Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 332 AM EDT Sat Apr 27 2024 Valid 12Z Sat Apr 27 2024 - 12Z Tue Apr 30 2024 ...Central Rockies... Days 1... A surface low pressure consolidating in the lee of the Rockies early Saturday will deepen briefly through the day before slowly weakening as it ejects to the northeast and into the Central Plains Saturday night. This low will deepen in response to impressive synoptic ascent through LFQ upper diffluence as an upper jet rotates through the base of an amplifying longwave trough, with this trough deepening into a closed low before advecting into the Plains late D1. As this low deepens and shifts to the east, it will be accompanied by an increasingly intense deformation axis on its NW side, which will overlap effectively with mid-level fgen to drive ascent into the DGZ, and increasing upslope flow on easterly winds into the Front Range and other CO Rockies. In this area, there is additionally good consensus for CSI/CI as mid-level theta-e lapse rates fall to below 0C/km in conjunction with pockets of -EPV. This suggests snowfall rates will likely exceed 1"/hr, and in the more intense convection could be 2-3"/hr as noted by the WPC prototype snowband tool. This deformation axis will pivot in the vicinity of the Front Range much of Saturday, and although snow levels will likely hover around 8,000 ft, impressive cold air dragging down to as low as 6,000 ft is probable which could bring significant accumulations into the foothills and Palmer Divide as well before everything shuts off Sunday morning. For the I-25 urban corridor from Cheyenne to Colorado Springs, it is possible even the lower elevations could mix with snow or even get some light accumulations, but the marginal thermal structure should prevent significant impacts east of the terrain except along the Palmer Divide. WPC probabilities have climbed once again this morning for the Front Range, now exceeding 80% for the eastern slopes and into the higher terrain, with a secondary maximum near Pike's Peek. The bigger change this morning, however, has been a noted increase along the Palmer Divide which now features probabilities as high as 60% for 6+ inches, especially west of I-25. Additional WPC probabilities exceeding 50% for 6+ inches exist across other portions of the CO Rockies above 8000 ft, and in the San Juans, northern Sangre de Cristos, and portions of the Wasatch in UT. ...Pacific Northwest and Northern Rockies... Days 2-3... Persistent onshore flow will spread eastward into the Pacific Northwest and Northern Rockies D2 and D3 as confluent mid-level flow streams across the Pacific and into the region. Although the available moisture will be near normal, there is forecast to be a subtle increase in IVT within this confluent flow as reflected by GEFS probabilities reaching 50-70% for 150+ kg/ms, highest on D2. Despite the overall modest moisture, ascent will intensify as dual shortwaves race eastward embedded within the pinched flow, to enhance ascent to wring out the available PW, with PVA maximized late Sunday and again late Monday. This ascent combined with the favorable upslope flow component into the Cascades, Olympics, and Northern Rockies due to the zonal flow will result in periods of moderate to heavy snow, with snow levels falling to as low as 2500 ft Monday. WPC probabilities for more than 6 inches ramp up during D2 across the OR and WA Cascades, as well as the Olympic Range, where they reach 50-80% in the higher elevations above 5000 ft. By D3 these extend eastward into the Northern Rockies including in the vicinity of the Salmon River and Sawtooth Ranges, with lighter probabilities reaching as far east as the Absarokas. With snow levels falling, several inches of snow is possible at the Cascade Passes, including Snoqualmie and Stevens Passes, and especially by D3, resulting in hazardous travel potential. The probability of significant icing is less than 10 percent. Weiss