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bluewave

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  1. Record high of 73° at JFK. This beats the previous record of 70°set back in 2015.
  2. Looks like a new record high for JFK. The most recent record high was set back in 2015. Kennedy Intl MOSUNNY 72 47 40 SW9 11/7 70 in 2015 66 in 2001 66 in 1975
  3. The 76° so far at Newark is just 2° off the record high of 78°. Newark Liberty MOSUNNY 76 43 07 Nov 12:51 pm 76 43 31 SW 5 10.00 FEW250 30.22 1023.8 30.24 76 48 11/7 78 in 1938 71 in 2015 71 in 1996+
  4. Walt, great thread. The 2” PWATS you mention would be a new record for November. So there is the potential for heavy rains if the tropical moisture plume gets close enough.
  5. Newark needs to keep the November 70° day streak going through Monday for the new record. 1938, 1982,1975, and 1994 all had 4 consecutive days. So Newark needs to reach at least 5 consecutive days for the new November record. 2020-11-05 70 2020-11-06 73 1938-11-05 75 1938-11-06 72 1938-11-07 78 1938-11-08 72 1975-11-07 71 1975-11-08 76 1975-11-09 75 1975-11-10 70 1982-11-01 77 1982-11-02 79 1982-11-03 74 1982-11-04 72 1994-11-03 71 1994-11-04 79 1994-11-05 76 1994-11-06 71
  6. The guidance corrected warmer today. So it looks like the 70° day streak that started yesterday will continue into next week. Not really a surprise given the record 591 DM ridge for November. KEWR GFSX MOS GUIDANCE 11/06/2020 1200 UTC FHR 24 36| 48 60| 72 84| 96 108|120 132|144 156|168 180|192 SAT 07| SUN 08| MON 09| TUE 10| WED 11| THU 12| FRI 13|SAT CLIMO N/X 53 73| 52 75| 52 73| 55 70| 59 71| 56 65| 47 58| 44 39 55
  7. Areas to our north are approaching record highs for the date. BDL is within a few degrees of the record set back in 2015. Pretty good high temperature guidance beat today. Bradley Intl MOSUNNY 74 36 Almanac for HARTFORD-BRADLEY INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, CT November 6, 2020 Daily Data Observed Normal Record Highest Record Lowest Max Temperature M 55 76 in 2015 33 in 1953
  8. Models continuing with near record 500 mb positive height anomalies for November this weekend. The November record for the NYC area is 589dm from the SPC sounding climo site. So an unusually warm November weekend coming up.
  9. Great post. The quick reversal from -AO in October to +AO in November is something that we normally see during an El Niño. This may be related to lingering neutral to positive IOD which is also more Niño-like. The IO standing wave the models have for November was implicated in the very strong PV and +NAO +AO last winter. The current +PMM with near record SST warmth north of such a strong La Niña cold tongue is also a first for a La Niña. A very warm November has also been associated with El Niño’s in the past. Several times this warm November during an El Niño carried over into December. So such an occurrence this year would be different than the typical front loaded La Niña winter progression. There have also been several very warm La Niña Novembers followed by warm Decembers. On the other hand, a warmer PMM was present for our most recent La Niña warm November in 2016. That was a near record warm winter. But it may have been the +PMM allowing occasional poleward extensions of the North Pacific Ridge into Alaska. Those were also accompanied by short -NAO -AO episodes for respectable seasonal snowfall despite the record warmth. There are many factors this year which could interact. We may just have to wait and see how things look in another month or so. But even beyond the specific ENSO conditions and interactions, we have just seen the warmest 5 winter stretch on record. Predictability of European winter 2019/20: Indian Ocean dipole impacts on the NAO https://rmets.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/asl.1005
  10. 70° now at Newark. They need to reach 5 to get into the November top 3. 2015 was the last November with 5 days reaching 70°. Newark Liberty MOSUNNY 70 42 36 SW14G21 Time Series Summary for NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP, NJ - Month of Nov Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. Rank Year Number of Days Max Temperature >= 70 Missing Count 1 1975 7 0 2 1994 6 0 - 1990 6 0 - 1953 6 0 - 1931 6 0 3 2015 5 0 - 2001 5 0 - 1982 5 0 - 1938 5 0
  11. An October -AO followed by a +AO in November is usually something we see during an El Niño. I wonder if this unusual AO reversal for a La Niña is related to such a strong +PMM and slightly positive IOD? 2020 2.419 3.417 2.641 0.928 -0.027 -0.122 -0.412 -0.381 0.631 -0.072 2015 1.092 1.043 1.837 1.216 0.763 0.427 -1.108 -0.689 -0.165 -0.250 1.945 1.444 2009 0.800 -0.672 0.121 0.973 1.194 -1.351 -1.356 -0.054 0.875 -1.540 0.459 -3.413 2006 -0.170 -0.156 -1.604 0.138 0.156 1.071 0.103 -0.265 0.606 -1.029 0.521 2.282 2004 -1.686 -1.528 0.318 -0.409 -0.094 -0.236 -0.201 -0.720 0.855 -0.515 0.678 1.230
  12. The big weather swings continue with all-time November warmth in Minnesota following the snowiest October on record.
  13. Yeah, above normal winter temperatures have become the new normal since the super El Niño in 15-16. The main question is can we can get enough blocking intervals like 16-17 for a better snowfall outcome than the last two years?
  14. Yeah, it was their 3rd coldest October temperature on record. Time Series Summary for JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, NY - Month of Oct Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. Rank Year Lowest Min Temperature Missing Count 1 1976 30 0 - 1966 30 0 - 1962 30 0 2 1988 31 0 3 2020 32 0 - 2011 32 0 - 1974 32 0 - 1969 32 0 - 1965 32 0
  15. Yeah, that looks close to the record for after the first week of November. JFK may have set the all-time November dew point record of 68° in November 2019. But that was earlier on the 1st. https://www.wunderground.com/history/daily/us/ny/new-york-city/KJFK/date/2019-11-1 11:51 PM 68 F 68 F 100 % S 40 mph 54 mph
  16. With the exception of 77-78, the 70s were notorious for underperforming snow for the amount of cold we had. We don’t seem to get cold and dry winters anymore. Most of our cold winters since 2000 had 40”+ to 50”+ snowfall seasons.
  17. This fall seems to be following the pattern since 2010. The years with an early freeze in October have had the warmest Novembers. Last year was the coldest November at Newark but didn’t drop below 40° in October. Time Series Summary for NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP, NJ - Month of Oct Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. Year Lowest Min Temperature Nov Departure 2020 32 ? 2019 40 -4.0 2018 34 -3.1 2017 40 -0.7 2016 37 +2.9 2015 31 +5.2 2014 39 -2.9 2013 33 -2.4 2012 34 -3.5 2011 32 +4.1 2010 38 +0.5
  18. Don recently posted a very informative paper on the topic. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-71945-4 Extreme weather events in Asia have been occurring with increasing frequency as the globe warms in response to rising concentrations of greenhouse gases. Many of these events arise from weather regimes that persist over a region for days or even weeks, resulting in disruptive heatwaves, droughts, flooding, snowfalls, and cold spells. We investigate changes in the persistence of large-scale weather systems through a pattern-recognition approach based on daily 500 hPa geopotential height anomalies over the Asian continent. By tracking consecutive days that the atmosphere resides in a particular pattern, we identify long-duration events (LDEs), defined as lasting longer than three days, and measure their frequency of occurrence over time in each pattern. We find that regimes featuring positive height anomalies in high latitudes are occurring more often as the Arctic warms faster than mid-latitudes, both in the recent past and in model projections for the twenty-first century assuming unabated greenhouse gas emissions. The increased dominance of these patterns corresponds to a higher likelihood of LDEs, suggesting that persistent weather conditions will occur more frequently. By mapping observed temperature and precipitation extremes onto each atmospheric regime, we gain insight into the types of disruptive weather events that will become more prevalent as particular patterns become more common Over Siberia they found a significant increase in the frequency and duration of warm spells and wet days, while central Asia saw more cold spells and wet days, and east Asia experienced more long wet spells. These results are consistent with an increased (decreased) prevalence of the pattern in node #1 (#12). They also found that warm, wet, and dry spells predominantly lengthened in most parts of Asia, suggesting a general increase in persistence. Another study14 analyzed output from several atmosphere-only models forced by sea-ice and ocean-temperature conditions consistent with a 2 °C warmer world. Similar to our results, they found significantly increased persistence of warm spells over northern and central Asia, as well as wet spells over northern and eastern Asia. In addition to supporting previous findings, our study demonstrates an increasing frequency of persistent large-scale circulation regimes and associated extreme weather events, especially since the mid-1990s when AAW emerged as a clear signal. As greenhouse gases continue to accumulate in the atmosphere owing to ongoing human activities, we find that patterns characterized by warming in high latitudes will occur more frequently while cold-Arctic patterns will decline. A higher percentage of days/year in any one pattern will increase the likelihood of multiple consecutive days occurring in that pattern, leading to more frequent persistent conditions. Moreover, we demonstrate that the predominant warm-Arctic pattern also exhibits a higher probability of long LDEs occurring relative to days belonging in a node, thus further augmenting the likelihood of persistent weather events. Three of the climate models participating in CMIP5 agree that warm-Arctic patterns will increase several-fold by the end of the century at the expense of cold-Arctic patterns, suggesting a substantial rise in the frequency of persistent circulation regimes and their associated extreme weather. The connections with changes in jet-stream characteristics, such as blocking and other cut-off circulation features, will be addressed in future work.
  19. You have to search for virtual lab gfs mos to get the new site. I only wish that that they also had ECMWF mos products. I believe the only access to that is on the NWS AWIPS in house system. https://vlab.ncep.noaa.gov/web/mdl/mos-products
  20. Looks like 60s and 70s until further notice as the WAR pattern really locks in. KEWR GFSX MOS GUIDANCE 11/03/2020 0000 UTC FHR 24| 36 48| 60 72| 84 96|108 120|132 144|156 168|180 192 TUE 03| WED 04| THU 05| FRI 06| SAT 07| SUN 08| MON 09| TUE 10 CLIMO X/N 54| 38 61| 48 69| 52 70| 54 72| 55 72| 58 73| 56 68 40 56 KISP GFSX MOS GUIDANCE 11/03/2020 0000 UTC FHR 24| 36 48| 60 72| 84 96|108 120|132 144|156 168|180 192 TUE 03| WED 04| THU 05| FRI 06| SAT 07| SUN 08| MON 09| TUE 10 CLIMO X/N 52| 33 59| 47 65| 52 70| 51 68| 51 69| 53 70| 56 68 38 56
  21. We could challenge the all-time November 500 MB positive height anomaly record this weekend. It looks like the record for the NYC area is 589 DM. The models all have values close to that level.
  22. We broke the March cold streak this year so I guess it was only a matter of time before we had a warmer than normal November. These have been the only reliably cooler than average months in recent years. Getting more than 3 consecutive colder Novembers and Marches is just too much to ask from this warmer climate. NYC Nov 17...-1.1 Nov 18...-3.3 Nov 19...-3.8 Mar 17...-3.3 Mar 18...-2.4 Mar 19...-0.8 Mar 20...+5.5
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