Jump to content

Typhoon Tip

Meteorologist
  • Posts

    42,935
  • Joined

  • Last visited

5 Followers

About Typhoon Tip

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Not Telling

Recent Profile Visitors

48,690 profile views
  1. What the fuck is cutter season in the first place
  2. as it is, that's a damaging CAA wind event
  3. Based on multi-seasonal trend to only sore up butts in the face of interminable power? ...right, it must be impossible. that said .. heh, the primary sensitivity on that series of charts ( 12z too) is the western ridge flatness. If that goes up higher in latitude, that thing will get under our latitude, minus perhaps 10 or 15% due to compressed flow absorption, but that thing has so much immensity to it it could sacrifice 1/2 and still choke off NYC/BOS from the civilized world with that f'n look.
  4. sufficed it is to say ... should this beast happen to correct and pass under L.I., that's our season defining event right there. not this last one ... it would double totals and destroy from wind impacts in one simultaneous horror bomb.
  5. 1045 mb high against a 975 mb low is a bit stronger in CAA gusts than 40 mph.. .. heh. Just sayin' that's a damaging CAA event there. Probably b.s. tho
  6. I was looking at these indices this morning... Before anyone ( or the straw man ) goes and says something dim witted like 'see what the indices did for us, today', just be made aware that the indices ferreted out any kind of storm event on the 1st, at all. As a primer, these indexes don't guarantee one's back yard is full and their dopa circuitry triggered. But they do elucidate the periods of time where one should be looking. Better than not having any means at all... Having said that, the indices don't look particularly good. But they don't look absolutely abysmal for winter enthusiasts, either. The basic spread looks like alleviating neutral AO, -PNA, +EPO, -NAO by the 15th. If it were not for the -NAO aspect, which is also fairly elaborately illustrated in all the ensembles in their spatial representation of the hemispheric scaled synopsis at mid month, I would be buckin' for an early spring. Really early! I don't trust any warm signal post 2000 era of hockey stick climate bursting to actually fall short if given any excuse to stand up tall. But... thankfully for winter enthusiasm, the -NAO ( which is a fine complementary phase state for -1 SD PNA btw ), that imparts a different play ground. I would think overrunning circumstances. I don't like the coastals in the guidance, tho. I suggest most of those fail. Or, if one succeeds, it likely to be a NJ model type narrow corridor system. Two caveats, 1 ... NAOs, even in the ensembles, routinely present certain challenges to prediction at extended leads. The amplitude, or even existence, both. It could be that it all redistributes to a -EPO. I've seen -NAO failures/reposition to Alaska a couple of times this year as a matter of fact. So we'll see. The 2nd caveat is suppression...if the -NAO goes ahead and materializes with that -PNA underneath, the flow could very easily torpedo with velocity and all that - it's not exactly something we haven't felt jammed up bums since CC rape began many "moons" ago.
  7. yeah, that's the only point I was trying to make... I think it's useful because there seems to be some debate about the cold aspect this year? heh, I don't ultimately care that much just sayn'
  8. Okay... well, relative to that product scope, then. I still suggest the mid latitude are colder in January than December.
  9. yeah, I could see that too - kind of like a 'glorified' arctic front.
  10. Destiny prove me wrong and so be it, Friday is just an intense arctic boundary - probably one that also attenuates a little in guidance as the week goes forward.
  11. Just imho, but any below normal month in this era+ is quite an achievement. There's probably a relativity value, like a monthly RONI for atmospheric departures, where a -1 month in 2026 becomes a greater significance compared to doing that in 1986 A more here and now subject, I find this interesting from NASA for December. I wonder what January will work out to. I'm guessing it will be more negative in the mid latitudes ... just by arithmetic from the Climate Analyzer folks. Their on-going monitoring has a whopper warm arctic domain, while the N.H. et al has sunk some... so in terms of anomaly distribution that only leaves the sub-arctic regions to be driving that downward trend.
  12. You know ..philosophically, all luck is, is just not knowing why things occurred. If we look at a system, and assume all inputs into that system, then ... "air apparent" ( puns always on purpose to annoy - ) something unexpected occurs, we tend to call that luck - something unpredictable must have been introduced that was not a part of those inputs. SO, it begs the question ... if one was able to predict, thus reduce the unpredictable quotient to zero, does that remove luck? It seems the answer to this question is rather academic - there is no luck. There is just knowing, or not knowing. So the term luck is really just a semantic dance around the notion that we are limited in our outlooks - limited by the fact that we are not clever enough to predict all inputs into the system. This is why I wonder if Quantum Mechanics, which deals ultimately in probabilities of location in time and space, ... in fact, all probabilities, is just really a limitation of human perception -
  13. It’s because the storm/cyclone, despite being deep in guidance is never fully coupled to the synoptic forcing … in the guidance. The modeled convective “theft” is lame, and not actually developed by synoptic q-g forcing so as it climbs latitudes and the convection begins to wane … it’s weakening. You see that on the cold side of the circulation, en route to the NW Atl, it looks like it fails to really generate much QPF on the west side of the cyclonic envelope - it’s kind of like an imposter low
  14. Yeah it's a matter of when in either case. The trouble with February downward breaks is that by the time it matters, the sun/seasonality is attempting to make it matter less. I guess cross that bridge... In this case, the exertion of a -AO has been in place prior to any notable temperature intrusion, so this suggests it is bottom up. This also hearkens back to an argument I've made in the past, that if you are in a season plagued by a preponderance of the -AO state, the advent of a SSW means less because it's eventual modulation is absorbed into the preexisting state. But that's a deeper aspect. .... it's going to be difficult separating causalities if the AO continues to be so weighted. So I believe the AO is separate phenomenon endemic to this season ... record breaking domain temperatures associated with this up there. It's offloaded so much mass that it is actually driving the NH totals down, while leaving the arctic elevated. Mind you, an elevated state that can still store meat indefinitely ... but it's an upside down hemisphere prior to any SSW even being involved. So I've looked at it and to me, there's more suggestion that this is bottom-->up
×
×
  • Create New...