www.srh.weather.gov |
Quantitative Precipitation Forecast |
Current
Version
Previous Version: 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 [Printable] 000 FOUS11 KWBC 151914 QPFHSD PROBABILISTIC HEAVY SNOW AND ICING DISCUSSION NWS HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL PREDICTION CENTER CAMP SPRINGS MD 311 PM EDT SUN MAR 15 2009 VALID 00Z MON MAR 16 2009 - 00Z THU MAR 19 2009 DAY 1 THROUGH DAY 3... PACIFIC NORTHWEST/NORTHERN ROCKIES... A PERSISTENCE FORECAST ACROSS WASHINGTON...NORTHERN OREGON...IDAHO...WESTERN MONTANA AND NORTHWEST WYOMING AS DEEP/COLD AND UNSTABLE CYCLONIC FLOW CONTINUES TO STREAM EASTWARD ALONG AND NORTH OF THE STRONG ZONAL 300 MB JET CORE. THERMAL PROFILES SUGGEST LITTLE OR NO WARMING ABOVE 4000 FEET FOR MONDAY AND SLIGHT WARMING IN THE H85-H5 LAYER BEGINNING LATE TUESDAY...WITH A STABLE LAYER/DRIER AIR AT H7 BEGINNING TO DEVELOP ALONG THE COASTLINE TUESDAY NIGHT. THIS IMPLIES THAT PRECIPITATION WILL BE IN THE FORM OF SNOW ACROSS THE CASCADES AND 4500-5500 FEET MSL IN THE SAWTOOTH/BITTEROOTS DURING THE NEXT 48 HOURS. ACCUMULATING SNOW LEVELS THEN RISE TO/NEAR 5000-6000FT MSL FOR WEDNESDAY...WITH ONLY THE HIGHEST TERRAIN SEEING A GENERAL 4-8 INCH SNOWFALL ACCUMULATION. ALONG THE WASHINGTON COAST AND NORTHWEST OREGON COAST...THE VERY COLD TEMPS ALOFT...IE H5 TEMPS OF M30-M35C...WILL OCCASIONALLY PRODUCE DEEP CONVECTION OFFSHORE...WITH HEAVY PRECIPITATION MOVING INLAND...AND BOUNCE LOCAL SNOW LEVELS IN THE 06Z-18Z TIME FRAME...TO SEA LEVEL/VALLEY FLOORS. ANTICIPATE 1-2 INCH PER HOUR SNOWFALL RATES...GIVEN THE CONVECTIVE INSTABILITY PARAMETERS/1000-850 MB THICKNESS PROGS. THE JET CARRIES THESE VERY COLD TEMPERATURES ALOFT ACROSS NORTHEAST OREGON...IDAHO...MONTANA AND NORTHERN WYOMING...ALLOWING DIURNAL CONVECTIVE SNOW SHOWERS TO DEVELOP MONDAY AND TUESDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING...AT/ABOVE 5000 FEET MSL. A DEEP-LAYERED WESTERLY FLOW ALOFT WILL FAVOR THE HIGH TERRAIN OF NORTHERN IDAHO...WESTERN MONTANA AND THE TETONS...WHERE TWO-DAY TOTALS (MON-TUE) OF 1-2 FEET ARE LIKELY ABOVE 5500 FT MSL. A NOTE...A MODEL CONSENSUS QPF FORECAST ACROSS THE SAWTOOTH/SALMON/CLEARWATER RANGES ARE SUGGESTING THE TWO-DAY SNOWFALL TOTALS WILL RANGE FROM 30-48 INCHES. PLEASE SEE QPFPFD FOR ADDITIONAL DETAILS. THE PROBABILITY OF SIGNIFICANT ICING IS LESS THAN 10 PERCENT. DAYS 1 AND 2... NORTHERN SIERRA-SISKIYOUS... WITH THE STEADY STATE SYNOPTIC-SCALE FLOW PATTERN AND EXPANSIVE 300MB JET CORE IN PLACE...EXCESSIVE MOISTURE ORIGINATING IN THE EAST PAC/GULF OF ALASKA...COUPLED WITH GOOD AGREEMENT FROM MODEL DATA WITH RESPECT TO THERMAL PROFILES/QPF FORECASTS WARRANT A MENTION OF HEAVY WET SNOWFALL ACCUMULATION ABOVE 5000 FEET MSL...ACROSS THE TRINITY ALPS AND MT SHASTA AREAS. FROM MT LASSEN SOUTHWARD INTO THE NORTHERN SIERRA...ACCUMULATING SNOWS ARE EXPECTED TO BE IN THE 5500-6500 FT MSL RANGE FROM NORTH TO SOUTH RESPECTIVELY. TIMING OF MODERATE TO HEAVY PRECIPITATION IN THE CRITICAL 06Z-18Z TIME FRAMES...IN ASSOCIATION WITH STRONG VERTICAL MOTION...WOULD SUGGEST DOWN DRAFTS IN STRONGER SHOWERS SHOULD BRIEFLY KNOCK DOWN LOCAL SNOW LEVELS INTO 3500-4000 FT MSL RANGE...LATE TONIGHT/MONDAY MORNING AND LATE MONDAY NIGHT/EARLY TUESDAY. THE PROBABILITY OF SIGNIFICANT ICING IS LESS THAN 10 PERCENT. VOJTESAK $$ |
National Weather Service Disclaimer |
Last Modified: August 31, 2005 Privacy Policy |