Extended Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
259 AM EDT Thu Aug 22 2019
Valid 12Z Sun Aug 25 2019 - 12Z Thu Aug 29 2019
...Overview and Guidance/Predictability Assessment...
Most guidance continues to show a deepening upper trough over the
central part of southern Canada and northern CONUS during Sun-Tue
with depth tending to stabilize thereafter. The overall trough
should have a slow eastward drift with time as a strong eastern
Pacific ridge pushes toward the Pacific Northwest/British Columbia
Coast. As for specifics, clustering is fairly good for leading
energy that sharpens/deepens Sun-Tue and surface low pressure that
strengthens as it tracks from near the U.S.-Canadian border toward
Hudson Bay. However to the west individual models and ensemble
members still depict a wide variety of possibilities for how
shortwave energy may round the top of the Pacific ridge and feed
into the mean trough. Therefore confidence is not very high for
resolving trough details and resulting surface front positions
mid-late period. Run-to-run variability and spread at the surface
and aloft will likely continue for a while. Overall a mostly
operational model blend early in the period followed by a
model/mean blend provides the best balance of detail versus
reflecting forecast uncertainty. Note that the general sharpening
trend of the upper pattern over the eastern Pacific seems to cast
some doubt on the 18Z GFS and new 00Z run that bring the Pacific
ridge farther eastward than the ensemble means or recent ECMWF
runs.
Over the Northeast remaining guidance has recently gravitated
toward a number of recent ECMWF/UKMET runs that have been showing
a New England closed low developing from energy within the
trailing part of a short range upper trough. The ECMWF mean is
the first ensemble mean to depict this closed low. The new 00Z
GEFS mean is showing some trends in the direction of the
operational model cluster.
Across southern latitudes guidance has been fairly consistent in
showing an upper ridge axis persisting over the southern Rockies
and extending back to the central West Coast, with some connection
to the eastern Pacific ridge. The same is true for an upper
weakness forecast to evolve over the Lower Mississippi Valley and
western Gulf Coast region Sun-Mon and then split apart in opposite
directions thereafter. Farther east there are hints that slow
development may occur from a surface trough currently over the
Bahamas, though in much weaker form than depicted by the past
couple UKMET runs. The manual forecast remains close to
yesterday's WPC-NHC coordinated depiction off the southeastern
coast.
...Weather Highlights/Threats...
Areas from the eastern half of the northern-central Plains into
the western/upper Great Lakes will see the potential for one or
more episodes of heavy rainfall and strong to severe convection
during the period. During Sun-Tue there is decent guidance
agreement that strengthening dynamics aloft/Canadian low pressure
will push a cold front across this region while a leading warm
front may provide an additional convective focus. The trailing
part of the cold front may stall for a time over the south-central
Plains. However frontal details and in turn precipitation
distribution/intensity at any particular time become increasingly
uncertain Tue onward in light of guidance spread/variability for
upstream shortwaves aloft.
The combination of moist flow ahead of weak upper level energy
reaching the Lower Mississippi Valley at the start of the week and
weakening surface front over the extreme Southeast may promote
some areas of heavy rainfall from the central Gulf Coast through
the southeastern states. Pockets of significant rain are also
possible with diurnal convection over the Florida Peninsula. The
eventual track/evolution of the surface trough now over the
Bahamas will have to be monitored as well.
The upper low forecast over/near New England early in the period
may produce some scattered diurnally-favored rainfall in a surface
pattern that would otherwise normally provide dry weather.
Highest temperature anomalies of at least plus 10-15F are most
likely over the southern Rockies/High Plains Sun-Mon with some
record highs possible, while similar anomalies are possible over
the central West Coast/Pacific Northwest by Tue-Thu as the Pacific
ridge aloft approaches/reaches the area. The southern Plains
should see a steady cooling trend closer to normal after Mon. On
the other hand the northern into central Plains will likely see
multiple days of well below normal highs with decent coverage of
at least minus 10-15F anomalies Mon-Thu. Over the East expect
moderately cool readings on Sun to trend gradually warmer with
time, reaching modestly above normal levels by midweek.
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
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