Tarheel1
I TOLD YALL IT WASN’T GOING TO SNOW
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Your having a nightmare, go back to sleep! A major Eastcoast trough is coming soon!One hell of a discussion to wake up to ...![]()
Your having a nightmare, go back to sleep! A major Eastcoast trough is coming soon!One hell of a discussion to wake up to ...![]()
Your and 1300m's interpretation of what I said was incorrect, I thought it was implied that this was an anomalous ridge because I'm pretty sure most of us are or should be already well aware there's a trough over the Great Lakes in the means, you would need a ridge axis >1-1.5 sigma just to break even & that's nothing to sneeze at
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A brief moment to check on the boards and I see a debate on if colors on a map is a ridge or not. From my standpoint, the orange does not equal a ridge. It is an anomaly. It's like saying it's going to be cold in Miami if it's showing below average. It comes down to the intensity and the actual strength. For instance, what defines a ridge at 500MB? It's kind of like what defines a low VS a high and at what MB does it change? The anomalies in between the two centers aren't that above compared to the actual two centers I see.
While it's an anomaly, is it truly a ridge? Does the actual flow of air connect completely and at a decent magnitude,are they barely connected and barely touching, or are they completely disconnected and slightly separated? You also have to remember the resolution on these things this far out is horrendous, so it may appear in a way that isn't true.
What you said, referring to a ridge, was incorrect. Moreover, I'm looking at the shape of the height lines. The 558 line on that EPS map goes from near Vancouver, BC, to far southern OH. That's actually a deeper trough than the normals map you just posted, which has a line go from Washington state to far southern OH. In other words, the trough is actually a little sharper over that area of the OH Valley than is the normal despite the height of 558 being above average.
The climatologies, gradients, and projection of the 500 mb heights of NCEP Reanalysis and ECMWF aren't directly comparable the former uses a 1981-2010 climatology, while the ECMWF uses a newer, warmer, and much smaller 20-year climatology as is also the case w/ the EPS weeklies on weatherbell. The trough in the means looks sharper because it's surrounded by two ridges in both the Rockies and the western Atlantic but that doesn't necessarily mean the impacts will be the same as a canonical trough anomaly
I'm by no means giving in, but I don't want to keep this up forever. We're obviously still in disagreement and neither side will give in. I don't see that changing. So, despite my having both 1300m and Forsyth agreeing with me, I think we should just agree to disagree and not waste any more of our and the readers' time.
There is no such thing as a ridge in the anomalies. What, physically, would that even represent? A trough is a trough and a ridge is a ridge. Height anomalies are simply a climatological comparison at a given location in time of a numerical value.
I've had green onions all around since September, they mean nothing in relation to spring, it's a cool weather weed. The last half of February still could end up cold and snowy!? Hard to tell being Feb 2nd and alli dont care what the fat ratts said today bout winter... buttercups are sprouting through the surface barely.... green wild onions are starting to come up in yard.... spring and tornado chasing weather isnt to far behind.... im ready for it.... light at the end of the tunnell
What is this lol? You are not making any sense to me.
Or too far south, as I recall, lol.
I agree. Those refer to an anomalous ridge, or a ridge that is not normal, while we were discussing how the EPS output is showing an anomaly.I feel like we are discussing two totally different topics. Probably best just to let it go.
Yeah, we aren't on the same page I think. Let's drop it here or you two can debate semantics in each other's PM versus the February thread.You said an "a ridge in the anomalies" or as I clearly put it an "anomalous ridge" doesn't exist. Apparently that's not the case. Idk why you're suddenly confused by this.
What is this lol? You are not making any sense to me. This is semantics. An anomalous ridge and a ridge in the height anomalies are two entirely different things.
Stop it, now. Don't throw this back on me. You are not correctly describing what you are trying to say and are trying to play word games .
Wrong month.This is good auguring here lol.
Don't you put that evil on him Ricky Bobby-Stop it, now. Don't throw this back on me. You are not correctly describing what you are trying to say and are trying to play word games .
That looks good, but I still think I see a little SE ridge down there!The placement of the ridge in Alaska and near Scandinavia at day 2-3 is exactly where you'd want them to be if you were rooting for a split of the polar vortex in the long range. A negative height anomaly over Eurasia coupled w/ a strong Scandinavian block oth would favor displacement.
View attachment 3734
Taken from Maritus, Polvani, & Davies (2009).
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Henceforth, a little over a week later, whola the vortex splits in half.
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That looks good, but I still think I see a little SE ridge down there!![]()
Having lived on the other side of the Lake for 7 years, believe me, "warmer" is a very relative term up there ...Tom Skilling said on his Chicago weather broadcast tonight that it would be cold for the next week and half and be much warmer from mid February into March. If it's warmer up there it's probably not real cold down south.
But the Brazilian begs to differTom Skilling said on his Chicago weather broadcast tonight that it would be cold for the next week and half and be much warmer from mid February into March. If it's warmer up there it's probably not real cold down south.
I'm curious as I've never paid attention to all the polar vortex spilt talk of the past years and I'm not well versed in it. What would be the effects at 500mb should the vortex split as depicted.
You never know. It could be 0 in Atlanta and 70 in Chicago. Anything is possible.Tom Skilling said on his Chicago weather broadcast tonight that it would be cold for the next week and half and be much warmer from mid February into March. If it's warmer up there it's probably not real cold down south.
I'm glad I'm not the only one who is getting annoyed by his "I can't wait until severe weather season gets ramped up", etc.As my grandma would say go jump in the lake.
What is a can February? I drink out of the bottleSo a SSW or PV split doesn't even guarantee cold here?! Wow we really suck. we basically don't know if we'll get cold at all. It's really upsetting to hear how this can February is turning into a dud. That's what we get for being ahead of ourselves. At least some of us. The chances of warm are probably higher now. I guess we just may have to wait till next year
There's no guarantee that the SSW impacts Eurasia. The cold could simply get all dumped into the Pacific, aka 2011-12.So a SSW or PV split doesn't even guarantee cold here?! Wow we really suck. we basically don't know if we'll get cold at all. It's really upsetting to hear how this can February is turning into a dud. That's what we get for being ahead of ourselves. At least some of us. The chances of warm are probably higher now. I guess we just may have to wait till next year
I meant Fab February. But I get your pointThere's no guarantee that the SSW impacts Eurasia. The cold could simply get all dumped into the Pacific, aka 2011-12.
Yes it will. Just be patient between now and 2020.All I want to know is if it’s going to get cold and snow here again. Can anyone tell me that?!