Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 320 PM EST Sun Feb 03 2019 Valid 00Z Mon Feb 04 2019 - 00Z Thu Feb 07 2019 ...Western States... Days 1-3... Strong moist advection from the Pacific combined with lowering snow levels will produce widespread heavy snow across the Mountain West through Tuesday. Although a variety of weak surface lows and an arctic front dropping from Canada through day 2 will aid in producing lift and snowfall, the primary forcing will involve Pacific Jet energy lifting into California and a deep low pressure dropping along the Pac NW coast. The latter of these will help drive down snow levels to the surface as far south as central CA/NV by D3, while the former will provide copious PWAT into the coast before spilling across the remainder of the West. Focused moist advection south of this mid-level impulse will be squeezed out as lift due to diffluence within the RRQ of the upper jet and pronounced mid-level height falls combines with orographic ascent on increasing 700mb flow. Once again, the Sierras of California appear to be favored for prolonged heavy snow with more than 4-6 feet of accumulation likely during the 3 days. Heavy snowfall is also likely in the ranges of Utah, WY, and ID, where WPC probabilities are moderate for 2 feet. Although snow levels will initially be above 5000 feet from Central California through central Colorado, the anomalously deep trough digging along the coast combined with the southward shift arctic front will drive snow levels downward each day of the period. This will eventually also feed drier air into the region from the north such that by D3 /Tuesday/ more modest snowfall is expected, with the heaviest south of 40N latitude. As snow levels drop to the surface, light accumulations are likely in the valleys as well, including the cities of Portland and Seattle during the Day 1 period, in which WPC probabilities show a moderate risk for 1" of snowfall. ...Northern Plains and Great Lakes... Days 1-3... Two separate systems will bring a mix of snow and ice to the Plains and Great Lakes through the forecast period. The first of these will begin this evening and persist into Monday night. A shortwave trough over the Great Basin will eject northeast into the northern Plains while a jet streak exits to the east across Southern Canada. These features in tandem will produce lift which will aid in lee cyclogenesis late tonight into Monday. Across eastern MT, ND, and into northern MN, synoptic ascent will produce a stripe of heavy snowfall, and although QPF is modest, around 1/2 inch, very high SLRs of 20:1 are likely in the cold airmass. Efficient snow growth is likely as the best omega appears collocated with a deep DGZ, and WPC probabilities remain high for 6" along the Canadian border as far east as Lake of the Woods, MN, with more than 8" possible in some locations. Further east, the surface low intensifies and lifts towards Lake Huron on Monday. The strongest synoptic forcing will lift away, but more robust lift due to mesoscale dynamics including increasing 700mb deformation and intensifying 925-700mb frontogenesis will produce heavy snow from central MN into the U.P. of Michigan. The DGZ is not as deep here, but snowfall rates will likely be more intense as noted by theta-e lapse rates approaching 0. There has been a notable northward shift in the axis of heavy snow this morning, with a slightly warmer solution now expected. This suggests that while heavy snowfall is still likely, most of it will be focused north of the Canada border, and the highest WPC probabilities for 4 inches extend from the Arrowhead of MN east into the Keweenaw Peninsula of MI. A stripe of freezing rain is also expected across portions of extreme northeast Wisconsin into the central and eastern portions of the U.P. of Michigan. Probabilities of exceeding local warning criteria for ice accumulations have increased to above 50 percent where total ice accretions of 0.25-0.40" are possible in some localized areas. This is likely due to a prolonged period of light precipitation but also the fact the ground surfaces are extremely cold and surfaces will be slow to respond to the warming. While confidence is still average at best, there is potential for some significant icing during the Day 1 period. Another wave of low pressure is likely to track across the central Plains into the lower Great Lakes on Day 3. A potentially significant freezing rain event may be possible late in the Day 3 period across portions of northern Illinois, northern Indiana, and southern Michigan. Probabilities of exceeding 0.25" ice accumulation have increased to 20-30 percent across these areas. This is a lower than average confidence forecast and bears watching in the coming days. Weiss/Taylor