Model Diagnostic Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 1131 PM EST Fri Feb 08 2019 Valid Feb 09/0000 UTC thru Feb 12/1200 UTC ...See NOUS42 KWNO (ADMNFD) for the status of the upper air ingest... 00Z Model Evaluation...with Preferences and Confidence ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...Eastern U.S... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: General model blend Confidence: Above average Good model agreement in the near term with the closed low and surface cold front track/speed across the Great Lakes and Northeast. Most of the energy with that system will pull north of the CONUS by Saturday morning. With subtropical ridging anchoring across southern Florida, relatively benign weather is in store for the eastern U.S. and with the above average model agreement for the mass fields. Thus, a general model blend will be preferred. ...Central/Western U.S... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: General model blend...through 48 hours ECMWF/NAM blend...after 48 hours Confidence: Average to Slightly Below Average An active weather pattern is expected to develop across the western U.S. through the forecast period with several impulses moving onshore. Initially, two mid/upper level features are moving across the western US, one opening up as it moves onshore across central California while a stronger closed low drops through B.C. and into Washington State. Through about 48 hours there is favorable model agreement and a general model blend can be used. Much of the energy associated with the Pacific Northwest closed low will be ejecting downstream across the Plains by late Monday which will allow surface low pressure to develop in the lee of the Rockies. Model difference become more substantial by Tuesday as the shortwave trough takes on a negative tilt. The 00Z GFS is considerably stronger with this feature and also further northwest with its surface low track, particularly compared to the ECMWF. The UKMET is slower/south while the NAM is fast/east. Overall, model spread is much higher beyond 48 hours as this system ejects into the central US and the operational GFS appears to be an outlier this cycle, so the preference will be for a blend of the ECMWF/CMC and NAM to some degree beyond 48 hours. Back toward the Pacific Northwest, another in a series of impulses looks to move into Washington State Sunday night and again Monday night. There is a fair amount of spread in the operational runs with respect to the timing and placement of the synoptic features. The GFS and the NAM appear to be slightly faster compared to the rest of the models. A blend toward the ECMWF/CMC is preferred for this portion of the CONUS beyond 48 hours. Model trends at www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/html/model2.shtml 500 mb forecasts at www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/h5pref/h5pref.shtml Taylor