Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,502
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    Weathernoob335
    Newest Member
    Weathernoob335
    Joined

The Mystical Month of February--Long Range Discussion


Ji
 Share

Recommended Posts

34 minutes ago, psuhoffman said:

2 of those 3 are in the other thread.  The one in this thread is kind of approaching the near range edge of what I consider "long range".  But I hope people don't mistake the conversation and speculation I am having regarding the "long range" days 7-15 as having anything to do with our chances of snow from the 3 threats before that now entering the medium range.  

But at the same time... it is impossible to ignore the degradation of the pattern look week 2 right now.  Especially when I expected and predicted it would evolve towards more +PNA -NAO and eastern trough and it is going the exact opposite way right now on all guidance.   

Question... do you have any thoughts/opinions what might be driving the SE ridge?  With the SOI tanked and the MJO into 8 it's obviously not derived from the PAC tropical forcing.  Is it the downstream effect of the north PAC blocking ridge forcing the trough into the west...and if so why is that stuck there despite favorable pac forcing?  OR...is the SE ridge being caused by another forcing source and is blocking up the flow upstream and forcing the trough/ridge alignment out west to be where it is?  Any thoughts?

Probably PDO related like Bob has been saying.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, psuhoffman said:

There are a few we know will DEB every year unless it’s 2003, 2010, or 2014. Basically that once every 7 years kind of anomaly where we get 200% snowfall is all that can keep them happy. The other 85% of the time they will be miserable. 

 

I recall people even complaining in those great years listed above (albeit less so).  Some people are just never satisfied or feel the need to be downers.

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

@C.A.P.E.  We were tracking the CFS a while ago.  lol  Maybe we are looking at the western trough wrong...CFS gets to a good look week 2-4 but it does it by retrograding the western trough west EVEN MORE...and then shifting everything west including the trough in the Atlantic.  There were a few times where I thought that might be a better way here than expecting progression...that just hasn't happened all year.  Of course the problem is the CFS does that by going absolutely berserk with nao blocking week 2 and that forces the chain reaction.  Nothing else has that look and the nao has been mostly a fail every time this winter.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

@psuhoffman  courtesy 33andrain .  

 

I bolded some parts that I felt were interesting 

 

@MattHugo,

 

There was evidence in favour of the E to W transitional QBO stage supporting SSWs occurring, but not necessarily propagating all the way downward. 

 

I believe for that we needed a predominantly wave-2 driven vortex split event, instead of the mainly wave-1 driven displacement-then-split event that we saw. Reason being that the former drives a much faster response that would likely have outpaced the descending W QBO and established major easterly flow anomalies in the troposphere. The much slower 'drip-down' nature of the event we've seen instead has allowed the W QBO to become a blockade that's kept most of the negative zonal wind anomalies in the stratosphere. I have a feeling that the manifestation for a time of a very unusual three-way vortex split right after the reversal initiation may further have impeded the downwelling by distributing the negative zonal anomalies more widely, essentially making them more diffuse.

 

At the time of the SSW, part of the response was a cooling of the upper troposphere above the tropics, enhancing convection even where the base state doesn't support it. Alongside the negative zonal anomalies, the SSW-driven positive temperature anomalies have also been held in the lower stratosphere, keeping the upper tropical troposphere cooler than usual and allowing the convection to continue to behave in ways that don't tie in with the Nino base state (interference with the patterns the Nino base state otherwise drive being the scrambling of the tropical-extratropical processes that Tamara refers to). Climate change may have taken this even further than it would otherwise have gone via increased overall oceanic heat content, but that's a matter of debate - to me the stratospheric mishaps seem more important for this particular winter's turnout.

 

 

I think we can see a good example of the interference this coming week; the neutral ENSO MJO composites (top row) fit the ECM 00z much more than the Nino ones, despite AAM and GWO observations indicating that it would usually fit more to the positive ENSO composites;

 

nada_6_feb_mid.pngnada_7_feb_ok.png
nino_6_feb_mid.pngnino_7_feb_ok.png

 

GFS fits mostly the neutral P6 composite before seemingly jumping straight to something akin to the P8 neutral composite (see below, left) with little P7 response - probably due to how it stalls the MJO in P7 for a while; continued eastward propagation is needed to bring about the typical response to activity within a given phase of the RMM plots.

 

The negative NAO-related UK cold potential for late this month and into March depends on how well we can break free of the Nina-like interference and so bring about an MJO P8 response more typical of the Nino base state.

 

So more toward the right-hand composite than the left-hand one. Note how I'm saying 'more toward' here; the composites should never be taken too literally (ideally we'd have different ones for each possible combination of MJO phase, GWO phase and AAM tendency, but there simply aren't enough historical years of obs data to do this meaningfully!).

 

nada_8_feb_mid.pngnino_8_feb_mid.png

 

As you can see - the temperature regime across the UK will be extremely sensitive to how much the interference gives way.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, psuhoffman said:

@C.A.P.E.  We were tracking the CFS a while ago.  lol  Maybe we are looking at the western trough wrong...CFS gets to a good look week 2-4 but it does it by retrograding the western trough west EVEN MORE...and then shifting everything west including the trough in the Atlantic.  There were a few times where I thought that might be a better way here than expecting progression...that just hasn't happened all year.  Of course the problem is the CFS does that by going absolutely berserk with nao blocking week 2 and that forces the chain reaction.  Nothing else has that look and the nao has been mostly a fail every time this winter.  

Yeah I saw that, and no I don't buy the big blocky look at this point. Once again that ship has sailed, and it was a ghost ship yet again I'm afraid.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, C.A.P.E. said:

Probably PDO related like Bob has been saying.

maybe, but the PDO doesn't look THAT hostile to me.  It's kind of neutralish imo with conflicting good (NE PAC warmth) and bad (warm pool east of Japan) signals.  Not discounting that possibility... there is obviously something I am missing.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, psuhoffman said:

maybe, but the PDO doesn't look THAT hostile to me.  It's kind of neutralish imo with conflicting good (NE PAC warmth) and bad (warm pool east of Japan) signals.  Not discounting that possibility... there is obviously something I am missing.  

might be the gradient SST we spoke about , or maybe the extreme warm waters East of Aussie.  I know we mentioned that as well.  Bob spoke of the Waters East of Japan, to me the PDO looks Ok, not bad enough to cause a huge impact.  But, not sure.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, psuhoffman said:

maybe, but the PDO doesn't look THAT hostile to me.  It's kind of neutralish imo with conflicting good (NE PAC warmth) and bad (warm pool east of Japan) signals.  Not discounting that possibility... there is obviously something I am missing.  

A combo of things. PDO early on was not favorable. The Nino was very late getting going, and still is probably more a warm neutral, plus it has not been well defined, and has not really coupled to the atmosphere, which was probably largely due to MJO on roids interfering. MJO and SOI are trending more favorable, but probably a lag effect. Also sometimes we have to accept that this shit is very complex- large scale fluid mechanics and heat transfer- and we just cant know.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, frd said:

@psuhoffman  courtesy 33andrain .  

 

I bolded some parts that I felt were interesting 

 

@MattHugo,

 

There was evidence in favour of the E to W transitional QBO stage supporting SSWs occurring, but not necessarily propagating all the way downward. 

 

I believe for that we needed a predominantly wave-2 driven vortex split event, instead of the mainly wave-1 driven displacement-then-split event that we saw. Reason being that the former drives a much faster response that would likely have outpaced the descending W QBO and established major easterly flow anomalies in the troposphere. The much slower 'drip-down' nature of the event we've seen instead has allowed the W QBO to become a blockade that's kept most of the negative zonal wind anomalies in the stratosphere. I have a feeling that the manifestation for a time of a very unusual three-way vortex split right after the reversal initiation may further have impeded the downwelling by distributing the negative zonal anomalies more widely, essentially making them more diffuse.

 

At the time of the SSW, part of the response was a cooling of the upper troposphere above the tropics, enhancing convection even where the base state doesn't support it. Alongside the negative zonal anomalies, the SSW-driven positive temperature anomalies have also been held in the lower stratosphere, keeping the upper tropical troposphere cooler than usual and allowing the convection to continue to behave in ways that don't tie in with the Nino base state (interference with the patterns the Nino base state otherwise drive being the scrambling of the tropical-extratropical processes that Tamara refers to). Climate change may have taken this even further than it would otherwise have gone via increased overall oceanic heat content, but that's a matter of debate - to me the stratospheric mishaps seem more important for this particular winter's turnout.

 

 

I think we can see a good example of the interference this coming week; the neutral ENSO MJO composites (top row) fit the ECM 00z much more than the Nino ones, despite AAM and GWO observations indicating that it would usually fit more to the positive ENSO composites;

 

nada_6_feb_mid.pngnada_7_feb_ok.png
nino_6_feb_mid.pngnino_7_feb_ok.png

 

GFS fits mostly the neutral P6 composite before seemingly jumping straight to something akin to the P8 neutral composite (see below, left) with little P7 response - probably due to how it stalls the MJO in P7 for a while; continued eastward propagation is needed to bring about the typical response to activity within a given phase of the RMM plots.

 

The negative NAO-related UK cold potential for late this month and into March depends on how well we can break free of the Nina-like interference and so bring about an MJO P8 response more typical of the Nino base state.

 

So more toward the right-hand composite than the left-hand one. Note how I'm saying 'more toward' here; the composites should never be taken too literally (ideally we'd have different ones for each possible combination of MJO phase, GWO phase and AAM tendency, but there simply aren't enough historical years of obs data to do this meaningfully!).

 

nada_8_feb_mid.pngnino_8_feb_mid.png

 

As you can see - the temperature regime across the UK will be extremely sensitive to how much the interference gives way.

 

Interesting read... some of those point's I agree with 100%, like the interference regarding the MJO.  The connection to the SSWE is interesting, we kind of speculated before but this would imply the SSWE did actually hurt us because it caused the increased MJO activity but then we never reaped much benefit because of its failure to propagate fully.  UGH lol

Some of that I find more useful to right now but less so what is coming.  We are into phase 8 now as of today.  So why week 2 would be trending towards a phase 6 look is well beyond the typical lag effect.  I could see it if we were talking about the next week or so, but by day 10 we should be past any effects from a phase 6 that ended a few days ago.  What is interesting though is the idea that without propagation east the previous signal lags so perhaps that keeps us under the influence of a phase 7 regime.  But the euro as of yesterday did propagate the wave into 1 and still did not show a phase 8 response.  So this is all interesting but there are questions and gaps in some of that imo.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, C.A.P.E. said:

Yeah I saw that, and no I don't buy the big blocky look at this point. Once again that ship has sailed, and it was a ghost ship yet again I'm afraid.

The NAO issue might have something to do with the QBO and how it is moving since late November .

I also mentioned in that other post I did where the met stated the QBO might have halted the proper reponse from the SSWE to downwell in a typical manner. 

and he mentioned again, ( backtracking ) the unusual nature of the SSWE , how it was driven ( wave 2 versus wave 1 ) and the way the main vortex split into 3 may have as he stated diluted the response .  All very interestiing  

maybe just maybe a short bit more sudden wind reversal and then a recovery would have been better in my mind, but I am really reaching.

also think base state leading into to this winter,  December was horrible in terms of the SOI , so again what did that effect have.   

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, C.A.P.E. said:

Yeah I saw that, and no I don't buy the big blocky look at this point. Once again that ship has sailed, and it was a ghost ship yet again I'm afraid.

Yea, surprised that the CFS goes off on a tangent so early in the run.  By week 2 it is already incredibly divergent.  But unfortunately the way it evolves the pattern is highly dependent on the NAO block.  Without that I can see how that becomes the trainwreck the EPS is in week 2 and then week 3-4 are in doubt as well.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, psuhoffman said:

Yea, surprised that the CFS goes off on a tangent so early in the run.  By week 2 it is already incredibly divergent.  But unfortunately the way it evolves the pattern is highly dependent on the NAO block.  Without that I can see how that becomes the trainwreck the EPS is in week 2 and then week 3-4 are in doubt as well.  

Just for curiosity,   I wonder if the way the CFS gets the block  going is from a rather deep North Atlantic Ocean storm , sort of a wave breaking event and a NAO response then it goes form there.  

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, frd said:

The NAO issue might have something to do with the QBO and how it is moving since late November .

I also mentioned in that other post I did where the met stated the QBO might have halted the proper reponse from the SSWE to downwell in a typical manner. 

and he mentioned again, ( backtracking ) the unusual nature of the SSWE , how it was driven ( wave 2 versus wave 1 ) and the way the main vortex split into 3 may have as he stated diluted the response .  All very interestiing  

maybe just maybe a short bit more sudden wind reversal and then a recovery would have been better in my mind, but I am really reaching.

also think base state leading into to this winter,  December was horrible in terms of the SOI , so again what did that effect have.   

 

 

I know I have said this before, but my optimism for a legit -NAO developing the second half of winter was based on a correlation to a CP weak-moderate El Nino. Without atmospheric Nino-ish behavior, I doubt we see anything other than weak/transient NA ridging at this point.

eta- QBO is a factor but was moving in the wrong direction as winter approached. The SSWE probably had impacts as well but that is way beyond my level of understanding. Ultimately, what drives the NAO (the negative phase in particular) is not well understood. It figures one of the most important indices for snow chances here is also one of the most esoteric.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

32 minutes ago, psuhoffman said:

Agree on the retrospective, but with the soi mostly neutral to positive and the mjo cycling around 4-7 all winter the non nino features infecting the pattern made sense. I’m more confused to see a -soi mjo phase 8 and still not get the typical pattern response. 

See and the fact that nobody seems to be able to figure out what the heck has been going on this winter really bothers me. How is it after all these decades of data...that this winter is somehow different from the rest in terms of it utterly baffling even the best met minds? Somebody gotta figure out something! That's what has made this winter mentally taxing at times--nothing seems to be working the way it should (resulting in both good and bad outcomes). It's not just our usual "missing a threat" like a bad track or something...but just the entire bigger picture. All winter it's been "well this usually does this, by why it didn't we don't know". I do hope after this season mets will take a long hard look so that maybe we don't have to go through this as much. End rant...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Maestrobjwa said:

See and the fact that nobody seems to be able to figure out what the heck has been going on this winter really bothers me. How is it after all these decades of data...that this winter is somehow different from the rest in terms of it utterly baffling even the best met minds? Somebody gotta figure out something...that's what has made this winter mentally taxing at times--nothing seems to be working the way it should (resulting in both good and bad outcomes). It's not just our usual "missing a threat" like a bad track or something...but just the entire bigger picture. I do hope after this season mets will take a long hard look so that maybe we don't have to go through this as much. End rant...

like Bob says, somethings the weather just weathers...

obviously there is a causation but we do not understand every detail to to every finite level...and it is possible the causation is linked to various very small sensitive effects and not just one or two major ones making it much harder to identify why thing's aren't going according to expectations. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Seems when you look at the QBO for this winter we have a rare occurence. First time I heard of this combination taking place. @Isotherm was talking about things this morning.

He states there are several things at play in regards to why we have not seen the typical responses including the blocking.

I  brought over this section from his detailed update over , since we had touched on the QBO earlier. 

His entire post covers a lot more, and is over at 33andrain.   

 

He states :  

<<<

 

 Finally, this particular QBO permutation (similar to this year) has only occurred two times since the late 1970s, namely, a +QBO descending at 30mb while the easterly -QBO at 50mb maintained. Those two years were nina like, with amplified intra-seasonal signals. One of those winters was one of the worst winters on record snowfall wise in our local area. 

 

>>>>

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, psuhoffman said:

like Bob says, somethings the weather just weathers...

obviously there is a causation but we do not understand every detail to to every finite level...and it is possible the causation is linked to various very small sensitive effects and not just one or two major ones making it much harder to identify why thing's aren't going according to expectations. 

We're still a long ways away from consistently accurate long range forecasting. Applies to winter, spring, summer, and fall. Sometimes forecasts nail it and sometimes they bust horribly. It's unfair to expect anything more than that for the rest of our lives on the planet. Anyone who bashes long range forecasting has way too high of expectations on what the science is capapble of. I only focus on 2 week patterns and that is fraught with curveballs and unexpected outcomes. 2 month leads? Lol. Yea, expecting accuracy there on a regular basis is flat out unrealistic. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, Maestrobjwa said:

See and the fact that nobody seems to be able to figure out what the heck has been going on this winter really bothers me. How is it after all these decades of data...that this winter is somehow different from the rest in terms of it utterly baffling even the best met minds? Somebody gotta figure out something! That's what has made this winter mentally taxing at times--nothing seems to be working the way it should (resulting in both good and bad outcomes). It's not just our usual "missing a threat" like a bad track or something...but just the entire bigger picture. All winter it's been "well this usually does this, by why it didn't we don't know". I do hope after this season mets will take a long hard look so that maybe we don't have to go through this as much. End rant...

Russian atmospheric collusion 

  • Haha 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, frd said:

Seems when you look at the QBO for this winter we have a rare occurence. First time I heard of this combination taking place. @Isotherm was talking about things this morning.

He states there are several things at play in regards to why we have not seen the typical responses including the blocking.

I  brought over this section from his detailed update over , since we had touched on the QBO earlier. 

His entire post covers a lot more, and is over at 33andrain.   

 

He states :  

<<<

 

 Finally, this particular QBO permutation (similar to this year) has only occurred two times since the late 1970s, namely, a +QBO descending at 30mb while the easterly -QBO at 50mb maintained. Those two years were nina like, with amplified intra-seasonal signals. One of those winters was one of the worst winters on record snowfall wise in our local area. 

 

>>>>

Wonder which two winters he was referring too? (wasn't 1978/79 was it? Lol)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, psuhoffman said:

like Bob says, somethings the weather just weathers...

obviously there is a causation but we do not understand every detail to to every finite level...and it is possible the causation is linked to various very small sensitive effects and not just one or two major ones making it much harder to identify why thing's aren't going according to expectations. 

MJO has become a big driver of this winter, but to me I'm starting to question why/how the PNA has remained so persistently unfavorable, in spite of several attempts at models showing more +PNA looks?  

IMO those 2 tellies have been the wreckin ball here in the east.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Here is that entire post from Isotherm , silly just to provide a few sentences on second thought.  

Great post, thanks Tom ! 

Science is all about advancement, usually due to anomalies that emerge spontaneously in any given dataset. Most scientific advancement occurs not as a function of status quo, but because something atypical, aberrant has arisen in any given field, and the scientists who are independently minded (and financed) enough to pursue those anomalies, are generally the ones who pioneer and "break ground."

 

Before I get into this, just as a disclaimer: it is still entirely possible that there's a "late-game comeback" with respect to this winter, but, it is apparent enough to me at this point, that the winter deserves/warrants a re-analysis post of sorts, regardless of how we finish over the next month, which may or may not ameliorate the widespread busts of this winter. 

 

Over the past few weeks, I've used some time to investigate, and believe I have a cogent hypothesis regarding the failings of this winter. In retrospect, I am rather disappointed in myself, being one who tries to be as meticulous as possible in research, that I missed this; however, it's easier to say such in hindsight, and I may not have detected this, but for the miscalculations of this winter.

 

We had quite a bit of +AAM in the atmosphere this winter, but I think to some extent, in not exactly the "right" places, to induce the necessary countervailing easterlies in the high latitudes. The lack of FT cooperation courtesy of the meager Nino forcing was a major factor, which would have produced more sub-tropical westerlies / +AAM, initiate the STJ, form sub-tropical TROUGHS, and thereby weaken the polar jet. We have had a lot of sub-tropical RIDGES this winter, more La Nina like. 

 

I do strongly believe the issues with respect to this winter's failures goes even deeper. Retrospectively, the tropical forcing pattern during much of autumn 2018 more closely resembled a La Nina, w/ subsidence large-scale over the Pacific, and more uplift over the Indian Ocean. This did attempt to flip somewhat in November, which is partially what led me down the putative rabbit's hole, prior to reversing back toward a Nina-esque tropical forcing regime in December. This was an aberration year in which November's regime certainly did not augur the mean winter pattern.

 

Additionally, the positive 30mb QBO hurt us and destructively interfered more than anyone thought in my opinion. We were expecting that the -50mb QBO, which has high correlation to SSW events (that truly helped!) would countervail. Unfortunately, yes, the negative 50mb QBO produced a SSW, but it also tends to intensify the MJO/intraseasonal signal.

 

Along that vein, I actually think this winter was too UNSTABLE in a number of ways. The MJO simply did not cease: constant propagation from amplified phase to phase, obviating any stable PNA or cold pattern from becoming locked in, compared to winters in which we stabilize in the colder MJO Nino phases. The negative 50mb QBO and thereafter the massive SSW only aided further to augment the incessant MJO signal.

 

Then, the 30mb QBO, which I now think is really more important than the 50mb QBO, aided in stabilizing the tropospheric polar vortex, and decreasing the very necessary tropospheric receptivity to blocking. The unpropitious 30mb QBO, the negative 50mb QBO induced intraseasonal amplification, unstable MJO, and Nina-esque forcing, precluding FT cooperation, sub-tropical +AAM, sub-tropical troughs, and polar easterlies -- were all the factors in my opinion.

 

Furthermore, the negative 50mb QBO, coupled with the cooling tropical stratosphere as a function of the major SSW event (I have noted this before), and the abnormally warm off-equator SST's in the West Pacific, aided in expanded hadley cells, poleward / retraction of the northern stream, yielding a less amplified, more disconnected, Nina-esque type of paradigm. Further, the very cold tropical stratosphere led to a convective disarray, much like a low-cap T-storm day, wherein destructive interference from rossby waves, and MJO amplification in the warm phases was frequent. 

 

The NAO has been trying to go negative this season, evincing pretty positive geopotential heights over Greenland, but the Azores/sub-tropical high never departed, which has kept the NAO calculation technically slightly positive thus far. I think that's Nina-forcing and QBO induced largely. Notice in the below composite, and you'll see even on model data going forward, we try to achieve the higher heights in Greenland, but it doesn't DISCONNECT and DETACH from the Azores sub-tropical high, thus, Europe remains mild, rather than the classic undercutting jet -NAO signal.

 

f57k9x.jpg

 

 

Regarding the AAM point; this is a highly unpropitious / unfavorable diagram right now, if you're looking for high latitude blocking of significance. +AAM in the wrong places. The belt of easterly/-AAM deposits in the sub-tropics tends to induce more nina-esque sub-tropical ridges, and indirectly, intensify the polar jet, tending to countermand sustained blocking.

 

http://gsdmsolutions.com/~gsdm/clim/daily_total/glaam.sig.90day.gif

nfjwcj.gif

 

That needs to alter for any major blocking to occur.

 

Finally, this particular QBO permutation (similar to this year) has only occurred two times since the late 1970s, namely, a +QBO descending at 30mb while the easterly -QBO at 50mb maintained. Those two years were nina like, with amplified intra-seasonal signals. One of those winters was one of the worst winters on record snowfall wise in our local area. 

 

Now, with all that being said, these are hypotheses, and correlations, with arguably debatable causation chains, but evidence of causality in meteorology is quite difficult as it's nearly impossibly to control for confounders and isolate the pertinent variables. Nevertheless, I am satisfied with re-analyzing this winter, and I will certainly not make this particular mistake again.

 

As far as the remainder of this winter: the WWB looks good, as does the MJO propagation, but will the atmosphere respond? Or will the Nina-esque tendencies w/ atypical AAM distribution, and dichotomous QBO keep the blocking muted? That seems to be what models are currently indicating.

 

Like I said, there is a chance for a late-game "save," and then, hopefully, all of the above will simply be good, abstract discussion regarding my take-aways going forward. On the other hand, if there isn't a late game save, the above is effectively a post-mortem on the issues underpinning this winter's miscalculations by virtually everyone if not everyone in the meteorological community this winter.

 

Thanks for reading.

 

Tom

Added this paragraph into the above:

 

A short summary of the problems: The Pacific was the largest problem; stronger blocking would have countervailed, but that wasn't the principal issue. The AO will average slightly negative for the winter, and the NAO probably near neutral to slightly positive. It was the pacific - due to reasons expounded above, and secondarily, the lack of more effective blocking, intraseasonal amplification / hadley cell expansion, due to the SSW and QBO as well as SSTA profile.

 

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, frd said:

Seems when you look at the QBO for this winter we have a rare occurence. First time I heard of this combination taking place. @Isotherm was talking about things this morning.

He states there are several things at play in regards to why we have not seen the typical responses including the blocking.

I  brought over this section from his detailed update over , since we had touched on the QBO earlier. 

His entire post covers a lot more, and is over at 33andrain.   

 

He states :  

<<<

 

 Finally, this particular QBO permutation (similar to this year) has only occurred two times since the late 1970s, namely, a +QBO descending at 30mb while the easterly -QBO at 50mb maintained. Those two years were nina like, with amplified intra-seasonal signals. One of those winters was one of the worst winters on record snowfall wise in our local area. 

 

>>>>

 

 

Frd - my full post is over on my winter outlook thread on the main board here as well, if anyone is interested.

Re: those specific years - yes, extremely rare permutation. The only two years like this one as far the QBO dichotomy since the late 70s were: 1994-95, and 2001-02. Both of which were quite appalling snowfall wise. Obviously, no year is like, but those similarities in Pacific systemic issues and failed propagation / high magnitude tropospheric blocking were there. Again, there's a chance for a late-game save, but enough has happened to warrant a re-analysis of the widespread miscalculations, in my view, by everyone. The Pacific was the principal problem (AO will finished slightly negative, NAO probably near neutral/slightly pos); stronger blocking could have countervailed. Reasons are expounded in my post on the main board thread.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Isotherm said:

 

 

Frd - my full post is over on my winter outlook thread on the main board here as well, if anyone is interested.

Re: those specific years - yes, extremely rare permutation. The only two years like this one as far the QBO dichotomy since the late 70s were: 1994-95, and 2001-02. Both of which were quite appalling snowfall wise. Obviously, no year is like, but those similarities in Pacific systemic issues and failed propagation / high magnitude tropospheric blocking were there. Again, there's a chance for a late-game save, but enough has happened to warrant a re-analysis of the widespread miscalculations, in my view, by everyone. The Pacific was the principal problem (AO will finished slightly negative, NAO probably near neutral/slightly pos); stronger blocking could have countervailed. Reasons are expounded in my post on the main board thread.

Thanks... What do you think is the main cause of the SE ridge and inability to get a PNA ridge on guidance despite -soi and MJO phase 8?  Error or time to admit its just not happening this year, even if we finally get the pacific forcing right?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, psuhoffman said:

Thanks... What do you think is the main cause of the SE ridge and inability to get a PNA ridge on guidance despite -soi and MJO phase 8?  Error or time to admit its just not happening this year, even if we finally get the pacific forcing right?

 

The atmosphere is behaving much more akin to neutral ENSO rather than El Nino this winter, so I would discard the z500 composites for MJO/Ninos evincing the favorability in the p7-8 transition. However, once we're into the core of phase 8 in a couple of days, with strengthening near 8/1 threshold, that effect will manifest with the typical circa 7 day lag. So I expect guidance will finally trend more favorable with the PNA ridging after about February 22nd or so. The MJO wave is more slow-moving and amplified than usual as well, so the effects are enhanced as far as Western trough. Typical MJO progression is faster, but this has been the winter of interference from other tropical waves. Like I said, that post wasn't a total post mortem, and hopefully it will become abstract, especially for you all in the MA who are nearing normal already.

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Isotherm said:

 

The atmosphere is behaving much more akin to neutral ENSO rather than El Nino this winter, so I would discard the z500 composites for MJO/Ninos evincing the favorability in the p7-8 transition. However, once we're into the core of phase 8 in a couple of days, with strengthening near 8/1 threshold, that effect will manifest with the typical circa 7 day lag. So I expect guidance will finally trend more favorable with the PNA ridging after about February 22nd or so. The MJO wave is more slow-moving and amplified than usual as well, so the effects are enhanced as far as Western trough. Typical MJO progression is faster, but this has been the winter of interference from other tropical waves. Like I said, that post wasn't a total post mortem, and hopefully it will become abstract, especially for you all in the MA who are nearing normal already.

Thanks. Yea I abandoned the “Nino plots” a while ago (although the current soi drop has me hold out some hope). But like you said the phase 8/1 neutral is a good look also and by Feb 25+ we should start feeling that affect.  I’ve been sticking too that but man I would like to see the guidance come around soon!  I guess it has made a couple fairly significant shifts at medium leads this winter already so why not again when it sees the mjo influence?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And this is why the EPS looks like crap... if there are other negative influences, such as isotherm talks about...this might not be enough of a signal to overcome that.  The forcing certainly is located in the right places but the wave is weak sauce...figure that after an amped up ape mjo through warm phases all winter it would become a wimp when it finally makes it into cold phases.  lol

ECMF_phase_MANOM_51m_small.gif.e74e746366b857ee261e0fc62d2357e2.gif

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...