tennessee storm
Member
I want a very strong derecho....I’m waiting on pop up storm and MCS season to begin, some years it takes forever to get going.
I want a very strong derecho....I’m waiting on pop up storm and MCS season to begin, some years it takes forever to get going.
I want a very strong derecho....
Would there be data for other states as well? Just wondering since different setups favor different storms for each part of the SE. Also, does this data cover for widespread winter storms or if the storm hits just one part of the state?Wasn't entirely sure whether to post this in the main forum or here, but I've been working on this for a while in python.
This is a northern hemisphere 500 hPa anomaly composite of nearly 700 days for approximately four hundred winter storms (including both big & small events alike) that's struck NC since 1948. The -NAO stands out like a sore thumb, the -EPO is also fairly obvious. The +PNA is definitely there, just not the way many imagined, with near normal heights on the west coast and below avg z500 on the E coast = +PNA. We also have a slight, but non-negligible +WPO.
Neat.
View attachment 19309
Would there be data for other states as well? Just wondering since different setups favor different storms for each part of the SE. Also, does this data cover for widespread winter storms or if the storm hits just one part of the state?
Something like that could definitely be done, as long as I have a list of dates to put into this composite it could work. I'm sure @GaWx would be the ticket for something like this. I also plan to divide this composite into Miller A, Miller B, and Hybrid/Overrunning cases, I generally have a feel for what they may look like based on the daily EPO, WPO, NAO, and PNA data from ESRL I've standardized. As for the composite, I included all storms that produced at least 0.1" or more of snow/sleet accumulation at either Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, Wilmington, or Elizabeth City &/or were featured in a case study by myself, NWS RAH, or the NC State Climate Office. I binned just for larger storms (i.e. those that produced at least 4" of snow (NWS RAH winter storm warning criteria) or more at the aforementioned locations in NC or at least 0.1
at all the locations) and didn't note that much of a difference in the EPO, WPO, PNA, & NAO indices
Would there be data for other states as well? Just wondering since different setups favor different storms for each part of the SE. Also, does this data cover for widespread winter storms or if the storm hits just one part of the state?
This is neat. The NAO turns out as I expected, as does the EPO. The PNA ridge is farther west than I would have expected, but it kind of makes sense. My guess is that a strong PNA ridge farther east would probably influence the storm track farther south and east, keeping NC on the dry side of things.Wasn't entirely sure whether to post this in the main forum or here, but I've been working on this for a while in python.
This is a northern hemisphere 500 hPa anomaly composite of nearly 700 days for approximately four hundred winter storms (including both big & small events alike) that's struck NC since 1948. The -NAO stands out like a sore thumb, the -EPO is also fairly obvious. The +PNA is definitely there, just not the way many imagined, with near normal heights on the west coast and below avg z500 on the E coast = +PNA. We also have a slight, but non-negligible +WPO.
Neat.
View attachment 19309
Wasn't entirely sure whether to post this in the main forum or here, but I've been working on this for a while in python.
This is a northern hemisphere 500 hPa anomaly composite of nearly 700 days for approximately four hundred winter storms (including both big & small events alike) that's struck NC since 1948. The -NAO stands out like a sore thumb, the -EPO is also fairly obvious. The +PNA is definitely there, just not the way many imagined, with near normal heights on the west coast and below avg z500 on the E coast = +PNA. We also have a slight, but non-negligible +WPO.
Neat.
Wasn't entirely sure whether to post this in the main forum or here, but I've been working on this for a while in python.
This is a northern hemisphere 500 hPa anomaly composite of nearly 700 days for approximately four hundred winter storms (including both big & small events alike) that's struck NC since 1948. The -NAO stands out like a sore thumb, the -EPO is also fairly obvious. The +PNA is definitely there, just not the way many imagined, with near normal heights on the west coast and below avg z500 on the E coast = +PNA. We also have a slight, but non-negligible +WPO.
Neat.
View attachment 19309
This is neat. The NAO turns out as I expected, as does the EPO. The PNA ridge is farther west than I would have expected, but it kind of makes sense. My guess is that a strong PNA ridge farther east would probably influence the storm track farther south and east, keeping NC on the dry side of things.
Wasn't entirely sure whether to post this in the main forum or here, but I've been working on this for a while in python.
This is a northern hemisphere 500 hPa anomaly composite of nearly 700 days for approximately four hundred winter storms (including both big & small events alike) that's struck NC since 1948. The -NAO stands out like a sore thumb, the -EPO is also fairly obvious. The +PNA is definitely there, just not the way many imagined, with near normal heights on the west coast and below avg z500 on the E coast = +PNA. We also have a slight, but non-negligible +WPO.
Neat.
View attachment 19309
You mean 92º with a 78% RH isn't your cup of tea ... at 8:00PM ... LOL ...Today is a pretty nice day with 50s dewpoints making the mid 80s feel pretty comfortable. I’d be killing for a day like this in summer.
Niceeee, this could be useful af when we get some sort of possibly next DJFM, the -EPO is a piece of the puzzle here in NC, but as we know we have lacked the -NAO, no wonder the storms we get is messy af as in snow/sleet/ZR/rain, maybe sometime we can get a -NAO to last a few weeks at least instead of big anticyclonic highs phasing through it in the matter of a day/few days, lol, also one reason why the PNA May be weak is due to the fact that sometimes the STJ undercuts it, making it more weakly + or neutral ?
Unless there was an intra-hour high, 83*F looks to do it for today.
Notably more in the way of Cirrus clouds as well.
Wasn't entirely sure whether to post this in the main forum or here, but I've been working on this for a while in python.
This is a northern hemisphere 500 hPa anomaly composite of nearly 700 days for approximately four hundred winter storms (including both big & small events alike) that's struck NC since 1948. The -NAO stands out like a sore thumb, the -EPO is also fairly obvious. The +PNA is definitely there, just not the way many imagined, with near normal heights on the west coast and below avg z500 on the E coast = +PNA. We also have a slight, but non-negligible +WPO.
Neat.
View attachment 19309
I guess we're screwed now since a -NAO does not exist in the winter anymore!To add to this, here's a lagged composite 3 weeks before and after the nearly 700 winter storm dates analyzed here.
The evolution overall is very interesting, a nice -NAO usually is present in the 1-2 weeks before big storms come knocking and conditions become stormy & cooler over the E US (likely helping to lay snow pack down to our north or even over us because many of these storms came in bunches). Near lag 0, a -EPO develops and a generally favorable pattern for wintry weather persists for a week or so thereafter, but it's eventually replaced by a -PNA at longer lags and the -NAO pattern progressively fades.
The color scale is the same for all images, I still haven't been able to get around to figuring out how to get the color bar to remain the same throughout.
(Nvm I eventually figured out the color bar issue)
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Being that I have been granted all the power in the world and beyond (LOL), I've unilaterally changed the name to -NAW ...I guess we're screwed now since a -NAO does not exist in the winter anymore!
I guess we're screwed now since a -NAO does not exist in the winter anymore!
NAWwww not yet; too early to be negative ... LOLI still say an official -NAO (as opposed to any Greenland block) during or prior to or during a MAJOR SE snow is overrated based on hard data from the last few decades, but I’ll save time and not list them this time. Regardless, it is good to be talking snow in late April. Looking forward to next winter!
NAWwww not yet; too early to be negative ... LOL
niceIts a beautiful evening here. 69 and sunshine !
After a crisp 41 this morning, its warmed up to a comfortable 60.
Is it just me or did the NAM try to introduce the slightest chance of some severe here Friday? Correct me if I'm wrong but this sounding shows at the very least some downburst potential with that dry layer in the mid levels, even a curved hodo (of course it's the long range NAM so.....)
View attachment 19320
Not the blue ice right?Watch out for large chunks of ice falling from the sky.
Its a beautiful evening here. 69 and sunshine !