Alaska Extended Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
651 PM EST Fri Nov 26 2021
Valid 12Z Tue Nov 30 2021 - 12Z Sat Dec 04 2021
...Well below normal temperatures over the west and some other
Interior areas should moderate by next weekend...
...Potential for heavy precipitation along the southeastern coast
and Panhandle into midweek...
...Overview...
A deep upper trough aligned near the western coast of the mainland
into midweek will gradually trend weaker as it progresses across
the mainland and Gulf of Alaska. This trough should guide a
short-range North Pacific storm along a path just east of Kodiak
Island by around the start of the extended period early Tuesday
and then to the southern coast of the mainland by Wednesday,
bringing a period of enhanced precipitation to the southeastern
coast and Panhandle. Slow movement of the upper trough will
promote persistent though weaker low pressure over the southern
coast/Gulf of Alaska into Friday, followed by more eastward
movement. Farther west, guidance continues to show a compact
system tracking through the western Aleutians on Tuesday and then
descending into the Pacific. An amplified upper ridge will likely
cross the Aleutians/Bering Sea during the latter half of the week
with trailing dynamics then pushing a front across this region.
Most guidance suggests this energy may significantly erode the the
upper ridge by Saturday. Higher latitude flow should gain a
little progression later in the period, helping to bring surface
high pressure across the northern mainland into northwestern
Canada by Friday-Saturday.
...Guidance Evaluation/Preferences...
A blend of 12Z operational models from Tuesday into early Thursday
followed by a transition to about half models/half means by day 8
Saturday represented the best ideas of guidance and provided
generally modest changes from continuity. Models continue to
display some spread and run-to-run variability for the main low
forecast to be near Kodiak Island as of early Tuesday as well as a
possible leading frontal wave that could reach the Panhandle. The
small scale of important details keeps predictability low for
specifics several days out in time, favoring a conservative
average approach. This mean of operational models did show more
of a hint at the leading frontal wave today while it trended
weaker with low pressure along the southern coast by Thursday.
Continuity is good for the western Aleutians system on Tuesday
though the 12Z GFS strayed to the deep/northern side of the spread
after Tuesday and there has been some divergence in recent runs
for the ultimate evolution over the Pacific. Later in the period
the 12Z ECMWF provided what appeared to be a very favorable
adjustment versus prior recent runs--trending to less input of
Arctic shortwave energy and a somewhat farther east upper trough
axis from the mainland southward, more in line with the ensemble
means. The preferred scenario still has low pressure evolving
over the Northeast Pacific but with the axis of greatest moisture
likely to stay to the south of the Panhandle. Some timing
differences still exist for the upstream ridge aloft and trailing
shortwave/surface front but a faster trend in the 12Z ECMWF has
narrowed the gap. Operational model signals for better definition
of the shortwave versus the means into day 8 Saturday favored
maintaining about half weight of the models to the end of the
forecast.
...Weather/Hazard Highlights...
Over Southcentral and the Panhandle, arrival of low pressure into
the Gulf of Alaska and then persistence along the southern coast
should lead to min temperatures that are mostly above normal and
highs within a few degrees on either side of normal on most days.
Otherwise a majority of the mainland will likely see below to well
below normal temperatures into late week, aside from a few pockets
of near to slightly above normal readings over north-central
areas. Coldest temperatures versus normal should be over the
southwest. Eventual weakening and progression of the upper trough
over the state should promote a moderating trend by next Saturday.
The initial Gulf storm will bring a period of enhanced
precipitation from the southern coast through the Panhandle during
Tuesday-Wednesday. Highest totals should be from the eastern part
of the Kenai Peninsula through the Panhandle. Expect somewhat
lighter precipitation to linger over this area through the rest of
the week as low pressure remains over or near the Gulf in some
fashion. Early in the period the flow around the storm will
produce a broad area of brisk to strong winds from the eastern
Bering Sea through the northeastern Pacific. Mostly light
precipitation should accompany the system tracking through the
western half of the Aleutians around Tuesday. After midweek an
area of precipitation and fairly strong winds will push across the
Bering Sea and Aleutians ahead of a frontal system. This system
will likely weaken considerably by the time it reaches the eastern
Bering Sea but some of its moisture may still extend into the
mainland by next Friday or Saturday.
Rausch
Hazards:
- Heavy precipitation across portions of mainland Alaska, Mon, Nov
29.
- High winds across portions of mainland Alaska, Mon, Nov 29.
- Heavy precipitation across portions of the Alaska Panhandle and
mainland Alaska, Tue-Wed, Nov 30-Dec 1.
- Much below normal temperatures across portions of mainland
Alaska, Mon-Tue, Nov 29-Nov 30.
- Much below normal temperatures across portions of mainland
Alaska, Mon-Fri, Nov 29-Dec 3.
Additional 3-7 Day Hazard Information can be found on the WPC
medium range hazards outlook chart at:
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/threats/threats.php
WPC medium range Alaskan products including 500mb, surface
fronts/pressures progs and sensible weather grids can also be
found at:
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/alaska/ak_5dayfcst500_wbg.gif
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/alaska/akmedr.shtml
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/alaska/ak_5km_gridsbody.html