Model Diagnostic Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 251 AM EDT Fri Oct 11 2019 Valid Oct 11/0000 UTC thru Oct 14/1200 UTC ...See NOUS42 KWNO (ADMNFD) for the status of the upper air ingest... 00Z Final Model Evaluation with latest Preferences and Confidence ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...Deep closed low near the 40N/70W benchmark... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: General model blend Confidence: Above average The nor'easter situated about 100 miles southeast of the 40N/70W benchmark has generally leveled off in intensity and is expected to remain nearly stationary through most of Friday before tracking towards the east-northwest and gradually weakens and becomes an open wave. This storm is currently blocked by a ridge axis over eastern Canada and part of a Rex block pattern. By Saturday morning, the ridge moves out of the way and the broad circulation around the big central U.S. low begins to propel the oceanic storm eastward. There are only minor differences in timing of the eastward track, and the solutions are close enough to merit a general deterministic model blend. ...Deep Plains/Upper Midwest Cyclone... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: General model blend Confidence: Above average An impressive upper level trough and closed low over the north-central U.S. is supporting a rapidly developing surface low that will track across northern Minnesota to southwestern Ontario by Friday night, before making a slow cyclonic loop and then eventually lifting towards the northeast while weakening. This will be accompanied by a pronounced cold front crossing the Midwest and extending southward to the Gulf Coast, along with potentially record snowfall for parts of the Dakotas and northwestern Minnesota. The models continue to be in excellent agreement with this large scale storm system through the forecast period with only minor differences in timing and placement. ...Western U.S.... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: GFS/GEFS mean/ECMWF compromise Confidence: Above average The next feature of interest to affect the western U.S. will be a progressive upper level trough that should reach the West Coast by 12Z Sunday, with a frontal boundary reaching the northern Rockies by Monday morning. The NAM is more amplified than the other guidance, and the CMC has trended closer to the model consensus. Both the ECMWF and GFS appear to fit the pattern well and a blend of these two models should work well as a starting point, along with some of the GEFS mean. Model trends at www.wpc.noaa.gov/html/model2.html 500 mb forecasts at www.wpc.noaa.gov/h5pref/h5pref.shtml Hamrick