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The Return of the 12/5 Snowstorm


SnowenOutThere
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8 minutes ago, SnowenOutThere said:

GFS looks to be pretty similar to 12z so far (though out West is possibly slightly improved?) Didn't matter, if anything the run is a slight step backwards with the energy being more ribbony 

Gfs may be more interested in the follow up wave (dec 8-9)

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Strong upper jet streak induces stretched/elongated vorticity ribbon underneath. Not going to get a widespread or major event with this, but rather a possible narrow corridor of decent lift that could produce a light to moderate event. Hard to say exactly where that might occur at this juncture but it appears it will be somewhere in our region or maybe even a bit south. Given the h5 look on the Euro it *should* be cold enough for a bit of snow.

1764968400-vhuT8rDPv44.png

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15 minutes ago, Weather Will said:

I mean an early thread jinxing a storm is silly, but there is really not a significant/ solid threat for Friday based on current guidance.

we just had a 25 page thread for sleet and cold rain. It’s okay to start a thread for this potential 

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1 hour ago, CAPE said:

Very impressed with your posts lately. 

Thank you! We finally got to the actual H5 Jet stream ageostrophic wind etc part of my course last month! Of course, it wasn't anything crazy but its given me just enough tools to begin identifying how the upper air connects to the surface and making predictions. That said, I'm very confident that this is very much a Dunning-Kruger effect where I know just enough to make broad forecasts and identify what I we need models to trend and make predictions from an earlier hour to but I am unable to "correct" model behavior as I just don't have the confidence (wait till Spring 2027 and Synoptic met for that) to do so. So with that said please feel free to correct any mistakes I make as it literally might save my grade! I also should of course mention that a lot of this knowledge was built through posts by you @psuhoffman @brooklynwx99 @high risk @WxUSAF@Terpeast @Bob Chill alongside the many other more occasional in depth breakdowns by our "on-event" posters. It's just this class has finally given me just enough to start synthesizing my own analyses so genuinely thank you. 

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23 minutes ago, CAPE said:

Strong upper jet streak induces stretched/elongated vorticity ribbon underneath. Not going to get a widespread or major event with this, but rather a possible narrow corridor of decent lift that could produce a light to moderate event. Hard to say exactly where that might occur at this juncture but it appears it will be somewhere in our region or maybe even a bit south. Given the h5 look on the Euro it *should* be cold enough for a bit of snow.

1764968400-vhuT8rDPv44.png

To be honest the upper winds is where my knowledge gets confused as we went over how the jet forms (I can tell you why the jet increases on the northward heading side of an upper low and decreases when heading south) but didn't go over the practical effect on the surface. I'm currently trying to research it on my own but generally it confuses me as my intuition says that areas of lift should form where winds are accelerating in the upper atmosphere (as it induces lower level lift as air is pulled into the upper flow) yet I know from the 4 quadrant model that understand I have is flawed. Additionally, I would've expected that stronger upper winds generally encourages cyclogenesis and didn't consider that it could actually hurt consolidation (which admittedly does make sense). Basically, what upper wind profile would actually be conductive to forming a strong surface low pressure? 

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