Extended Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
232 PM EDT Sat Jun 12 2021
Valid 12Z Tue Jun 15 2021 - 12Z Sat Jun 19 2021
...Record to dangerous heat continuing through next week across
much of the Interior West and through midweek over the northern
Plains...
...Extreme heat possible for the Southwest/California next week...
...Overview...
Today's guidance maintains reasonable continuity for the general
pattern evolution. The very strong upper ridge centered over the
Four Corners states next week may weaken somewhat by
Friday-Saturday as it flattens east-west. Vigorous shortwave
energy brushing the Northwest and tracking around the Four Corners
ridge will push a cold front across the northern half of the West
and Plains, eventually reaching northern parts of the East by next
weekend. This energy should re-establish eastern North American
mean troughing after it kicks out a leading trough expected to
persist near the East Coast into Thursday. Expect the western
upper ridge to support a large area of temperatures that
approach/exceed daily record values over portions the Interior
West/Rockies on most days next week and extending into California
during the latter half of the week--making for a hazardous heat
wave event. Some of this heat will extend into the northern
Plains through at least midweek as well. In the Gulf of Mexico,
there is still the potential for a disturbance to form near the
Bay of Campeche and move northward late in the week but also a
large degree of uncertainty in its evolution. The National
Hurricane Center continues to monitor this area in its outlooks.
...Guidance/Predictability Evaluation...
The models and means continue to agree well for the strength and
position of the Four Corners ridge/upper high through the period.
Early-mid period strength of the upper ridge is quite remarkable
with even the ensemble means showing 500mb height anomalies of
+2.5-3 standard deviations over parts of the Rockies/High Plains
and even greater than that north of the Canadian border on
Tuesday. Such heights may breach record high heights for this
early in the warm season. Models/means all show some weakening of
the ridge by Friday and especially Saturday as the flow into the
PacNW squashes the northern side. For the initial eastern North
America upper trough, most guidance has gravitated to a common
solution but the 00Z CMC differs with some details and was not
preferred. It may still take some time to resolve the finer
details of surface low evolution near New England. Among the
00Z/06Z guidance an operational model blend represented consensus
well, with relatively more weighting to the GFS/ECMWF vs the UKMET.
Not counting the 00Z CMC, there is decent agreement in principle
for the shortwave ejecting through the Northwest and around the
western ridge, ultimately settling into the long-term mean trough
over eastern North America. Meanwhile models and individual
ensemble members showed considerable difficulty in handling the
complexities of North Pacific flow--leading some guidance to
become up to 180 degrees out of phase for eastern Pacific/western
North America features by late in the week/weekend. The rather
low amplitude flow across the North Pacific is at least one
factor, and suggests clarity may not exist until closer to the
short range. An operational model blend for the first half of the
period trending to an even weight of models/means (along with
continuity) later represents consensus well for the leading
shortwave. Differences in the 06Z/00Z GFS in the East led to a
preference for the latter rather than the former (which was
perhaps too bullish with low pressure off the Northeast coast late
Thu into Fri).
Latest guidance continues to show the possibility for some degree
of tropical development to emerge from the Bay of Campeche and
track northward over the Gulf of Mexico. 00Z model/ensemble cycle
trended slower with some eastern tracks as well and/or multiple
centers. Ensemble members are still sufficiently diverse to keep
their means from showing much definition. Needless to say there
is still considerable uncertainty. The manual forecast reflected
a consensus approach via the 17Z NHC-WPC coordination, with a weak
feature looming just south of the west-central Gulf Coast by early
next Saturday.
...Weather Highlights/Hazards...
The most extreme anomalies within the area of intense
western/northern U.S. heat will be on Tuesday when areas over the
northern half of the Rockies/High Plains and possibly into parts
of the Great Basin may see highs 20-30F above normal. It may not
be out of the question for one or more locations to set a new
record high for June. The front progressing eastward from the
Northwest Tuesday onward will bring a brief cooler trend across
northern parts of the West into midweek and then into the northern
Plains. The southern half to two-thirds of the West should see
highs consistently 10-20F above normal for most of the period,
including a westward expansion of the heat into California from
about Wednesday onward. Northern areas should also rebound to
well above normal readings late in the week as well, though with
some uncertainty due to guidance spread for details of flow aloft.
Morning lows should also be 10-20F above normal over a majority
of the West through the period, as well as the northern Plains
into Thursday. Expect numerous daily records for highs/warm lows
for most of the period. The combination of extreme daily
temperatures and duration, as well as being rather early in the
season for such an event, should make this a dangerous heat wave
for sensitive groups. Excessive heat warnings are in place for
many areas of the Southwest next week where temperatures may climb
well into the 110s in the lower deserts with low temperatures only
in the 80s and 90s.
The eastern trough aloft and associated surface waves/fronts will
produce some areas of rain and thunderstorms of varying intensity
and during mid-late week some moderately below normal temperatures
(perhaps 5 to about 10F below normal). The southern tier may see
rain from both a wavy front and typical diurnal convective
activity. Portions of the Gulf Coast region could see an increase
of rainfall toward the end of next week as moisture pushes
northward across the Gulf. Guidance spread and variability thus
far keep confidence low for determining the timing and
coverage/intensity of rainfall. Monitor forecasts/National
Hurricane Center discussions over the coming days for the latest
information regarding any potential tropical cyclone development.
The upper trough/surface front initially affecting the Pacific
Northwest will produce some rainfall from the eastern Plains into
the Great Lakes and Northeast through the week, with generally
light to locally modest amounts.
Fracasso/Rausch
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 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