• Winter Storm Key Msgs in

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Wednesday, January 15, 2025 08:57:00
    FOUS11 KWBC 150731
    QPFHSD

    Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    231 AM EST Wed Jan 15 2025

    Valid 12Z Wed Jan 15 2025 - 12Z Sat Jan 18 2025

    ...Great Lakes & Central Appalachians...
    Days 1-2...

    Ongoing lake-effect snow over the eastern Great Lakes will wind
    down today as a new shortwave moves in from the northwest, bringing
    light snow to the Upper Midwest/Western Great Lakes on WAA. As the
    warm front passes, winds will switch to NW as the cold front makes
    its approach but weakens across the region in response to height
    rises from the west. Regardless, some lake enhancement or lake
    effect snow is likely over much of the region but with overall
    light amounts over the U.P. and into western Lower Michigan.

    East of Lakes Erie and Ontario, system will bring in some light
    snow followed by a period of lake enhanced/effect snow D2 before
    ending D3. To the south, shortwave will swing right through the
    central Appalachians, maximizing upslope into eastern WV where
    several inches of snow are likely D2. WPC probabilities for at
    least 6 inches are high (>70%) especially over 2000ft.


    ...Northern/central Rockies/High Plains...
    Day 3...

    As an upper ridge builds across the Northeastern Pacific Thursday
    into Friday, downstream response will be digging troughing out of
    western Canada nearly due south through the High Plains via a
    strong cold front ("blue norther"). Though moisture will be
    limited, strong northerly flow will support upslope enhancement
    into some of the terrain over central/western Montana (esp the
    Little Belts and Big Snowy Mountains) southward into the Bighorns,
    Absarokas, and into the southeastern WY ranges.

    As the front dives southward, steeper lapse rates will support
    snow squalls along the front Friday in Montana progressing into
    Wyoming. Snow squall parameter per the guidance still shows values
    1 (and even >3) suggesting the possibility of bursts of snow with
    sharply reduced visibility leading to near whiteout conditions. CAM
    guidance should shed a little more light on the threat over the
    next two days, but we have outlined this area in our Key Messages
    (see below). WPC probabilities for at least 4 inches of snow over Montana/Wyoming are moderate (40-70%) and mostly over the terrain
    with light snow (1-2") elsewhere.

    As the system races southward, cold front will slow a bit across
    the Rockies but continue to plunge through the High Plains,
    favoring upslope enhancement into the Front Range late Fri/early
    Sat. Snow will expand through the I-25 corridor into the Denver
    Metro area with higher amounts across the Front Range as
    temperatures fall into the teens, helping to increase SLRs from
    ~12:1 up toward ~18:1. Additional snowfall is likely past 12Z Sat.
    Through then, WPC probabilities for at least 4 inches of snow are
    at least 50% across the Front Range.


    For the Day 1-3 period, the probability of significant icing of at
    least 0.10" is less than 10 percent across the CONUS.


    Fracasso

    ...Winter Storm Key Messages are in effect. Please see current Key
    Messages below...

    https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/LatestKeyMessage_1.png

    $$
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