Extended Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
316 PM EDT Wed Apr 17 2019
Valid 12Z Sat Apr 20 2019 - 12Z Wed Apr 24 2019
...Overview and Guidance Preferences...
Guidance agrees that mean flow across the Lower 48 will become
less amplified in the wake of the deep system lifting
northeastward over the East during the weekend. As illustrated by
ensemble spaghetti plots, shortwave details will be rather
uncertain for most of the period--starting with energy coming into
the West on day 3 Sat and then for details of Pacific flow
reaching western North America. This favors maintaining a blend
approach for the forecast, mostly using operational guidance early
and then trending toward more ensemble mean input late.
For the departing eastern system the primary consideration is to
downplay the 00Z GFS which becomes faster than consensus after
late Sat. The past day of ECMWF runs has been fairly stable while
GFS runs have been less consistent.
Regarding the weekend western U.S. energy and trailing Pacific
shortwave(s) whose combination becomes one of the primary forecast
problems through the rest of the period, GFS/GEFS runs have been
persistent in showing a deeper and slower overall trough than most
other guidance. However the past couple ECMWF runs have trended
toward digging somewhat more energy into the southwestern
U.S./Rockies and northern Mexico versus previous runs.
Teleconnections relative to negative height anomaly centers well
north of Hudson Bay and the Gulf of Alaska (or farther
west-northwest depending on the model/ensemble mean) all generally
support moderately above normal heights and possibly modest mean
ridging over the west-central U.S. This relationship would
suggest that whatever troughing reaches the West should be a
little weaker and/or faster than depicted in the GFS/GEFS. ECMWF
trends and a GFS-like solution in the 00Z UKMET favor an
intermediate blend approach but tilted just a bit in the
ECMWF/ECMWF mean direction in light of teleconnections.
During the latter half of the period the 00Z CMC/CMC mean are most
aggressive to bring height falls across the northwestern U.S.
Aforementioned teleconnections recommend staying closer to the
GFS/ECMWF and their ensemble means. The fast mean flow and
sensitivity to smaller-scale shortwave details lead to low
confidence for surface front/wave specifics as each cycle of
guidance has shown meaningful changes for eastern Pacific fronts
that should tend to die out upon entering western North America.
Farther east, guidance consensus over the past couple days has
been trending stronger/eastward with eastern Canada high pressure
that will likely help to push a backdoor front southward along the
East Coast next Tue-Wed.
...Weather Highlights/Threats...
The strong system affecting the East to start the weekend may
produce a band of enhanced cool-sector rainfall over parts of the
Ohio Valley/east-central Great Lakes and a leading band of locally
moderate/heavy rainfall focused over parts of New England. Winds
may be fairly strong at some locations on Sat as well. The
overall shortwave trough aloft affecting the western/central U.S.
and associated surface features will spread rain and high
elevation snow over central latitudes of the West and then
rainfall of varying intensity over central/southern parts of the
Plains and possibly the Mississippi Valley. Confidence in
specifics of this precipitation area is lower than desired due to
the guidance spread for details aloft. There is a signal for low
level upslope flow to provide some precipitation enhancement along
the eastern slopes of the central Rockies around Sun. Thereafter
ensemble guidance shows relatively higher probabilities for
locally heavy rainfall over the southern Plains which should see a
multi-day feed of moisture from the Gulf. After a relatively dry
weekend the Pacific Northwest should see periods of precipitation
from Mon onward as multiple fronts approach/cross the region.
Most of this activity should be in the light-moderate range.
The strong eastern system will bring a brief period of chilly
temperatures to the Mississippi Valley/East from Sat into Sun
morning. Highs may be at least 10-15F below normal on Sat from
parts of the Ohio Valley into the Southeast. Aside from a pocket
of below normal highs dropping southward along the High Plains,
temperatures should otherwise be near to above normal given the
flatter trend of flow aloft. Expect the highest warm anomalies
over the West and into the northern High Plains with one or more
days of max and/or min readings 10-20F above normal.
Rausch
Additional 3-7 Day Hazards information can be found on the WPC
medium range hazards chart at:
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/threats/threats.php
Hazards:
- Heavy rain across portions of the Southern Plains, Tue-Wed, Apr
23-Apr 24.
- Flooding possible across portions of the Mid-Atlantic, the Lower
Mississippi Valley, the Central/Southern Appalachians, the
Northern Plains, the Tennessee Valley, the Great Lakes, the
Northeast, the Upper Mississippi Valley, the Southern Plains, and
the Ohio Valley.
- Flooding occurring or imminent across portions of the Northeast,
the Northern Plains, the Mississippi Valley, and the Ohio Valley.
- Flooding likely across portions of the Southeast, the Upper
Mississippi Valley, the Mid-Atlantic, the Northern Plains, and the
Northern Great Basin.
- High winds across portions of the Central Plains and the
Southern Plains, Sun-Mon, Apr 21-Apr 22.
WPC medium range 500mb heights, surface systems, weather grids,
quantitative precipitation, winter weather outlook probabilities
and heat indices are at:
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/5dayfcst500_wbg.gif
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/5dayfcst_wbg_conus.gif
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/5km_grids/5km_gridsbody.html
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/day4-7.shtml
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/wwd/pwpf_d47/pwpf_medr.php?day=4
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/heat_index.shtml