Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 445 AM EDT Tue Mar 28 2023 Valid 12Z Tue Mar 28 2023 - 12Z Fri Mar 31 2023 ...Great Lakes into the Northeast... Days 1-3... Hudson Bay upper low will continue to meander in place over the next couple of days, shedding a shortwave across the Great Lakes tonight into Wednesday and into the Northeast Wednesday evening into Thursday. Cold front will strengthen this afternoon and move through the U.P. of Michigan overnight with generally light snow, but some lake enhancement post-FROPA could accumulate to 3-4" in the Keweenaw Pensinsula into the Porcupine Mountains. On Wednesday, the shortwave and cold front will sharpen with an increasing temperature gradient and some non-zero instability as the front moves through central NY into New England. Snow and some snow squalls are likely especially after dark with briefly heavy snow rates -- HREF probs of >1"/hr rates are near and above 50% at 00Z/30 from the Adirondacks through central NY (SYR-ITH-ELM) which should continue eastward especially across northern areas into Vermont with a sharp drop in temperatures behind the front. WPC probabilities for at least 4 inches of snow across NY/VT are low (<40%) but this may tick up with the next cycle of hi-res guidance. The system will continue eastward into Thursday as the mid-level trough takes on a negative tilt and closes off over the St. Lawrence River, allowing a brief surge in moisture into Maine where temperatures will certainly be cold enough for snow -- at least a couple inches but with low to moderate probabilities of at least 4" (30-60%). ...The West/Rockies... Days 1-3... A deep/anomalous closed low west of Oregon this morning (850-700-500mb heights below the 1st percentile for this time of year) will wobble southeastward today toward the NorCal coast with an attendant wrapped-up occlusion out ahead of the trough axis. A modest moisture plume (precipitable water values near 1 inch along the coast to around 0.5" near the Sierra) of up to +1 sigma will ride the warm conveyor belt on SW to S flow into the northern CA ranges today and steadily focus more and more southeastward into the Sierra this afternoon/evening. IVT values (300-500 kg/m/s) per the NAEFS will be in the top 99th percentile but the resident time will be limited due to the progressive motion. A 120kt jet streak will round the base of the upper low and move into NorCal and the Great Basin tonight, with broad scale lift east and northeast of the Sierra/OR Cascades into Wednesday. The upper low is forecast to weaken into a sharp trough by early Thursday, with continued height falls progressing through the Great Basin into the Rockies on deep southwesterly flow. This will favor SW-facing mountains all across the West until the trough axis passes through on Thursday. Heavy mountain snow is anticipated from the Sierra Nevada and Trinity/Salmon Mountains of California with more modest totals farther north through the Cascade Range into southern Washington and over to the Blue Mountains. Between 2-4 feet of snow is likely in many California ranges where WPC probabilities are high. Snow levels will rise to about 4000-6000ft before falling back to around 3000ft after the cold front passes. Farther south, the higher terrain of the San Gabriels and San Bernadinos could see up to a foot or so of snow. Eastward, focus of the snow will be over parts the NV ranges into the Wasatch in UT beneath the stronger height falls, but also over central ID due to more vigorous PVA on the LFQ of the upper jet. Cold front will eventually reform east of the Rockies later Thursday when snow will wind down over much of the region. This should leave the CO Rockies in a bit of a minimum for this system with only light/moderate snow totals generally under a foot. ...Upper Midwest... Day 3... As the trough exits the Rockies late Thursday, upper jet will strengthen over the central Plains out of the southwest pointed up into the Upper Midwest. WAA snow will expand over northern MN into the U.P. of Michigan as a Canadian cold front moves southward toward the U.S. border. Models show a wide variety in both the QPF axes and thermal profiles (snow vs rain or some wintry mix) but would expect a broad area of snow in a west-to-east axis that will continue beyond this forecast period. Through 12Z Friday, WPC probabilities for at least 4 inches of snow are low (<40%) over much of the Arrowhead of MN. For Days 1-3, the probability of significant icing greater than 0.25" is less than 10%. Fracasso