John1122 Posted 23 hours ago Author Share Posted 23 hours ago Been reading on the MJO today as I wait for the Tennessee game to start. The MJO phase only affects North American temperatures apparently in relation to the proposed in the paper, MVP (multivariate PNA). For instance, in the article I am reading, phase 5 is only warm if the MVP is also negative. This is from that paper. "The MVP is the first combined EOF of 20–100-day OLR, 850-hPa streamfunction, and 200-hPa streamfunction over the North Pacific and North America. The North American temperature patterns that follow each phase of the MJO change with the sign of the MVP. For example, real-time multivariate MJO (RMM) phase 5 usually leads to warm anomalies over eastern North America. This relationship was only found when the MVP was negative, and it was not associated with El Niño or La Niña. RMM phase 8, on the other hand, usually leads to cold anomalies. Those anomalies only occur if the MVP is positive, which happens somewhat more frequently during La Niña years. Composite analyses based on combinations of the MJO and the MVP show that variability in the Pacific jet and its associated wave breaking play a key role in determining whether and how the MJO affects North American temperatures." The article can be found here. https://journals.ametsoc.org/configurable/content/journals$002fmwre$002f141$002f11$002fmwr-d-13-00118.1.xml?t:ac=journals%24002fmwre%24002f141%24002f11%24002fmwr-d-13-00118.1.xml 5 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John1122 Posted 23 hours ago Author Share Posted 23 hours ago I remember a few years ago we passed through phase 8 and it didn't get cold. I believe it was an el Niño, so the mentioned/proposed MVP likely wasn't favorable. I do believe ph 7 is generally normally BN here in winter. The article I linked above noted that phase 7 seemed to be unaffected by the state of the proposed MVP. 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Carvers Gap Posted 23 hours ago Share Posted 23 hours ago That is insanely good information, John. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John1122 Posted 22 hours ago Author Share Posted 22 hours ago I do like that we may get to phase 8, and low amp (which is usually the coldest version of 8) and that La Nina is much more likely to produce a +MVP, which means a deep Eastern trough. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Holston_River_Rambler Posted 10 hours ago Share Posted 10 hours ago Pretty nice run of the Euro AIFS at 6z. 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Daniel Boone Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago Trainwreck. SER flexes on Weeklies. Looks like only part of the US that's going to benefit from the weakened PV will be mainly the Rockies and Plains. Euro Weeklies go from well above first 2 weeks to a basic Average look weeks 3 and 4 as SER is finally squashed. Of course, nothing is set in Stone as we've witnessed these change drastically recently. If they're not factoring the MJO much there may be a drastic change if MJO 8 flexes. Fwiw, the CFSv2 Weeklies are even worse. Wall to wall well above Normal. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Carvers Gap Posted 13 minutes ago Share Posted 13 minutes ago The good thing about the Weeklies.....it is still shoulder season and they apparently have missed days 1-10 of December badly - just speaking of the hemispheric long wave pattern. In other words, do we trust a model which likely is going to miss badly? The Weeklies will almost undoubtedly miss embedded cold. Models are swinging back and forth wildly right now. That tells me cold air is incoming into NA. The Mountain West looks likely simply because that has been the pattern since 2015 or so. I really doubt models are done with their wild swings. The GFS trying to "cook up" a Gulf hurricane tells us this could be wild. But really, I think the first week of December has been pretty well documented as being warm. This was a textbook kick the can or Lucy football situation. The second week of December should be a transition w/ the time around Christmas "maybe" being very cold. I also think SSWs upends thing. Within days of it being mentioned, the LR pattern went warm-ish. We have seen that occur several times. That said, I do think we have some chances upcoming. Either way, early December is rarely good snow climatology. I do think there is a bit more pressure to have cold weather in December during Nina years as they are front loaded. If Cosgrove is right, the last half of winter should be good. He certainly has stuck to his ideas and appears to be ready to score a coup of sorts for December. Again, after models missed the Baja low (multiple lows in succession), I have been waiting for the dust to settle so to speak. If the end result of this is getting a cold or seasonal air mass around the holidays...I will gladly take it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Carvers Gap Posted 9 minutes ago Share Posted 9 minutes ago One last note, the Euro Weeklies are very dependent upon the first two weeks of the 0z deterministic. I knew today's Weeklies would be warm. It was simply an extrapolation of the deterministic which is struggling greatly with what is likely Southwest feedback.. It would not surprise me to see them snap back cold if the MJO continues to rotate. I have definitely seen models not recognize the MJO impact until day 10-12, and we are not to that point yet. I would suggest modeling will trend much colder as it becomes clear to modeling that we are entering a phase 7-8 rotation, and I wouldn't be surprised to see it rotate right back to 6-7-8. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Carvers Gap Posted 7 minutes ago Share Posted 7 minutes ago FWIW, the 12z GEFS looked good in terms of cold. I noticed that one of the mets in the MA noted that the GEFS is running circles around other modeling right now in the extended range. I don't have that data, and am to lazy to look...so just look in their December thread for reference. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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