Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 346 AM EDT Wed Apr 24 2024 Valid 12Z Wed Apr 24 2024 - 12Z Sat Apr 27 2024 ...Northern Maine... Day 1... A potent shortwave trough traversing the Northeast today will help to spawn a wave of low pressure in eastern Quebec this afternoon while rapid cooling on the western flank of the developing area of low pressure results in a brief burst of moderate snowfall. Latest forecast calls for generally 1-3" in northern Maine, but given WPC PWPF shows low chances (10-30%) of snowfall totals >4" west of Caribou, localized amounts topping 4" cannot be ruled out. Snow will quickly end Wednesday evening with an unusually cold day late April day to follow on Thursday. ...The West... Days 1-3... A series of upper level disturbances will carve out a broad longwave trough across the western U.S. that will be responsible for some late season mountain snowfall from the Cascades and Sierra Nevada to as far east as the Colorado Rockies. The initial 500mb disturbance approaching southern California will be responsible for a burst of heavy snow over the White Mountains along the CA/NV border today and into this evening. Mountain snow will then pick up over the Four Corners region by Thursday afternoon as the same upper trough moves in overhead. Farther north, the next upper level trough looks to amplify over the Pacific Northwest Thursday evening. While the lead disturbance over the Four Corners region will generate some high elevation snow >9,000ft in the Colorado Rockies through Thursday night, it is the trough along the West Coast that will be the primary driver in mountain snow Friday and into the upcoming weekend. By Friday morning, falling 700-500mb heights over the Intermountain West and a surge in Pacific moisture allows for more snow to breakout across many mountain ranges that include the Blue Mountains, the Sawtooth, Absaroka, Tetons, Wind River, Big Horns, central Great Basin, and the Uinta. By Friday night, the heaviest snowfall rates are anticipated in the Absaroka and Wind River Ranges where 500-700mb winds out of the southeast will lead to additional upslope enhancement in these ranges. These ranges will remain favored for the heaviest snowfall into Saturday morning as the 500mb low tracks over the Colorado Rockies. WPC PWPF shows high chances (>70%) for snowfall totals >8" in the Sawtooth of central Idaho, the Absaroka, Wind River Range, and both the Wasatch and Uinta ranges, all at elevations >9,000ft. The Wind River Range in western Wyoming sports moderate chances (40-60%) for snowfall totals >12" through Saturday morning. Note that additional snowfall is still not over in the Absaroka and the Wind River Range through Saturday afternoon as the upper trough deepens over the Four Corners region and spawns a surface low in lee of the Colorado Front Range on Saturday. The probability of significant icing is less than 10 percent. Mullinax