

EDIT to add guidance differences between 12 GFS and EC...(very large spead in the Operational Guidance)...

http://www.met.sjsu.edu/weather/models/ ... c-ani.html
Moderator: S2k Moderators
snow and ice wrote:cheezyWXguy wrote:Portastorm wrote:The 12z GFS is looking a lot more like the 0z Euro next week and beyond. Very cold looking with some possible winter precip events.
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod/analysis/namer/gfs/12/fpc.shtml
I dont follow.
I see some cold in the long range, but a warmer drier front in about 6 days than the model was showing yesterday. And no winter precip
sigh....
Once you get past 3-5 days the operational GFS should only be used for general trends not specifics. It's much better to use the EURO or the Ensembles when looking in the long range. Speaking of long term trends, all the models are strongly suggesting a trough in the central and southern US from the first through mid December. This favors cyclogenesis in the GOM, and it's just a matter of time before one of these systems meshes with cold air that will becoming down from the north. Who will get what can only be determined once you get to within a couple days of the storm.
iorange55 wrote:Wow the 18z does not look good at all. I know the models flip flop, so thats what i'm hoping for. Hopefully this is not a trend.
wxgirl69 wrote:iorange55 wrote:Wow the 18z does not look good at all. I know the models flip flop, so thats what i'm hoping for. Hopefully this is not a trend.
When you say it does not look good at all. Are you talking about it being to cold or warm?
cheezyWXguy wrote:wxgirl69 wrote:iorange55 wrote:Wow the 18z does not look good at all. I know the models flip flop, so thats what i'm hoping for. Hopefully this is not a trend.
When you say it does not look good at all. Are you talking about it being to cold or warm?
warm
Discussion
(Relevant Graphics Follow The Text)
Much of the Thanksgiving four day weekend will be very nice around Houston, courtesy of an impressive surface high pressure that bridges down from the Great Lakes into Texas. Since the anticyclone is associated with a polar air mass, it may well be that low temperatures for Thursday and Friday will be quite chilly. But latitude and lots of sunshine will start to warm the atmosphere, and as the ridge pulls eastward the flow of air will turn off of the Gulf of Mexico on Saturday. With warm and humid back in the forecast, therein lies the undoing of our weekend condition on November 29.
Even though the latest GFS model output lost the storm threat for Sunday and Monday, I am fairly confident that a high-yield precipitation threat will advance into Texas from the lower Front Range late in the coming weekend. The linkage with the subtropical jet stream and boost from a Kelvin wave nearing the International Dateline will give the disturbance great potential to drop very heavy rain and thunder while also channeling some much colder air. The freeze line is expected to drop as far south as Matamoras Mexico, and it is entirely possible that locations such as Dallas TX and Shreveport LA could see a touch of snow before the low pressure system makes its run fro the eastern Great Lakes.
It can be said with some certainty (a rarity in weather forecasting, I know....) that most of the medium range and longer term forecast for Houston, and indeed much of the U.S., will be colder than normal. There is now good agreement among the numerical models on a strong Rex signature forming over Alaska and northwestern Canada, with the net effect of setting up drainage of cPk and cA regimes into the nation mainly east of the Continental Divide. Since the subtropical jet stream is so active and lodged to our south and east, we may have to confront the possibility of a more important winter precipitation episode in Texas at some point during the first half of December. And while normally snow or ice is a rarity, just remember what happened last December 11!
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LUBBOCK TX
417 AM CST WED NOV 25 2009
ALTHOUGH A MOOT POINT THIS FAR OUT...THERE IS A SURPRISING AMOUNT
OF AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE MODELS THAT AN ARCTIC AIRMASS WILL BECOME
DISLODGED EARLY NEXT WEEK AND BEGIN MOTORING SOUTH INTO THE
CENTRAL AND POSSIBLY SOUTHERN GREAT PLAINS BY MIDWEEK.
ASSOCIATED COLD FRONT WILL REACH NORTHWESTERN NORTH TEXAS SUNDAY
MORNING...WITH THE ECMWF AND GFS AGREEING FAIRLY WELL ON FRONTAL
TIMING. FAIRLY COOL AIR WILL STREAM IN...BUT THIS IS NOT ARCTIC
AIR AND RAIN IS THE PRECIP TYPE EXPECTED. ATMOSPHERE DRIES OUT
MONDAY EVENING...SO BY THE TIME IT WOULD BE COLD ENOUGH FOR ANY
WINTER PRECIPITATION IT WILL BE TOO DRY TO PRODUCE ANY. THIS IS
TYPICAL OF TEXAS COLD FRONTS...SO THIS IS NOT AN EXCEPTION.
AFTER MONDAY BOTH MODELS KEEP NORTH TEXAS IN DRY WESTERLY FLOW SO
NO MORE PRECIP EXPECTED THROUGH DAY 7.
&&
PRELIMINARY EXTENDED FORECAST DISCUSSION
NWS HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL PREDICTION CENTER CAMP SPRINGS MD
859 AM EST WED NOV 25 2009
VALID 12Z SUN NOV 29 2009 - 12Z WED DEC 02 2009
THE UPDATED PRELIM GRAPHICS KEPT THE SAME GENERAL IDEAS OF THE
EARLY PRELIM BUT SUBSTITUTED THE NEW 00Z/25 ECENS MEAN FOR THE
OLDER CORRESPONDING 12Z/24 MEAN. OUR BLEND WAS 70% DETERMINISTIC
ECMWF EARLY IN THE PERIOD BUT TAPERED OFF TO 70% ECMWF ENSEMBLE
MEAN TOWARDS THE END OF THE PERIOD.
DESPITE BIG CONTINUITY CHANGES IN ITS LAST TWO RUNS FOR THE MIDDLE
OF NEXT WEEK...THE EUROPEAN CENTRE GUIDANCE STILL LOOKS MORE
STABLE THAN THE OTHER GLOBAL NUMERICAL MODELS...INCLUDING THE GFS
AND GEM GLOBAL...WITH THE HANDLING OF THE UPCOMING PATTERN. THE
MAIN FORECAST PROBLEM....FOR TUE-WED DAYS 6-7...APPEARS TO BE THE
POSSIBLE SPLITTING OF A TROF CROSSING THE MS RIVER INTO NRN AND
SRN STREAM PIECES OF ENERGY. THIS SPLITTING IS COMPLICATED BY A
THIRD SHOT OF ENERGY DROPPING INTO THE NRN ROCKIES AT THAT TIME
WITH ITS OWN POTENTIAL FOR SPLITTING INTO TWO PARTS. IT WAS
SOMEWHAT ENCOURAGING TO SEE THE NEW 00Z GFS PARALLEL RUN
SUPPORTING THE 00Z ECMWF WITH A POSITIVE TILT SPLITTING TROF
SCENARIO TUE DAY 6 VERSUS THE REGULAR GFS DEEP ONE PIECE SYS OVER
THE ERN CONUS. HOWEVER THE 06Z/25 PARALLEL RUN EVOLVED A WHOLE
DIFFERENT SCENARIO BY DAY 6 CREATING TWO CUTOFF LOWS FROM THE
SPLIT OFF SRN END OF THE NRN ROCKIES TROF AS WELL AS THAT OF THE
ERN CONUS TROF. THAT WILD 06Z GFS PARALLEL SOLUTION HAD NO SUPPORT
FROM THE 00Z/25 ENSEMBLE SPAGHETTI PLOTS...WHILE THE SPLITTING
SOLUTION OF THE 00Z DETERMINISTIC ECMWF HAS GOOD SUPPORT FROM
ECMWF/CANADIAN ENSEMBLE MEMBERS AND EVEN A FEW GFS ENSEMBLE
MEMBERS. BEHIND THAT SYSTEM...ALL THE MODELS SHOW AN INVASION OF
AT LEAST MODIFIED ARCTIC AIR OVER THE NORTHERN PLAINS LATE DAY 7
AND JUST BEYOND THIS FORECAST PERIOD...THE FIRST SUCH OUTBREAK IN
SEVERAL WEEKS.
CISCO/FLOOD
iorange55 wrote:Dallas NWS seem sure of themselvesASSOCIATED COLD FRONT WILL REACH NORTHWESTERN NORTH TEXAS SUNDAY
MORNING...WITH THE ECMWF AND GFS AGREEING FAIRLY WELL ON FRONTAL
TIMING. FAIRLY COOL AIR WILL STREAM IN...BUT THIS IS NOT ARCTIC
AIR AND RAIN IS THE PRECIP TYPE EXPECTED. ATMOSPHERE DRIES OUT
MONDAY EVENING...SO BY THE TIME IT WOULD BE COLD ENOUGH FOR ANY
WINTER PRECIPITATION IT WILL BE TOO DRY TO PRODUCE ANY. THIS IS
TYPICAL OF TEXAS COLD FRONTS...SO THIS IS NOT AN EXCEPTION.
AFTER MONDAY BOTH MODELS KEEP NORTH TEXAS IN DRY WESTERLY FLOW SO
NO MORE PRECIP EXPECTED THROUGH DAY 7.
&&
Hope they're wrong.
srainhoutx wrote:A quick look at the 12 GFS will likely perk some ears.Got to love the models. Cold Core Low over Central TX moving slowly E on Monday night through Wedneday.
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