Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

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

May 2019 General Discussions & Observations Thread


Rtd208
 Share

Recommended Posts

32 minutes ago, Rtd208 said:

Larry Cosgrove thinks we will start to dry out and warm up in the longer term outlook of his weekly newsletter. He also says we are probably going to have a hazy, hot and humid summer.

Don't buy that for a second. We haven't been in a dry pattern for many months now and with a firehouse jet continuing, that's not likely to change.

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

32 minutes ago, bluewave said:

NYC has had a positive temperature departure 8 out of the last 9 Mays since 2010.

2018...+4.5

2017...-1.3

2016...+0.4

2015...+6.1

2014...+1.6

2013...+0.4

2012...+2.7

2011....+2.1

2010...+2.9

 

When will they realize 30 year or even 15 year averages are a thing of the past.

AN is the new normal now. Top 5-10 months are the new AN months. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 4/27/2019 at 4:36 AM, Rtd208 said:

May temps look like they will start off a little below normal, hopefully warmer times will be ahead thereafter. 

Post them here.

...anyone see the first heat-wave down the road?

winter time we all look for the cold /snowy conditions..me included.

now its time to see when the 1st heat wave will commence.

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, tim said:

...anyone see the first heat-wave down the road?

winter time we all look for the cold /snowy conditions..me included.

now its time to see when the 1st heat wave will commence.

The first 90 degree potential in May will take longer than last year. Newark hit 90 on May 2nd and 94 on the 3rd with record warmth. This year we’ll have to deal with a warm frontal/backdoor boundary nearby for the first week of May.

Newark May 90 degree days since 2010:

5-2-18.....90....5-3-18....94...5-15-18...92...5-26-18...92

5-17-17...92....5-18-17..92...5-19-17...93

5-25-16...91...5-26-16...93...5-28-16...96

5-25-15...90...5-26-15...91

2014....None

5-30-13....93....5-31-13....94

5-28-12...91....5-29-12....92

5-30-11...92

5-26-10...95

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, bluewave said:

The first 90 degree potential in May will take longer than last year. Newark hit 90 on May 2nd and 94 on the 3rd with record warmth. This year we’ll have to deal with a warm frontal/backdoor boundary nearby for the first week of May.

Newark May 90 degree days since 2010:

5-2-18.....90....5-3-18....94...5-15-18...92...5-26-18...92

5-17-17...92....5-18-17..92...5-19-17...93

5-25-16...91...5-26-16...93...5-28-16...96

5-25-15...90...5-26-15...91

2014....None

5-30-13....93....5-31-13....94

5-28-12...91....5-29-12....92

5-30-11...92

5-26-10...95

 

Yeah forgot about  last May's early heat... 93° here on the 3rd.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Root for the more optimistic Euro forecast on Thursday. Hopefully, the 588 DM ridge near NC allows the warm front to get far enough north. While the NAM usually does really well with backdoors, Thursday is just outside its best range for details like that.

 

FED80984-7370-46EB-9201-8CD4553A4A83.thumb.png.1c31cc614cd013cef2eb14c4bb3e3e59.png

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 4/29/2019 at 8:38 AM, bluewave said:

The first 90 degree potential in May will take longer than last year. Newark hit 90 on May 2nd and 94 on the 3rd with record warmth. This year we’ll have to deal with a warm frontal/backdoor boundary nearby for the first week of May.

Newark May 90 degree days since 2010:

5-2-18.....90....5-3-18....94...5-15-18...92...5-26-18...92

5-17-17...92....5-18-17..92...5-19-17...93

5-25-16...91...5-26-16...93...5-28-16...96

5-25-15...90...5-26-15...91

2014....None

5-30-13....93....5-31-13....94

5-28-12...91....5-29-12....92

5-30-11...92

5-26-10...95

 

This summer probably wont be nearly as hot/warm as last summer was.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

April ended with a mean temperature of 55.4° (2.4° above normal) in New York City's Central park. That was the 9th warmest April figure on record for that location.

The April 16-30 period had a mean temperature of 57.3°. That fell within the range (+/- 1 standard deviation) from the mean temperature following cases where the AO had dropped to -2.500 or below during April 1-10. The mean temperature for such prior cases was 56.3° and the standard deviation was 2.3°

The ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly was 0.1°C and the Region 3.4 anomaly was +0.9°C for the week centered around April 24. For the past six weeks, the ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly has averaged +0.05°C and the ENSO Region 3.4 anomaly has averaged +0.93°C. Conditions consistent with El Niño should persist into at least the first week of May in Region 3.4.

The SOI was -1.66 today.

Today's preliminary value of the Arctic Oscillation (AO) was -0.282.

On April 29, the MJO was in Phase 4 at an amplitude of 1.787 (RMM). The amplitude was lower than the April 28-adjusted figure of 2.140.

Since 1974, there were four cases when the MJO reached an amplitude of 1.750 or above during Phase 2 during the April 20-30 period. The mean May 1-10 temperature was 58.8° vs. the 1981-2018 average of 60.2°. 75% of those cases were cooler than the 1981-2018 average. However, during May cases when the ENSO Region 3.4 anomaly was +0.50°C or above for the month, the May 1-10 temperature averaged 60.8°. Therefore, it is likely that the first 10 days of May will probably wind up with a mean temperature of 59.2°-61.2°. The latest guidance has an estimated mean of 60.1°.

Going forward, May looks likely to be both warmer and wetter than normal. The latest EPS weekly guidance has swung from cooler than normal to near normal. The CFSv2 favors somewhat warmer than normal conditions. Based on applying sensitivity analysis to the latest guidance, there is an implied 52% probability that May will wind up warmer than normal in New York City.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, bluewave said:

Root for the more optimistic Euro forecast on Thursday. Hopefully, the 588 DM ridge near NC allows the warm front to get far enough north. While the NAM usually does really well with backdoors, Thursday is just outside its best range for details like that.

The backdoor tends to win out most of the time from April to mid May. Big temp bust on Thursday I think, could be near 80F or in the 50s/60s. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mt.Holly & Upton ref late week/weekend Temps, heavy rain/storms. Really excellent discussion from Mt.Holly

Mt.Holly:

 

.SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/... 
  In "short," what a mess. 
   
  Starting with the convection ongoing in the central/southern 
  plains into the Midwest, the models performed noticeably  
  better than with the prior day`s convection, but there were  
  still some issues (mostly with convection allowing for  
  front/outflow boundary propagation displaced southeastward from  
  previous progs). Additionally, the models (hi-res and coarser  
  operational) whiffed on the long-lasting weak mesoscale  
  convective system moving from the Ohio Valley through much of PA 
  before dissipating in MD/DE and adjacent areas this evening. 
   
  I start with the above because, as discussed last night, the 
  relatively poor verification of convection (on Monday) has  
  wreaked havoc with the model forecasts (and trends) during the  
  past 24 hours and will likely continue today. For example, the  
  NAM surface pressure trends the past 24 hours have been for much 
  higher pressure in the Great Lakes/Northeast Thursday and  
  Friday (with implications of this to be discussed at length  
  below), and the GFS has trended with slightly lower pressure in  
  much of the Southeast through the period. The GFS has also  
  trended slightly weaker and faster with the ridging in the  
  eastern U.S. All of these trends make sense to me to some degree 
  given the delayed onset of widespread convection in the central 
  U.S. and the somewhat more progressive nature of the mesoscale  
  phenomena associated with the storms (and upscale effects on  
  larger-scale features). 
   
  There continues to be a sizable amount of disagreement of 
  timing/location of convection downstream in the eastern U.S. 
  associated with the plethora of perturbations convectively  
  generated or attendant to the widespread storms in the central  
  U.S. However, there appears to be some model convergence for  
  Thursday. Two perturbations appear to eject from the larger- 
  scale trough in the central U.S. The first comes Thursday  
  morning, with some showers/storms expected to initiate in  
  portions of the Northeast/Mid-Atlantic during the afternoon. The 
  00z NAM Nest develops some rather vigorous convection (with  
  hints of this in the 00z RGEM as well), and the environment is  
  certainly appearing increasingly favorable thermodynamically  
  (MLCAPE/SBCAPE approaching 1000 J/kg during the afternoon). With 
  deep-layer vertical shear of 30-40 kts, could at least see some 
  strong (perhaps a few severe) storms during peak heating. Exact 
  placement needs to be worked out, with some indications that  
  areas south of Interstate 78 appear most at risk. Notably, the  
  00z GFS/ECMWF develop convection in the northern Mid-Atlantic  
  during the afternoon as well, with precipitation lingering for  
  much of the night as the second perturbation approaches. 
   
  The big wild card will be what transpires upstream of these 
  perturbations. The 00z NAM blasts the region with onshore flow 
  and much cooler and more stable air by Friday (differences of 
  20+ degrees in surface temps; note the implications of higher  
  pressure in the northern U.S. mentioned above). Meanwhile, the  
  GFS and ECMWF are much warmer, inducing southerly flow as a  
  third perturbation approaches the region on Friday. Should these 
  latter solutions materialize, another line of loosely-  
  organized convection is expected to develop and move through the 
  area. However, the NAM solution would suggest more substantial  
  convection is in question and may be displaced south/west of the 
  area. Given what has transpired the past 24 hours, it is quite  
  difficult to discount the colder NAM solution and have at least  
  incorporated it into the temp/dew point forecast Thursday and  
  Friday. I also capped PoPs on Friday to chance given the large  
  discrepancies that have developed with the surface pattern among 
  the models. It is worthy of noting the NAM looks suspiciously  
  dry in the Northeast for much of this period and appears to be  
  an outlier with the convective evolution upstream as well. 
   
  For the weekend...the front appears to linger close enough to 
  the area to allow a potentially significant storm to affect the 
  area. The 00z GFS/ECMWF eject a southern-stream vort max from an 
  upstream/amplified trough in the plains (around 18z Friday) and 
  rapidly intensify it as it phases with a northern-stream 
  perturbation on Saturday and Saturday night. Rapid cyclogenesis 
  occurs in the Mid-South and Ohio Valley during this period, with 
  widespread convection expected to develop in its vicinity. This 
  system approaches the area Saturday night, so have increased 
  PoPs during this period substantially. 
   
  As could probably be deduced already, the temperature forecast 
  is subject to large errors given the huge uncertainty with the 
  surface pattern, especially Thursday night and Friday. Errors of 
  10 or more degrees are possible for much of the period. 
   
  && 
   
  .LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... 
  The developing low to our southwest on Saturday appears to move 
  through or near our area on Sunday. Though the low remains 
  fairly weak from a sea-level pressure magnitude standpoint,  
  there will be a rather impressive setup for high QPF should the  
  00z GFS/ECMWF verify. With right-entrance region dynamics  
  provided by a retreating anticyclonic 250-mb jet streak in New  
  England and intensifying differential cyclonic vorticity  
  advection in the midlevels, the high-octane air provided by the  
  slowly retreating subtropical ridge in the eastern U.S. will  
  provide a highly favorable environment for heavy rainfall. The  
  QPF from the 00z GFS and ECMWF is quite impressive, with 1-2+  
  inch amounts in a 6-12 hour period in most of the CWA. That  
  spells flooding potential, and I have highlighted this in the  
  Hazardous Weather Outlook. There may also be potential for warm- 
  sector convection in portions of the CWA, but this is quite  
  uncertain since models are just beginning to converge on a  
  solution here. Notably, the CMC was discounted owing to its  
  suspiciously high influence of tropical convection in the  
  Bahamas. 
   
  Of course, a lot of uncertainty remains with the above scenario. 
  This involves phasing systems, a highly unpredictable 
  predecessor front, and antecedent convection allowing for the 
  synoptic-scale players to materialize. 
   
  There appears to be a brief break in the action Monday and 
  possibly Tuesday before another cold front approaches, perhaps 
  reloading a very similar pattern thereafter. 
   
  && 
   

Upton:

 

.SHORT TERM /6 PM THIS EVENING THROUGH 6 PM THURSDAY/...
Chances for light rain will increase tonight as a sfc warm
front approaches. Areas of fog should also develop mainly in
coastal sections and mainly after midnight as the warm front
nears, and this fog could become locally dense.

After dog burns off thu morning, big questions as to how far
north and east the warm front will lift through for a time on
Thu before a back door cold front pushes to the south and west.
There is about 20 degrees of spread between the coolest and
warmest model guidance, from the lower 60s to lower 80s across
NE NJ, and lower 50s to lower 70s across SE CT. Forecast takes
more of a middle ground approach between the NAM and ECMWF,
ranging from the mid 50s across eastern areas to near 70 in NE
NJ.

&&

.LONG TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/...
A cloudy and wet pattern will persist across the area as deep layer
ridging remains firm over the western Atlantic and a long wave
trough lingers across the western U.S. The ridge axis then
retrogrades and rebuilds across the Central U.S. by early next week.
Initially the extended period will be dominated by southwesterly
flow aloft, advecting Gulf moisture into the region, with periods of
rain possible. Thereafter, troughing becomes more prevalent across
the Northeast as a result of the ridge building upstream.

For Thursday night, confluent flow aloft will shift offshore, with
the associated surface high following, allowing a back door cold
front to move through the area quite quickly overnight. The boundary
then stalls slightly to the west during the day time, through may
begin to return northward as a warm front as flow shifts to a more
southerly direction ahead of the next approaching front. There is
some uncertainty as to potential destabilization, depending on how
far the warm front can progress, but with height falls and the
quickly following cold front, there is potential for a rumble of
thunder across the interior. Expect temperatures to be coolest
across the coastal areas for Friday. Should the warmer guidance pan
out across the interior, temps over western zones could end up about
10-15 warmer than currently forecast.

The cold front then stalls offshore Saturday with a wave of low
pressure developing along it to our SW. The low eventually passes to
our south at some point Sunday into Sunday evening. This keeps the
threat of more rain through the entire period, but will cap PoPs at
50% this far out. If the low passes farther to the south on Sunday,
similar to the Canadian solution, then rainfall chances will be
lower than currently forecast.

A cold front then brings low chances of showers and Monday, then
will go with a dry forecast for Tuesday into Tuesday night as weak
high pressure builds in behind the front.

&&
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

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