests across the country in coming years. It says the area burned by wildfires is expected to at least double over the next 25 years, and insect infestations often will affect more land per year than fires..." (file photo courtesy of the Grand Junction, CO office of the National Weather Service).

Friday, February 8, 2013

Historic Nor'Easter Continues; Plowable Snow for Minnesota


A large chunk of the Upper Midwest has been put under WINTER WEATHER HEADLINES including BLIZZARD WATCHES. A fairly intense area of low pressure will blow into the Upper Mississippi Valley region by the weekend with strong winds and wintry precipitation. At this point, the heaviest snowfall looks to fall from portions of northwestern Nebraska to central/eastern South Dakota, eastern North Dakota and into central and northern Minnesota, where 6" to 10"+ of snow will be possible. Strong winds on the backside of the low will gust to near 45mph and create whiteout conditions across the Dakotas and far western Minnesota.


Probability of at Least 4" of Snow on SUNDAY
Again, at this point, it still appears that the heaviest will just miss the Twin Cities. The NWS probability of at least 4" of snow  on SUNDAY are at 70% across central and northwestern MN.

Probability of at Least 8" of Snow on SUNDAY
Here's the NWS probability of at least 8" of snow on SUNDAY. Note there is still a small 70% near the SD/ND/MN border. The 10% does not fall in the Twin Cities.

Probability of at Least 12" of Snow on SUNDAY
The percent chance of at least 12" of snow on SUNDAY drops down to just 10% across northwestern MN.

Slop Storm for MSP??
To be honest, there is still quite a bit of uncertainty with weather models right now. Some have heaviest snow band across northwestern Minnesota, while some try to bring it through the northern Twin Cities metro. Here's a look at a few different weather models for the Twin Cities. I've circled the "MODEL AVERAGE" which suggests around a few inches of slop. Keep in mind that it also appears there will be some sleet/rain/freezing rain possible. Total precipitation (liquid) from the storm could be near 1" for some!

MODEL AVERAGE:


Waterlogged Storm
Here's the latest HPC 3 day precipitation forecst. Note several maximums there exceeding 1" - again from central Minnesota and southeast, snowfall amount could be cut down quite a bit due to warmer air  wrapping into the system. That would change precipitation over to Rain/Freezing Rain and Sleet!

Still a Developing Storm...
I'm hoping that we'll get a little more clarity with the next set of model runs later this evening.... stay tuned!

Historic Nor'Easter Continues...
Wild wind and snow surrounding the historic Nor'Easter of 2013 will begin to wind down through PM Saturday and Sunday. Post storm, there will be lots of cleanup, which will likely take days/weeks to remove nearly 2ft. to 3ft in places. Near hurricane force wind gusts and the shear quantity of snow will make for a number of power restorations that will likely be still ongoing through next week.


...A POTENTIAL HISTORIC WINTER STORM AND BLIZZARD IS EXPECTED TO DROP AROUND 2 FEET OF SNOW THROUGH SATURDAY...
** STORM TOTAL SNOWFALL ACCUMULATIONS OF 1 TO 2 FEET...WITH LOCALLY HIGHER AMOUNTS ARE POSSIBLE ACROSS MUCH OF THE NORTHEAST. THE HEAVIEST SNOW IS FORECAST TO FALL ACROSS PARTS OF EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS...CONNECTICUT AND RHODE ISLAND WHERE SNOWFALL AMOUNTS HIGHER THAN 2 FEET ARE POSSIBLE. IN ADDITION TO THE HEAVY SNOWFALL... WIND GUSTS AS HIGH AS 70 MPH ARE POSSIBLE...ESPECIALLY NEAR THE COAST. THIS WILL RESULT IN BLIZZARD CONDITIONS WITH DRIFTING AND BLOWING SNOW ACROSS MUCH OF SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND INTO SATURDAY. TRAVEL CONDITIONS WILL BE EXTREMELY HAZARDOUS IF NOT IMPOSSIBLE. **
2013 Nor'Easter
Image courtesy NASA
Why So Intense?
This Nor'Easter was actually the result of two low pressure systems merging near Cape Cod. The northern low tracked through the Great Lakes region with heavy snow tallies near 12". The southern low tracked across the Gulf Coast States with heavy rain and even a few severe storms. The image below was from Friday afternoon just before the two storms merged. Note how intense the southern low appeared to be... This helped to churn copious amounts of Atlantic moisture inland. The northern low provided a shot of colder air, which helped keep that all important rain/snow line mostly off-shore for most everybody!
Friday Night Merge...
Not sure I've ever seen a storm like this! There were reports of thundersnow and 3" to 6" snowfall rates PER HOUR! The image below was the Nor'Easter as it was really kicking into high gear with heavy snow and wind gusts to near hurricane force over eastern Mass.
THUNDERSNOW!!
I've only experienced thundersnow once maybe twice in my life... it's pretty awesome! Take a look at this video out of NY, thanks to Christine Heeren (thrillcats) out of Middle Island, NY:
Thundersnow on Radar
Even radar was picking up on thundersnow! The little lightning icons below showed where lightning was being picked up by radar.
Dual Pol Radar Upgarde
Geek moment... I thought this was pretty neat. There were reports of SLEET mixed in with heavy snow during the height of the even over parts of CT. Flipping over the the Hydrometeor Classification mode, it was actually suggesting SLEET in the areas that were reporting sleet! Pretty cool!
Infancy of Storm in NYC
This is what it looked like in NYC as the snow started Friday afternoon. Thanks to my good friend and old hockey teammate, Jamie Steinert, for this picture.
Thanks to my good friend Peter Brooks for this picture below. Here's Lainey Yang enjoying the snow in NYC Friday night!

New England Closed Until Further Notice
A number of cities in the Northeast basically 'shut down' in advance of this storm. Ground and air travel halted Friday. The images below from Flightaware.com showed over 3,000 flight cancellations across the nation on Friday, most of those in the Northeast due to the massive storm!





A Storm of Historic Proportions... 2013?
This storm definitely has the potential to dump record snow amounts in quite a few areas. Here are the top 5 storm totals for Providence, RI and Boston, MA. Interestingly, the February 5th-7th, 1978 storm ranks as the all-time greatest snow storm in Providence, RI at 28.6". Boston, MA had it's 2nd largest snow storm during that storm at 27.1". This storm certainly has the potential to meet OR exceed some of the top 5 tallies listed below!


Boston Snow Stats...
Big snow has eluded the Boston, MA region over the last couple of winters. In fact, the last time we've seen a 12" snow storm was back in 2011. January 11th that had 14.6" !! By the way, the biggest snow event last winter was a whopping 4.4"


 Boston Snow Stats Continued...
Here are some other Boston snow stats. Note the measly 9.3" seasonal snow total last winter!



Weekend Storm
This is the storm progged by Sunday. This storm will have the capability of heavy snow across the Upper Midwest and strong/severe storms across the Lower Mississippi Valley.


Stormy Scenario
This storm system will also have the capability of producing strong to severe thunderstorms across the south Saturday and possibly Sunday. The Storm Prediction Center has issued a SLIGHT RISK of severe weather for parts of Texas on Sunday. Stay tuned for more.

Saturday Threat
Sunday Threat

Thanks for checking in, have a great weekend ahead!
Don't forget to follow me on Twitter @TNelsonWNTV

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Crippling Blizzard Expected for the Northeast



* POTENTIAL HISTORIC WINTER STORM AND BLIZZARD TO IMPACT MUCH OF SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND FRI INTO SAT

Those are the words from the National Weather Service out of Boston, MA... Read more below.


* 1 TO 2 FEET OF SNOW POSSIBLE FOR MUCH OF SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND EXCEPT AREAS NEAR THE SOUTH COAST WHERE THERE MAY BE SOME MIXING. THE MODELS HAVE COME INTO VERY GOOD AGREEMENT ON A POTENTIALLY HISTORIC WINTER STORM AND A POSSIBLE BLIZZARD THAT WILL IMPACT MUCH OF SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND. WE ARE CONFIDENT THAT MUCH OF THE REGION WILL RECEIVE 1 TO 2 FEET OF SNOW. STILL TOUGH TO PINPOINT WHERE THE BEST CHANCE FOR THE HIGHER AMOUNTS WILL BE...BUT CLIMATOLOGY FAVORS THE I-95 CORRIDOR. WE ALSO EXPECT A MID LEVEL DEFORMATION BAND THAT WILL LEAD TO LOCALIZED HIGHER AMOUNTS ACROSS THE INTERIOR. THE BULK OF THE STORM APPEARS TO BE IN THE FRIDAY NIGHT/SATURDAY MORNING TIME FRAME.


Amazing Snow Total Potential!
According to the RPM model... there will be a HUGE swath of 1 to 2 feet or more across parts of the Northeast!


 A Storm of Historic Proportions... 1978
Folks in the Northeast are no strangers to massive winter storms at this time of the year. February 5th-7th, 1978 there was a massive snow storm that dumped 20" to 30" + and crippled many of the BIG cities.



A Storm of Historic Proportions... 2013?
This storm definitely has the potential to dump record snow amounts in quite a few areas. Here are the top 5 storm totals for Providence, RI and Boston, MA. Interestingly, the February 5th-7th, 1978 storm ranks as the all-time greatest snow storm in Providence, RI at 28.6". Boston, MA had it's 2nd largest snow storm during that storm at 27.1". This storm certainly has the potential to meet OR exceed some of these top 5 tallies!



Proverbial "Calm Before the Storm"
I thought it would be interesting to take a look at these webcam midday Thursday and compare them to what it'll look like from midday Friday. The landscape will look A LOT different... Stay tuned! Keep in mind that both locations below could experience BLIZZARD conditions during the storm.

Block Island, RI

 Boston College

Boston Snow Stats...
Big snow has eluded the Boston, MA region over the last couple of winters. In fact, the last time we've seen a 12" snow storm was back in 2011. January 11th that had 14.6" !! By the way, the biggest snow event last winter was a whopping 4.4"


 Boston Snow Stats Continued...
Here are some other Boston snow stats. Note the measly 9.3" seasonal snow total last winter!


Significant Snow Potential...
This is what meteorologists are juggling with... Take a look at how varied these forecasts are.

12z NAM
This might be a little much, but according to the 12z NAM 1 to 2 feet or more of snow is possible.


 12z GFS
Not quite as crazy as the model below, but still close to 1 foot or more.


Another Storm on the Horizon
We're watching yet another storm for the weekend, which is expected to bring accumulating snow to the Upper Midwest through early next week.


Weekend Storm
This is the storm progged by Sunday. This storm will have the capability of heavy snow across the Upper Midwest and strong/severe storms across the Lower Mississippi Valley.


Snowy Scenario
According to the GFS, the heaviest snow will fall from the eastern Dakotas to northern Minnesota.


Winter Winter Headlines...

The National Weather Service has issued winter weather headlines in advance of the said system. More updates to come... stay tuned!


Stormy Scenario
This storm system will also have the capability of producing strong to severe thunderstorms across the south Saturday and possibly Sunday. The Storm Prediction Center has issued a SLIGHT RISK of severe weather for parts of Texas on Sunday. Stay tuned for more.


Thanks for checking in, have a great weekend ahead!
Don't forget to follow me on Twitter @TNelsonWNTV