Model Diagnostic Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 1215 AM EST Mon Feb 25 2019 Valid Feb 25/0000 UTC thru Feb 28/1200 UTC ...See NOUS42 KWNO (ADMNFD) for the status of the upper air ingest... 00Z Model Evaluation...with Preferences and Confidence ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...Deep trough/closed low over Southeast Canada/Northeast... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: General model blend Confidence: Above average The models remain in very good agreement with the gradual exit of a deep trough/closed low and corresponding surface low impacting the Great Lakes and Northeast through Monday. A general model blend will be preferred at this time concerning the mass fields with this system. ...Deep closed low/trough over the Pacific Northwest... ...Undercutting shortwave arriving over northern CA Wed... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: Blend of the 00Z GFS/18Z GEFS mean/12Z UKMET Confidence: Average The guidance overall shows rather good agreement with the evolution of a slow-moving, positively tilted upper trough and closed low dropping down over the Pacific Northwest through Monday. The guidance shows the closed low then shifting somewhat further offshore through Tuesday and Wednesday while become a part of a larger scale rex block over the northeast Pacific. In the near-term, a compact vort center and associated surface low will undercut the large scale through Monday morning and cross through far southern and eastern OR. The guidance is in good agreement with the details of this. However, as this energy quickly advances inland, there will be another system approaching the West Coast with a focus on northern CA by early Wednesday. This system will be the remnants of an upstream closed low that will weaken and undercut the aforementioned closed low offshore of the Pacific Northwest by then. A surface wave associated with this next system will move into northwest CA and then southern OR by late Wednesday. The 12Z ECMWF and 12Z CMC are a little farther north with the low track compared to the 00Z NAM/GFS and 12Z UKMET, and this is related to the placement of the deep closed low offshore the Pacific Northwest as the ECMWF/CMC solutions are situated a little north of the remaining guidance and thus allowing the next surface wave to gain a tad more latitude. Overall, there is a bit better support for a slightly more suppressed wave track. Will prefer a solution generally toward a blend of the GFS/GEFS mean and UKMET at this point. ...Shearing shortwave energy over the Midwest/OH Valley... ...Weak surface wave crossing the OH Valley/Mid-Atlantic... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: Blend of the 00Z GFS/18Z GEFS mean Confidence: Average By late Tuesday and through Wednesday, there will be shortwave energy shearing across the Midwest and through the OH Valley and this will result likely in a weak wave of low pressure moving through the OH Valley and Mid-Atlantic region Wednesday before moving offshore Thursday. The 00Z GFS overall is the fastest solution with this energy, with the remaining guidance a little slower. The 00Z NAM though is overall the sharpest solution with the energy, and like the GFS, it tends to track its surface low a bit north of the non-NCEP models. The non-NCEP guidance is all a bit slower than the NAM/GFS camp. In general there is a tad more support for the faster and northward camp, and thus will lean close to the 00Z GFS and the 18Z GEFS mean. ...Remainder of the CONUS... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: Non-NAM blend Confidence: Above average Broad zonal flow will dominate the southern two-thirds of the CONUS after late Monday. Subtle waves moving out of the Pacific and crossing the southern Plains into the Mid-South will help to draw Gulf moisture and a coastal boundary north. There is a tremendous amount of spread in pin-pointing the axis of heavier QPF, but the 00Z NAM remains a clear outlier with notably heavier rainfall across the Southeast which is tied into a bit stronger shortwave energy shearing across the Gulf Coast states. A non-NAM blend will be preferred given relative good clustering out of the global models concerning their mass fields and even QPF to an extent. Model trends at www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/html/model2.shtml 500 mb forecasts at www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/h5pref/h5pref.shtml Orrison