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November 26, 2018 Intermediate-Term Weather Report – Neither Fish Nor Fowl but Cold

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Written by Sig Silber

It is not an El Nino Pattern nor a La Nina Pattern. But what is it? I think it is called “December is Arriving”. And this December will be more like a normal December than we have had the last few years. The MJO may be important for the next two weeks and the troughs are crossing CONUS briskly. The analogs suggest a similarity between the weather in the next two weeks with the weather in 1968/1969 so it is a bit retro. We discuss all of this in this report.

either


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In our Monday night Weekly Weather and Climate Report, we mostly cover Days 6 – 14 and Weeks 3 – 4 which depending on when you read this article covers to about Day 25. We cover Days  1- 5 also but in most cases  readers will want to consult their local NWS Office for more detailed information that impacts them in the short term. However, we plan to start publishing a Report that will continually update and provide easy access to products from the NOAA Storm Prediction Center and other parts of NOAA. This will make it easy to see if there are special situations that need to be considered by those living in the areas covered or planning to travel there. It is not intended to replace reliance on the local NWS Offices but will be an easy way to find out if and where that is needed. The first report may be published Wednesday night.  .

Here is the recent history of the overall pattern for North America and the North Pacific.

November 19, 2018 Atmospheric Anomalies

We see the ridging around California which has had these horrible wild fires. It is possible this pattern will be changing soon. We see the huge trough over the Central North American Continent which made Thanksgiving unpleasant in NYC. To a large extent there is a lot of similarity in the pattern for the past two months which is what is shown here. 

It is not clear how much the MJO impacts the AO and NAO but it looks like it may contribute to a warmer Northeast at least for a while. The MJO is circling the Equator at a fast speed after a fairly long period of being much less active. We discuss this in more detail later in the article.

MJO Overview November 26, 2018

Some housekeeping: On November 17, 2018 we published our analysis of the NOAA and JAMSTEC Seasonal Outlook and that can be accessed here. In that report, the December Early Outlook was issued. We published our now weekly Drought and Agriculture Report on November 22, 2018 and that can be accessed here. On November 20 we published a special ENSO Update Report which can be found here. Remember if you leave this page to go to links or if you have clicked to enlarge a graphic, in order to get back you need to hit the return arrow usually located on the left of your URL box on the upper left of the screen. Also most of the small graphics are designed to become full size when you click on them. If that does not work, an alternative way to view the larger graphics is to right click and then hit “view image”. That should always work.

……Since we are neither clearly in La Nina or El Nino I thought it useful to compare and contrast the two phases of ENSO. There are many versions of the two graphics below but these are as good as any.  A  major difference is the track of the Polar Jet…how far north or south it is. If you look at our current and short-term forecasted weather pattern the Polar Jet is in between those two extremes.

Comparing El Nino to La Nina

ENSO Typical Winter Circulation US

Walker Circulation.

And this gets more technical. Here we take a look at the Walker Circulation which is where the warm water causes evaporation and convection (cloud formation) and where these clouds tend to drop their precipitation which creates downwards air movements. The colors also reveal the location of warmer than climatology and cooler than climatology Sea Surface Temperatures (SST) which are used to define the pattern. Pay special attention to the water along the Equator.

La Nina Walker Circulation

It is difficult to see the difference between the La Nina (above) and Neutral conditions (below) but you should pay attention to the more pronounced (darker – thicker arrows) convection zone in the El Nino state as compared to the Neutral state and similarly the stronger subsidence zone in the La Nina state. Subsidence tends to warm and dry air masses.

ENSO Neutral

It is a lot easier to see the different between Neutral and El Nino as the pattern tends to reverse with Convection Zones converting to Subsidence (drying) Zones. This winter the Convection Zone was further west than usual and I have mentioned that almost every week.

Walker Circulation

But these are theoretical constructs and are only a guide to trying to understanding what is going on. And of course these graphics do not address Modokis. Perhaps I should have as this El Nino may well begin as a Modoki.
Right now we have the Sea Surface Temperature Pattern of an El Nino and a Walker Circulation that is more like a La Nina or ENSO Neutral.

Summary of the Forecast

We now provide our usual summary first for temperature and then for precipitation of small images of the four short-term maps. You can click on these maps to see larger versions. The easiest way to return to this report is by using the “Back Arrow” usually found top left corner of your screen to the left of the URL Box. Larger maps are available later in the article with the discussion and analysis.

Sometimes it is useful to see the evolution of the forecasts from the 1 – 5 Day, 6 – 10 Day (which NOAA considers to be Week-1 of their intermediate forecast) , 8 – 14 Day (which NOAA considers to be Week-2) and Week 3 and 4 (which after being issued overlap with Week-2). I do not have comparable maps for the Day 1 – 5 forecast in the same format as the three maps we generally work with. What I am showing for temperature is the Day 3 Maximum Temperature and for precipitation the five-day precipitation: the latter being fairly similar in format to the subsequent set of the maps I present each week but showing absolute QPF (inches of precipitation) not QPF deviation from Normal.

First Temperature

Day 3 Max Temperature6 - 10 Day Forecast Temperature8 - 14 Day Temperature3 - 4 Week Temperature
This shows magnitude rather than probability of being higher or lower than Normal and shows the middle day of the five day period.

The pattern is now mostly zonal (west to east versus meridional north to south to north). 

It is becoming more progressive as in the pattern is moving west to east a lot faster than it has been for weeks. But it is deamplifying.

The transition from the 8 -14 day forecast shown above to the week 3/4 forecast seems likely.

And then Precipitation

Five day QPF

6 - 10 Day Forecast Precipitation8 - 14 Day Precipitation3 - 4 Week Precipitation
The five day QPF is shown above. The units are different than the other maps i.e. in units of precipitation (inches) not probabilities of exceeding or being less than climatology.

The wet anomaly is moving from west to east and deamplifying.

The transition from the 8 -14 day forecast shown above to the week 3/4 forecast seems feasible. .

A. Now we will begin with our regular approach and focus on Alaska and CONUS (all U.S.. except Hawaii).

Water Vapor.

This view of the past 24 hours provides a lot of insight as to what is happening.

Eastern Pacific Animation

You can see from this animation that there has been moisture entering CONUS in the Northwest from the Pacific.

Water Vapor Imagery

Tonight, Monday November 26, 2018, as I am looking at the above graphic, you see the  same pattern. There is also an  upper low ,not easily seen here, over Baja that has some impacts.

This graphic is about Atmospheric Rivers i.e. thick concentrated movements of water moisture. More explanation on Atmospheric Rivers can be found by clicking here or if you want more theoretical information by clicking here. The idea is that we have now concluded that moisture often moves via narrow but deep channels in the atmosphere (especially when the source of the moisture is over water) rather than being very spread out. This raises the potential for extreme precipitation events. You can convert this graphic into a flexible forecasting tool by clicking here. One can obtain views of different geographical areas by clicking here.

 Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes, Scripps/UCSD.

We see a  wide Atmospheric River approaching the Northwest and activity originating in the Gulf of Mexico.

And Now the Day One and Two CONUS Forecasts

Day One CONUS Forecast

Day Two CONUS Forecast

Day 1 Forecast Map

Day 2 Forecast

These graphics update and can be clicked on to enlarge but my brief comments are only applicable to what I see on Monday night prior to publishing.

You see very definitive snow areas around the Great Lakes and New England marked in white outlines.

Additional useful forecasts from the Storm Prediction Center and be found here. Storm events are covered by Met Watch which can be accessed here. Explanation of symbols can be found here.

60 Hour Forecast Animation

Here is a national animation of weather fronts and precipitation forecasts with four 6-hour projections of the conditions that will apply covering the next 24 hours and a second day of two 12-hour projections the second of which is the forecast for 48 hours out and to the extent it applies for 12 hours, this animation is intended to provide coverage out to 60 hours. Beyond 60 hours, additional maps are available at links provided below. The explanation for the coding used in these maps, i.e. the full legend, can be found here although it includes some symbols that are no longer shown in the graphic because they are implemented by color coding.

current highs and lows

The below makes it easier to focus on a particular day.  The best way to read them is from left to right on the first row and then from left to right in the row below it.

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What is Behind the Forecasts? Let us try to understand what NOAA is looking at when they issue these forecasts.

Below is a graphic which highlights the forecast surface Highs and the Lows re air pressure on Day 7. The Day 3 forecast can be found here. the Day 6 Forecast can be found here.

Day 7 Highs and Lows

When I look at this Day 7 forecast, the Aleutian Low is quite strong with surface central pressure of 984 hPa in the centroid over by Kamchatka and 972 hPa in the centroid located between Kamchatka and the Western Aleutians. But there is an extentson to the south with surface central pressure of 1008 hPa and this can provide continual Pacific storms to CONUS. The Hawaiian High is not shown tonight which is a change from yesterday. Instead we see a large sprawling but not tight gradient High stretching from Alaska to the Southwest. Further east there is a Quebec Low with central surface pressure of 1000 hPa and much further east there now is an offshore High with surface central pressure of 1024 hPa. In the Arctic, to the west there is a High with surface central pressure of 1040 hPa and over Greenland there is another High with surface central pressure of 1012 hPa. Of course tonight (Monday) is a day later than yesterday but the rapid change does not have me inclined as is NOAA to conclude that the forecast issued today has a confidence level of 5 out of 5.

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Looking at the current activity of the Jet Stream. The below graphics and the above graphics are very related.

Not all weather is controlled by the Jet Stream (which is a high altitude phenomenon) but it does play a major role in steering storm systems especially in the winter The sub-Jet Stream level intensity winds shown by the vectors in this graphic are also very important in understanding the impacts north and south of the Jet Stream which is the higher-speed part of the wind circulation and is shown in gray on this map. In some cases however a Low-Pressure System becomes separated or “cut off” from the Jet Stream. In that case it’s movements may be more difficult to predict until that disturbance is again recaptured by the Jet Stream. This usually is more significant for the lower half of CONUS with the cutoff lows being further south than the Jet Stream. Some basic information on how to interpret the impact of jet streams on weather can be found here and here. I have not provided the ability to click to get larger images as I believe the smaller images shown are easy to read.

CurrentDay 5
Current Jet StreamJet Stream Five Days Out
You can see the current Central CONUS trough here.The pattern shifts further to the east and is more zonal. We see the next Trough entering CONUS and also moving to the east. It does not extend very far south.

Putting the Jet Stream into Motion and Looking Forward a Few Days Also

To see how the pattern is projected to evolve, please click here. In addition to the shaded areas which show an interpretation of the Jet Stream, one can also see the wind vectors (arrows) at the 300 Mb level.

This longer animation shows how the jet stream is crossing the Pacific and when it reaches the U.S. West Coast is going every which way.

Click here to gain access to a very flexible computer graphic. You can adjust what is being displayed by clicking on “earth” adjusting the parameters and then clicking again on “earth” to remove the menu. Right now it is set up to show the 500 hPa wind patterns which is the main way of looking at synoptic weather patterns. This amazing graphic covers North and South America. It could be included in the Worldwide weather forecast section of this report but it is useful here re understanding the wind circulation patterns.

500 MB Mid-Atmosphere View

The map below is the mid-atmosphere 7-Day chart rather than the surface highs and lows and weather features. In some cases it provides a clearer less confusing picture as it shows only the major pressure gradients. This graphic auto-updates so when you look at it you will see NOAA’s latest thinking. The speed at which these troughs and ridges travel across the nation will determine the timing of weather impacts. This graphic auto-updates I think every six hours and it changes a lot. Thinking about clockwise movements around High Pressure Systems and counter- clockwise movements around Low Pressure Systems provides a lot of information.

7 Day 500 MB Geopotential Forecast

As of this evening we see for Day 7 a strong Trough. To the east and west of the Trough there is a Ridge. The snow line is just making it into CONUS in the Great Lakes Area.

Here is the whole suite of similar maps for Days 3, 4, 5, 6 and repeated for Day 7. It is quite complicated. Read from left to right first  row and then left to right on the  second row. 

You can see how this trough is expected to move across CONUS. It pretty well determines all the weather in CONUS.

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Understand How the Jet Stream Impacts Weather

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This is particularly useful for locations at the base of the trough but it works wherever the jet stream is involved and when one can forecast where the jet stream will be. This is the general model but local offices of the NWS will be interpreting this very specifically for the various part of their County Warning Area (CWA). Do not be intimidated by the graphics. It is not that complicated. The idea is that if you are facing the Jet Stream (on the ground of course) and are more or less below the center of the Jet Stream, there will be different impacts to your right than to your left and it makes a difference if you are where the jet stream is discharging the wind (Exit Region) or where the wind is converging into the Jet stream (Entrance Region). This terminology is a bit confusing until you get used to it.

We are showing both the situation on the surface and at mid-atmosphere 500 mb and the view is different so sometimes it is useful to simply be able to compare them.

Surface 850MBMid Atmosphere 500 MB

Day 7 Highs and Lows

7 Day 500 MB Geopotential Forecast

For Day 7 the surface and 500 millibar views are in good agreement.  At 500 MB  you clearly see the trough. At the surface,

Here is the seven-day cumulative precipitation forecast. More information in how to interpret this graphic is available here.

https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/p168i.gif?1473026352

We see heavy moisture entering CONUS from the Northwest. It is not an El Nino pattern. It is relatively north. And then we have the wet East Coast but less intensified than recently.

Four – Week Outlook: Looking Beyond Days 1 to 5, What is the Forecast for the Following Three + Weeks?

I use “EC” in my discussions although NOAA sometimes uses “EC” (Equal Chances) and sometimes uses “N” (Normal) to pretty much indicate the same thing although “N” may be more definitive.

First – Temperature

6 – 10 Day Temperature Outlook issued today (Note the NOAA Level of Confidence in the Forecast Released on November 26, 2018 was 5 out of 5

6 - 10 Day Temperature Outlook

8 – 14 Day Temperature Outlook issued today (Note the NOAA Level of Confidence in the Forecast Released on November 26, 2018 was 3 out of 5).

8-14 Day Temperature Outlook–

Looking further out.

Experimental Week 3-4 Temperature Outlook

You can see something close to a  La Nina pattern here.

Now – Precipitation

6 – 10 Day Precipitation Outlook Issued Today (Note the NOAA Level of Confidence in the Forecast Released on November 26, 2018 was 5 out of 5)

6 - 10 Day Precipitation Outlook

8 – 14 Day Precipitation Outlook Issued Today (Note the NOAA Level of Confidence in the Forecast Released on November 26, 2018 was 3 out of 5)

Current 8 - 14 Day Precipitation Outlook

Looking further out.

Weeks 3 and 4 Experimental Forecast.

You can see something close to a La Nina pattern here.

Here is the 6 – 14 Day NOAA discussion released today November 26, 2018

6-10 DAY OUTLOOK FOR DEC 02 – 06 2018

TODAY’S MODELS ARE IN VERY GOOD AGREEMENT ON THE PREDICTED 500-HPA CIRCULATION PATTERN OVER NORTH AMERICA FOR THE 6-10 DAY PERIOD. AN AMPLIFIED RIDGE IS FORECAST OVER MAINLAND ALASKA INTO THE GULF OF ALASKA, AND AN AMPLIFIED TROUGH IS FORECAST OVER THE WEST-CENTRAL CONUS. A WEAK RIDGE IS FORECAST OVER THE ATLANTIC COAST. WEAK TROUGHS ARE FORECAST UPSTREAM OF NORTH AMERICA OVER THE WESTERN ALEUTIANS AND OVER THE PACIFIC OCEAN TO THE NORTH OF HAWAII. TODAY’S MANUAL 500-HPA HEIGHT BLEND WEIGHTS THE 0Z ECMWF ENSEMBLE MEAN THE GREATEST. THE RESULTANT MANUAL BLEND INDICATES ABOVE NORMAL 500-HPA HEIGHTS OVER ALASKA, BELOW NORMAL 500-HPA HEIGHTS OVER THE WESTERN AND CENTRAL CONUS, AND NEAR TO  ABOVE NORMAL 500-HPA HEIGHTS OVER THE EASTERN SEABOARD. 

BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES ARE LIKELY FOR MUCH OF THE WESTERN AND CENTRAL U.S. FROM THE PACIFIC COAST EASTWARD TO THE NORTHERN PLAINS, CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, AND NORTH TEXAS, UNDER THE PREDICTED TROUGH AND ANOMALOUS NORTHERLY FLOW. ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES ARE LIKELY FOR THE EASTERN CONUS, UNDER PREDICTED ANOMALOUS SOUTHERLY FLOW AND NEAR TO ABOVE NORMAL 500-HPA HEIGHTS. ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES ARE LIKELY FOR ALASKA, UNDER THE PREDICTED RIDGE AND ABOVE NORMAL 500-HPA HEIGHTS. 

ABOVE NORMAL PRECIPITATION IS LIKELY FOR MUCH OF THE CONUS, NEAR AND AHEAD OF THE PREDICTED AMPLIFIED TROUGH DURING THE 6-10 DAY PERIOD, INCLUDING AREAS FROM THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS EASTWARD ACROSS THE NORTHERN AND CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE EASTERN CONUS, WHERE SOUTHERLY MOISTURE FLOW FROM THE GULF OF MEXICO ENHANCES THE PROBABILITIES OF ABOVE NORMAL PRECIPITATION. BELOW NORMAL PRECIPITATION IS MORE LIKELY FOR MOST OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST, TO THE WEST OF THE PREDICTED TROUGH AXIS. NEAR NORMAL IS INDICATED FOR CLIMATOLOGICALLY DRY AREAS OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA AND TEXAS WHERE NO PRECIPITATION IS EXPECTED DURING THE 6-10 DAY PERIOD. ABOVE NORMAL PRECIPITATION IS INDICATED FOR THE ALEUTIANS AND MAINLAND ALASKA, UNDER ANOMALOUS SOUTHERLY FLOW AHEAD OF THE PREDICTED TROUGH OVER THE WESTERN BERING SEA. BELOW NORMAL PRECIPITATION IS LIKELY FOR THE ALASKA PANHANDLE UNDER ANOMALOUS NORTHERLY FLOW AHEAD OF THE PREDICTED RIDGE OVER MAINLAND ALASKA. 

FORECAST CONFIDENCE FOR THE 6-10 DAY PERIOD: WELL ABOVE AVERAGE, 5 OUT OF 5,  DUE TO GOOD AGREEMENT AMONG MODEL SOLUTIONS AND GOOD AGREEMENT AMONG TOOLS FOR THE TEMPERATURE AND PRECIPITATION OUTLOOKS. 

8-14 DAY OUTLOOK FOR DEC 04 – 10 2018 

TODAY’S MODEL ENSEMBLE MEANS AND HIGH RESOLUTION RUNS ARE IN GOOD AGREEMENT ON THE PREDICTED 500-HPA CIRCULATION PATTERN DURING THE 8-14 DAY PERIOD, BUT PREDICT SIGNIFICANT DE-AMPLIFICATION OF THE PREDICTED TROUGH OVER THE CONUS FROM THE 6-10 DAY PERIOD TO 8-14 DAY PERIOD. ECMWF AND GEFS ENSEMBLE MEANS INDICATE AN AMPLIFICATION OF A POSITIVE 500-HPA HEIGHT ANOMALY OVER THE NORTH PACIFIC NEAR THE ALEUTIANS AND EASTWARD PROGRESSION OF A WEAK MEAN TROUGH DOWNSTREAM OVER THE NORTH PACIFIC. THERE IS SIGNIFICANT ENSEMBLE SPREAD AND UNCERTAINTY AROUND THE LOCATION AND AMPLITUDE OF THE TROUGH PREDICTED OVER THE NORTH PACIFIC DURING THE 8-14 DAY PERIOD. TODAY’S MANUAL 500-HPA HEIGHT BLEND IS BASED PRIMARILY ON THE 0Z ECMWF ENSEMBLE MEAN, AND INDICATES EASTWARD  PROGRESSION OF THE TROUGHS PREDICTED OVER THE NORTH PACIFIC AND OVER THE CONUS,  RELATIVE TO THE 6-10 DAY PERIOD FORECAST. ABOVE NORMAL 500-HPA HEIGHTS ARE PREDICTED OVER ALASKA, WHILE BELOW NORMAL 500-HPA HEIGHTS ARE INDICATED OVER NEARLY THE ENTIRE CONUS, EXCLUDING ONLY SMALL AREAS OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA AND FLORIDA. 

PREDICTED POSITIVE 500-HPA HEIGHT ANOMALIES OVER ALASKA LEAD TO LIKELY ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES FOR THE STATE, INCLUDING MORE LIKELY ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES FOR THE ALASKA PANHANDLE IN THE 8-14 DAY PERIOD RELATIVE TO THE 6-10 DAY PERIOD. BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES ARE LIKELY FOR MOST OF THE CONUS, UNDER PREDICTED NEGATIVE 500-HPA HEIGHT ANOMALIES. ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES ARE LIKELY FOR A SMALL AREA OF THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COAST WHERE 500-HPA HEIGHTS ARE NEAR NORMAL. ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES REMAIN LIKELY DURING THE 8-14 DAY PERIOD FOR THE ATLANTIC COAST OF THE SOUTHEAST. 

THE DE-AMPLIFICATION AND EASTWARD PROGRESSION OF A PREDICTED TROUGH OVER THE CONUS LEADS TO A REDUCED AREA OF LIKELY ABOVE NORMAL PRECIPITATION DURING THE 8-14 DAY PERIOD. ABOVE NORMAL PRECIPITATION IS MORE LIKELY FOR MUCH OF THE WEST FROM NORTHERN CALIFORNIA, NEVADA AND UTAH INTO THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST, AS THE  TROUGHING OVER THE NORTH PACIFIC IS PREDICTED TO PROGRESS EASTWARD TOWARDS THE CALIFORNIA COAST. NEAR TO BELOW NORMAL PRECIPITATION IS LIKELY FROM THE  SOUTHWEST TO THE SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL PLAINS AND THE CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, UNDER ANOMALOUS NORTHERLY FLOW BEHIND THE EASTWARD PROGRESSING TROUGH.  

FORECAST CONFIDENCE FOR THE 8-14 DAY PERIOD: ABOUT AVERAGE, 3 OUT OF 5, DUE TO GOOD AGREEMENT ON THE PREDICTED 500-HPA HEIGHT PATTERN, OFFSET BY INCREASING ENSEMBLE SPREAD OVER THE NORTH PACIFIC AND DECREASING NEGATIVE 500-HPA HEIGHT ANOMALIES OVER THE CONUS. 

THE NEXT SET OF LONG-LEAD MONTHLY AND SEASONAL OUTLOOKS WILL BE RELEASED ON DECEMBER 20.

Some Indices of Possible Interest: We should always remember that the forecast is driven by many factors some of which are conflicting in terms of their impacts. Please pay more attention to the graphics than my commentary which does not update on a regular basis once the article is published. The indices will continue to update. I provide these indices as they are important guidelines to the weather. It is in a way looking at the factors that are impacting the weather. There were developed  because weather forecasters found them to be useful.

Arctic Oscillation Forecast

Looks like the AO will tend to be start quite Negative which means cool air intrusions from Canada are entirely possible but quickly return to close to Neutral.

NAO

It is not a surprise when the AO and NAO are highly correlated. They both have to do with Polar versus Sub-Polar pressure gradients but the AO is over CONUS and the NAO is over the Atlantic with the impacts of the NAO felt on both sides of the Atlantic. Some look at the AO as simply being the western end of the NAO but the AO is based on conditions over land and the NAO is based on conditions over the Atlantic so they are related but not the same thing. As the NAO become Negative this could impact both East Coast weather and Western Europe weather.

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PNA Forecast

The forecast Phase of the PNA pattern is first Positive  then returning to Neutral or even Negative. You can see the impact of the different phases in the schematics below (N.C. State). PNA Positive in on the left and PNA Negative on the right.  PNA Negative is a pattern that is more westerly located than PNA Positive. This has to do with storms entering CONUS in the Northwest and then moving south either closer to the coast or further inland. 
It looks like conditions favor troughs entering further north and then dropping down rather than dropping down along the West Coast. It does appear that there will first be a storm that bring moisture to California but there may not be a string so such storms.
………………………..PNA Positive…………………………….. PNA Negative……………..

PNA phases

Madden Julian Oscillation (MJO)

The MJO is an area of convective activity along the Equator which circles the globe generally in 30 to 60 days. The location of the convective activity not only impacts the Equator but also the middle latitudes. Most people are not familiar with the MJO but at certain times it plays an important role Worldwide re weather and for CONUS.

There are a lot of models and I try to read the results from all of them. For access to a variety of models, I refer readers here. This weekly report summarizes things. Here is another useful source of information.

First we look at two models that I find very helpful. On the GFS graphic , the light gray shading shows the tracks which fit with 90% of the forecasts and the dark gray shading shows a smaller area that fits with 50% of the forecasts The large dot is the current location.

MJO Summary November 26, 2018

looks like the MJO will be more important very soon.

It is sometimes useful to look at the recent history  of the MJO.

November 26, 2018 MJO OLR Anomalies

You can see the movement of the MJO and changes elsewhere which may or may not be related to the MJO. The circled areas are obviously areas that NOAA believes the reader should look at.  They are all outside of CONUS right now except for the extreme Southeast. It has been pretty much stagnant but is now forecast to change. It may require the passage of this Inactive MJO Phase for the El Nino to really develop.

November 26, 2018 850 hPa Wind Anomalies

Weakening of wind  pattern may mean that El Nino can proceed.

Then the first of the two indices we typically present.

NOAA Index MJO November 26, 2018

This shows the recent history. Movement to the east has begun

And then a forecast.

November 26, 2018 NOAA

This suggests that the MJO will be moving into  Phase 4 and 5 and then be destroyed by the El Nino.  So there could be some very short term  impacts.

This tool allows one to translate the location of the forecast MJO to the impacts on CONUS. To make it easier for the reader I am displaying the highest probability interpretation for the time period in question namely November/December/January. I select this set of graphics since we are entering December, December is the center month in NDJ. This (70% match) of course might miss some other impacts which have less statistical confirmation but may none-the-less be valid.

Remember we are interested in how the MJO impacts CONUS weather during the first half of December. So that is what I have displayed.  Over the net two weeks, Phases 8, 1, 2, 3 may be experienced.

Temperature

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/precip/CWlink/MJO/Composites/Temperature/SON/t_SON70.png

For Temperature, Phase 8 which is ending would seem to have the most impact.

Precipitation

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/precip/CWlink/MJO/Composites/Precipitation/SON/p_SON70.png

For precipitation, Phase 3 which might have a tendency to make the Southwest wet might be important.
Remember that the MJO is one of many influences on weather. What I am showing here is the most reliable impacts but NOAA goes into much more depth in their analysis than I could show in this report. But the goal is to demystify weather forecasting.

Analogs to the NOAA 6 – 14 Day Outlook.

Now let us take a detailed look at the “Analogs”.

NOAA normally provides two sets of Analogs.

A. Analogs related to the 5 day period centered on 3 days ago and the 7 day period centered on 4 days ago. “Analog” means that the weather pattern then resembles the recent weather pattern and the recent pattern is used to initialize the models to predict the 6 – 14 day Outlook.

B. There is a second set of analogs associated with the Outlook. It compares the forecast (rather than the prior period) to past weather patterns. I have not been regularly analyzing this second set of information. The first set applies to the 5 and 7 day observed pattern prior to today. The second set, relates to the correlation of the forecasted outlook 6 – 10 days out and 8 – 14 days out with similar patterns that have occurred in the past during a longer period that includes the dates covered by the 6 – 10 Day and 8 – 14 Day Outlook. The second set of analogs also has useful information as it indicates that the forecast is feasible in the sense that something like it has happened before. I am not very impressed with that approach. But in some ways both Approach A and B are somewhat similar. I conclude that if the Ocean Condition now are different then the analogs and if the state of ENSO now is different than the analogs that is a reason to have increased lack of confidence in the forecasts and vice versa.

They put the first set of analogs in the discussion with the second set available by a link so I am assuming that the first set of analogs is the most meaningful and I find it so. But NOAA prefers the first set (A) as it helps them (or at least they think it does) assess the quality of the forecast.

Here are today’s analogs in chronological order although this information is also available with the analog dates listed by the level of correlation. I find the chronological order easier for me to work with. It also helps the reader see the impact of the phases of the PDO and AMO which are shown. The first set (A) which is what I am using today applies to the 5 and 7 day observed pattern prior to today.

Centered DayENSO PhasePDO*AMO*Other Comments
Nov 19, 1959Neutral++ 
Nov 6, 1968 (2)El Nino––Modoki Type II
Nov 17, 1968El Nino––Modoki Type II
Nov 18, 1968El Nino––Modoki Type II
Dec 4, 1969El Nino+–Traditional El Nino
Dec 5, 1969El Nino+–Traditional El Nino
Nov 19, 1972El Nino––Unusual PDO-/AMO-
Nov 20, 1972El Nino––Unusual PDO-/AMO-
Nov 27, 1974La Nina–– 

* I assign values that are consistent with the trend so I am doing some subjective smoothing with respect to the Phases of the AMO and PDO shown in this table. (t) = a month where the Ocean Cycle Index has just changed from a consistent pattern or does change the following month to a consistent pattern.

The spread among the analogs from November 6 to December 5 (amost identical to last week) is 29 days which similar to last week. I have not calculated the centroid of this distribution which would be the better way to look at things but the midpoint, which is a lot easier to calculate, and fairly accurate if the dates are reasonably evenly distributed, is again about November 20. These analogs are centered on 3 days and 4 days ago (November 21 or November 22). So the analogs could be considered to be back in sync with respect to weather that we would normally be getting right now or perhaps a day or two late which is not significant.

For more information on Analogs see discussion in the GEI Weather Page Glossary. For sure it is a rough measure as there are so many historical patterns but not enough to be a perfect match with current conditions. I use it mainly to see how our current conditions match against somewhat similar patterns and the ocean phases that prevailed during those prior patterns. If everything lines up I have my own measure of confidence in the NOAA forecast. Similar initial conditions should lead to similar weather. I am a mathematician so that is how I think about models.

Including duplicates, there are eight El Nino Analogs, one Neutral analog and one La Nina Analog. The pre-forecast analogs this week strongly favor McCabe Condition B which is “more wet than dry but Great Plains and Northeast are dry. Because this is not consistent with the forecast I am less confident in the forecast than is NOAA. The Atlantic seems to be in control.

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Historical Anomaly Analysis

When I see the same dates showing up often I find it interesting to consult this list.

Since 1968 and 1969 were so prominent in the  analogs I consulted that list and this is what I found.

1968: Expert Predicts 65 Million Americans To Starve During The 1980s

1968: From UK To Middle East, Blizzards & High Winds Cause Destruction, Death Over One Day

1968: Heat Wave Causes 550 To Collapse At Wimbledon

1968: Sudden Windstorm On Lake Eire Turns Perfect Night Into Nightmare – 15 Foot Wave Surge

1968: Sahara Sand Falls On London While Fist-Sized Hail Bombards Wales

1968: Violent Windstorm Lashes Sicily’s Earthquake Disaster Area

1968: Windstorm & Hail Wreak “Near-Catastrophic” Damage On Oregon Forest

1968: Windstorm Batters 60 Block Area of North Miami Beach – Significant Damage

1969: 4 British Arctic Explorers Go On Polar Bear Killing Spree

1969: NYT Reports That Arctic Will Be An Open Sea By The 1980s

1969: NYT – Instant Ice Age On The Way

1969: “Experts Say New Ice Age Is Imminent”

1969: Scientist Predicts Humans Only Have Few Decades To Solve Global Warming

1969: Northwest Passage Normally Open 2-4 Months A Year

1969: Wisconsin State Fair Slammed By Windstorm – Large Tents Collapsed, Hundreds Hurt

1969: Record Storms, Droughts And Floods Hit US

1969: Freak Windstorm Packing 125 MPH Winds Slams Into Boulder, Colorado

1969: Monster Cat-5 Hurricane Camille Flattens Mississippi With 190 MPH Gale

1969: Tundra & Forest Fires Plague Alaska’s Arctic Circle Area

1969: 9-Day Rain Deluge Brings California Its Worst Flooding & Mudslides In 30 Years

1969: Severe Windstorm, Giant Waves & Torrential 6 Inch Rainfall Roar Through Lake Erie Region

1969: Brazil Gets Sizzling Heat Wave & Hong Kong Flu At Same Time

Few of the above apply to a December but it is interesting that there was so much weather news in 1968 and 1969.

A Useful Read

Some might find this analysis which you need to click to read interesting as the organization which prepares it focuses on the Pacific Ocean and looks at things from a very detailed perspective and their analysis provides a lot of information on the history and evolution of ENSO events.

Recent CONUS Weather

This is provided mainly to see the pattern in the weather that has occurred recently.

And the 30 Days ending November 17, 2018And the 30 Days ending November 24, 2018

November 19, 2018 30 temp and Precipitation Report

T & P November 24, 2018
Re Precipitation the Western Dry Anomaly has become more intense and the Eastern Cool Anomaly has also become more intense.The dry anomaly has increased and the Northern Tier warm anomaly has moderated.

Remember, these maps are a 30 average so the most distant seven days are removed and the most recent seven days are added.

B. Beyond Alaska and CONUS Let’s Look at the World which of course also includes Alaska and CONUS

It is Useful to Understand the Semipermanent Pattern that Control our Weather and Consider how These Change from Winter to Summer. These two graphics (click on each one to enlarge) are from a much larger set available from the Weather Channel. They highlight the position of the Bermuda High which they are calling the Azores High in the January graphic and is often called NASH and it has a very big impact on CONUS Southeast weather and also the Southwest. You also see the north/south migration of the Pacific High which also has many names and which is extremely important for CONUS weather and it also shows the change of location of the ITCZ which I think is key to understanding the Indian Monsoon. A lot of things become much clearer when you understand these semi-permanent features some of which have cycles within the year, longer period cycles and may be impacted by Global Warming. We are now moving into early December  and we should be returning from the set of positions shown below for July back slowly to the Winter Pattern. For CONUS, the seasonal repositioning of the Bermuda High and the Pacific High are very significant.

Same as above but for July

World Forecasts

1. Today (Source: University of Maine)

2. Short-term set for day six but can be adjusted (BOM – Australia)

3. 8 – 14 Day (NOAA/Canada/Mexico Experimental NAEFS))

4 Tropical  Activity

1.  Forecast for Today (you can click on the maps to enlarge them)

Temperature

Equatorial Africa is really really hot as is South Africa. So is  Australia.

And now precipitation

Precipitation

It is still the general pattern of a wet Equator and dry North Africa extending to the Eastern Asia and  even Southern Asia. South of the Equatorial the wet belt has now become very wet. You also see a wet Mediterranean.
there appears to be a large North Atlantic Storm.

Additional Maps showing different weather variables can be found here.

2. Forecast for Day 6 (Currently Set for Day 6 but the reader can change that)

World Weather Forecast produced by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. Unfortunately I do not know how to extract the control panel and embed it into my report so that you could use the tool within my report. But if you visit it Click Here and you will be able to use the tool to view temperature or many other things for THE WORLD. It can forecast out for a week. Pretty cool. Return to this report by using the “Back Arrow” usually found top left corner of your screen to the left of the URL Box. It may require hitting it a few times depending on how deep you are into the BOM tool. Below are the current worldwide precipitation and temperature forecasts for six days out. They will auto-update and be current for Day 6 whenever you view them. If you want the forecast for a different day Click Here

BOM Temperature Forecast 5 days.

Australia is forecast to be warm.

Please remember this graphic updates every six hours so the diurnal pattern can confuse the reader.

Now Precipitation

Surface Pressure & Rainfall over Globe at Wed Sep 26 06:00:00 2018 UTC

This is a forecast for one particular day (Day 6). But it shows the surface Highs and the Lows which is useful information.

3. And now we have experimental 8 – 14 Day World forecasts from the NAEFS Model.

First Temperature

Temperature.

Parts of Southeast Asia look cold. Southern Europe looks cold and Northeast Canada looks very cold.

Then Precipitation

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/short_range/NAEFS/naefs_raw_precip_8-14day-global.png

I mostly rely on the reader to interpret world maps that update frequently.

4. Tropical Hazards.

Tropical Hazards

This graphic updates on Tuesdays and I usually post on Monday which is almost a week later than when this graphic was last updated. So normally Week 2 applies at the time I write this article on Monday. Mostly, as I review this now on November 26, 2018 for what is shown as Week – 2,  the period November 28 to December 4, 2018, we see a dry** Northern and Western Maritime Continent also impacting Indochina, part of the Philippines are also dry** and Eastern Brazil is very** wet. We see a wet** Canal Zone (Panama) and a small wet* area in Western Africa from the Equator south. We had been seeing this north of the Equator so I am not sure if this is a seasonal shift or related to ENSO.

C. ENSO SUMMARY of Current Status. Our full report was published on November 20, 1018 and can be accessed here.

Current Status of ENSO

This section is organized into three parts.

1. Current Sea Surface Temperatures (SST)

2. Current Nino 3.4 Readings

3. The Surface Air Pressure Pattern that confirms the state of ENSO.

1. Current and Recent Sea Surface Temperatures (SST)

A major driver of weather is Surface Ocean Temperatures. Evaporation only occurs from the Surface of Water. So we are very interested in the temperatures of water especially when these temperatures deviate from seasonal norms thus creating an anomaly. The geographical distribution of the anomalies is very important. To a substantial extent, the temperature anomalies along the Equator have disproportionate impact on weather so we study them intensely and that is what the ENSO (El Nino – Southern Oscillation) cycle is all about. Subsurface water can be thought of as the future surface temperatures. They may have only indirect impacts on current weather but they have major impacts on future weather by changing the temperature of the water surface. Winds and Convection (evaporation forming clouds) is weather and is a result of the Phases of ENSO and also a feedback loop that perpetuates the current Phase of ENSO or changes it. That is why we monitor winds and convection along or near the Equator especially the Equator in the Eastern Pacific.

My focus here is sea surface temperature anomalies as they are one of the two largest factors determining weather around the World. If we want to have a good feel for future weather we need to look at the oceans as our weather mostly comes from oceans and we need to look at surface temperature anomalies (weather develops from the ocean surface

It is the ocean surface that interacts with the atmosphere and causes convection and also the warming and cooling of the atmosphere. So we are interested in the actual ocean surface temperatures and the departure from seasonal normal temperatures which is called “departures” or “anomalies”. Since warm water facilitates evaporation which results in cloud convection, the pattern of SST anomalies suggests how the weather pattern east of the anomalies will be different than normal.

Current Sea Surface Temperature (SST) Departures from Normal for this Time of the Year i.e. Anomalies

First the categorization of the current daily SST anomalies.

Mediterranean, Black Sea and Caspian SeaWestern PacificWest of North AmericaNorth and East of North AmericaNorth Atlantic

The Mediterranean. Black Sea and Caspian Sea are slightly warm.

Warm east of Japan but more intense out to sea and south of Kamchatka.

Warm Norton Sound

Warm in Gulf of Alaska.

Warm everywhere west of CONUS.

Slightly warm off East Coast.

Cool off Nova Scotia and way south of Greenland

Slightly warm.
Equator

Looks like El Nino but trapped east of the Nino 3.4 Measurement Area

SST Daily Anomalies
AfricaWest of AustraliaNorth, South and East of Australia

West of South America

East of South America

Slightly cool off West Africa.

Warm south of South Africa

Warm off Somalia.

Very cool

Cool to the northwest and southwest.

Warm off of Peru.

Warm at 3oS extent far out to sea.

Fairly Neutral.

Cool off 10S

Warm off 40S.

Then we look at the change in the anomalies. The SST anomaly is sort of like the first derivative and the change in the anomaly is somewhat like a second derivative. It tells us if the anomaly is becoming more or less intense.

Four week change in SST Anomaly As of November 26, 2018

Here it gets a little tricky as for this graphic red does not mean a warm anomaly but a warming of the anomaly which could mean more warm or less cool and blue does not mean cool but more cool or less warm.  I used to interpret this graphic but really my interpretation was no more than characterizing the graphic by geographical region as per the above graphic and the reader can do this for themselves.
But I can not help mentioning the cooling in the North near Alaska and the East Coast and the lack of change along the Equator.

I am only showing the currently issued version of the NINO SST Index Table as the prior values are shown in the small graphics on the right with this graphic. The same data in graphic form but going back a couple of more years can be found here. The full table of values can be found here. NOAA considers N

ino 3.4 shown in the graphic as the best indicator of Equatorial Surface Temperature Anomalies associated with different phases of ENSO. There is a duration requirement to be a recorded El Nino or La Nina but to have El Nino Conditions the Nino 3.4 index needs to be +0.5C or warmer and to have La Nina Conditions the Nino 3.4 Index needs to be -0.5C or cooler.

November 26, 2018 Nino Readings

The Nino 3.4 Index which is most used by NOAA is warmer than the 0.5C Threshold for El Nino Conditions.

This graphic brings the Nino 3.4 up to date and is easy to read.

BOM Nino 3.4

Recently has become warmer than the 0.5C NOAA threshold for El Nino. In Asia they often use a higher threshold and also sometimes pay more attention to Nino 3.0 the value of which is shown in the graphic above this one.  This graphic simple provides a nice  graphical history of Nino 3.4 on a weekly basis.

Here is a daily version

CDAS Legacy System

Definitely in El Nino territory. It had gone sky high but not is barely in El Nino territory.

3. The Surface Air Pressure that Confirms the Nino 3.4 Index

And of course Queensland Australia is the official keeper of the SOI measurements.

http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/monitoring/soi30.png

The SOI Index was is totally neutral so the El Nino is not yet confirmed.  This is very confusing.

SOI = 10 X [ Pdiff – Pdiffav ]/ SD(Pdiff) where Pdiff = (average Tahiti MSLP for the month) – (average Darwin MSLP for the month), Pdiffav = long term average of Pdiff for the month in question, and SD(Pdiff) = long term standard deviation of Pdiff for the month in question. So really it is comparing the extent to which Tahiti is more cloudy than Darwin, Australia. During El Nino we expect Darwin Australia to have lower air pressure and more convection than Tahiti (Negative SOI especially lower than -7 correlates with El Nino Conditions). During La Nina we expect the Warm Pool to be further east resulting in Positive SOI values greater than +7).

D. Putting it all Together.

At this time, La Nina Conditions along the Equator have come to an end and we are solidly into ENSO Neutral and possibly entering into El Nino Conditions. But the drivers of a transition to El Nino are not solidly in place. In fact this is almost unprecedented in terms of the lateness of the arrival of a potential El Nino.

E. Relevant Recent Articles and Reports

Fourth National Climate Assessment – Part II

I have not read this report yet but I will. I consider it a nothing report since the real authority is the IPCC and this seems to be a “Look at me – we are here also” make work effort.

F. Useful Reference Information

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Standard Pressure Levels

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