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El Nino 2023-2024


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1 hour ago, GaWx said:

 The 3.4 OISST is not going in the right direction if you want a super Nino:

IMG_8745.png.94a2aa2cdc4fb60436c2e9e9327a0a97.png

No, it’s not I guess for those who were predicting a super El Niño now I guess they will just have to wait for the next El Niño for those who were predicting a  strong El Niño Congratulations.

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 Here is a screenshot of a list of major SSWs broken down by split vs displacement: noteworthy splits include 1/30/58 (El Nino), 1/8/68, 2/2/73 (El Nino), 1/9/77 (El Nino though not listed), 1/2/85, 12/8/87 (El Nino), 1/18/03 (El Nino), 2/9/10 (El Nino), and 1/2/19 (El Nino; too recent to be listed here but was a split). Note that there have been 7 split SSWs since 1958 during El Nino that were early enough to impact met. winter and all 7 were notable in terms of subsequent cold and/or historic E US winter storms:

 

1765105202_Screenshot2023-12-24at09-18-14(PDF)DependenceofLunarTideoftheEquatorialElectrojetontheWintertimePolarVortexSolarFluxandQBO.thumb.png.0a8d373e0b040d391d2d22cd8d749b0d.png

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2 minutes ago, GaWx said:

 Here is a list of major SSWs broken down by split vs displacement: noteworthy ones include 1/30/58 (El Nino), 1/8/68, 2/2/73 (El Nino), 1/2/85, 12/8/87 (El Nino), 1/18/03 (El Nino), 2/9/10 (El Nino), and 1/2/19 (El Nino; too recent to be listed here but was a split). Note that there have been 6 split SSWs since 1958 during El Nino that were early enough to impact met. winter and all 6 were notable in terms of subsequent cold and/or historic E US winter storms:

 

1765105202_Screenshot2023-12-24at09-18-14(PDF)DependenceofLunarTideoftheEquatorialElectrojetontheWintertimePolarVortexSolarFluxandQBO.thumb.png.0a8d373e0b040d391d2d22cd8d749b0d.png

My 12/25 to Jan 8 window may work out, afterall. Now we need to watch exactly how it plays out because the devil is in the details with these things, but I have a feeling all hell will break loose for February. 

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21 hours ago, jbenedet said:

If you’re looking for significant cold this is a West of Mississippi River story. Several pieces of guidance are pointing in this direction. At this point, I think the East-central US has some reason for excitement in January; I.e. big snow potential. Not seeing this elsewhere at the moment. This is a N to AN look for the east coast, AN favored in the northeast.

 

Why would you want the PV lobe over NE? I have no interest in January 2004.

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1 hour ago, ORH_wxman said:

That’s a very strong cross-guidance signal for a split for 10+ days out. Impressive to see the convergence on the different ensemble suites. 

And GFS/GEFS has a notable strong vortex bias, so extra encouraging to see it onboard as well. Assuming this holds and we get an official SSW around the 3rd, question becomes how fast it impacts the troposphere on our side of the planet.

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I'll just leave this here.

Boston, <=1.0" Snow by Dec 31, El Nino
-------------------
1941-42 - 23.9 (Oct-May snow)
1953-54 - 23.6
1957-58 - 44.7
2006-07 - 17.1
2015-16 - 36.1
2018-19 - 27.4
--------------------
Mean: 28.8" (Oct-May Snow)

NYC (Central Park), <=1.0" Snow by Dec 31, El Nino
-------------------
1941-42 - 11.3 (Oct-May snow)
1965-66 - 21.4
1972-73 -  2.8 
1977-78 - 50.7
1986-87 - 23.1
1991-92 - 12.6
1994-95 - 11.8
1997-98 -  5.5
2006-07 - 12.4
2015-16 - 32.8
-------------------
Mean: 18.4" (Oct-May Snow)

Philly, <=1.0" Snow by Dec 31, El Nino
-------------------
1941-42 -  5.1 (Oct-May snow)
1958-59 -  5.1
1965-66 - 27.4
1972-73 -  0.0
1977-78 - 54.9 
1986-87 - 25.7
1991-92 -  4.7
1994-95 -  9.8
1997-98 -  0.8
2004-05 - 30.4
2006-07 - 13.4
2014-15 - 27.0
2015-16 - 27.5
2019-20 -  0.3
-------------------
Mean: 16.6" (Oct-May Snow)

ABQ, 0.0-2.0" Snow by Dec 31, El Nino (1.0" so far)
-------------------
1939-40 -  4.0 (Oct-May snow)
1963-64 - 10.0
1969-70 -  7.1
1977-78 - 11.5
1994-95 -  9.4
2002-03 -  2.8
2009-10 -  4.2
2014-15 - 15.2
------------------
Mean: 8.0" (Oct-May Snow)

No snow on the GFS or Euro for the Northeast cities through 12/31.

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11 hours ago, stadiumwave said:

 

Several ensembles & the control have split for the last 3-4 runs. This is the first GFS operational run that I recall splitting.

And we can now add the 12Z GFS op to the split SSW list.

 Here’s the way I look at the SPV:

-Weak much better than strong

-SSW better than not

-Major SSW better than minor. E 1/3 of US affected most.

-Split major seems to be somewhat better than displacement major

-Split during El Niño may be best of all though displacement during Nino normally good enough

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2 hours ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

Why would you want the PV lobe over NE? I have no interest in January 2004.

def not.
 

Point is, balance of guidance has the core of the PV towards the mountain west. 

That latest run of the GEFS looks best though for our region. But some caution on that—it’s a bit misleading— you can still see height falls greatest over the SW on that run.

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The main difference these days between El Niños and La Ninas in December is the location of the +10 or greater departures. During El Niños the warmest departures are in the north with the +PNA. They shift to the south during the La Ninas with the -PNA. Getting 3 Decembers since 2015 with any section of the US going higher than +10 is pretty extreme. +10 or greater departure months used to be very rare. The +10 at some stations last January in the Northeast was a 4th month which was during a La Niña. A 5th month was the +10 in the Southeast in February 2018. January 2020 which was neutral came close in some locations.

 

 

 

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14 hours ago, GaWx said:

This 0Z 12/24 GFS is almost definitely a major SSW (we'll find out by afternoon) and is the first run I can recall with an actual split of the SPV.

0Z 12/24 (orange) barely makes major SSW status with it a hair under 0 m/s at the end and still dropping. The 0Z CDN ens mean (blue) is at 2 days in a row at a major. But the 0Z GEFS mean never gets below +17.

IMG_8761.thumb.png.ca8a3b9ec469835d834d876ed74791a4.png

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