Scientific Forecaster Discussion

NWS Discussion
			
				

Area forecast discussion 
National Weather Service Taunton Massachusetts 
727 PM EDT Sat may 25 2013 


Synopsis... 
low pressure in the Gulf of Maine will slowly move northeastward 
tonight. Some improvement is likely Sunday as this low departs 
into northern New England. Mainly dry weather is anticipated with 
moderating temperatures Monday into Tuesday. A warm front will move 
through Wednesday bringing some showers and thunder. Expect warm 
and muggy conditions by the end of the work week. 


&& 


Near term /until 6 am Sunday morning/... 


730 PM update...showers and drizzle continue. The surface low was off 
Portland and the upper low overhead. As these shift 
northeast...the coldest air aloft will move over southern New 
England. Model soundings suggest that rain in the higher terrain 
may mix with or change over to snow in the heavier showers. The 
best chance for this to occur exists at elevations greater than 
1000 feet. Given that its late may...temperatures at the surface and 
on the ground are too warm for any appreciable accumulations. 
Elevated surfaces such as trees and power lines may see a dusting 
of snow. Low temperatures are expected to be 10 to 15 degrees below 
seasonal normals. 


&& 


Short term /6 am Sunday morning through Sunday night/... 
Sunday...leftover showers will end from south to north during the 
day as low pressure moves into the Maritimes. Clouds will remain 
for most of the day as northwest winds pick up. Expecting gusts up 
to 30-35 miles per hour...especially across central and western areas. Will 
remain cool with highs again 10-15 degrees below normal. 


Sunday night...should see clearing skies as high pressure starts 
to build into southern New England. Winds will stay up enough to 
prevent optimal radiational cooling so temperatures won't be as cool as 
tonight but will still be 5 to 10 degrees below normal. 


&& 


Long term /Monday through Saturday/... 
big picture... upper low over the northeast USA migrates northeast 
through the Maritimes. Upper high pressure over the plains shifts 
east for the latter half of the week. Pacific upper low digs over 
The Rockies midweek...then ejects through the northern plains by 
next weekend. 


Model preferences... upper contour fields are similar for much of 
the week. Minor differences in handling the ejecting Pacific low 
upstream late week. We used blends of HPC/gmos and GFS/European model (ecmwf) data 
as available. 


The dailies... 


Monday-Tuesday... upper trough shifts east Monday but still cyclonic 
flow aloft as the surface high builds in. Limited moisture around 
850 mb should support some diurnal cloud development...but not deep 
enough for any showers. Monday should be a dry day with at worst 
partly cloudy skies. Of more concern are the temperatures. Both 
mav and met guidance show highs in the middle 70s pvd-bdl and low 
70s bos...while model temperatures at the top of the mixed layer support 
values of 65-70. Either the model temperatures aloft are wrong...the 
projected mixing depth is wrong...or MOS is wrong. We favored a 
blend that edges toward the cooler values with a range in the 
upper 60s to low 70s. 


Clear skies and light winds Monday night...dewpoints 35-40. Could 
be some frost in the Berkshires and Monadnocks but elsewhere temperatures 
should bottom out in the upper 30s to middle 40s. 


High pressure overhead Tuesday with temperatures aloft warming...values 
around 9-10c support maximum temperatures 75-80. Cooler at the coast as the 
light flow will allow for developing sea breezes. 


Wednesday... upper ridge will push warming temperatures into the region. 
Warm front representing the leading edge of this warmer air moves 
across New England late Wednesday/Wednesday night. This will 
generate some showers...and stability parameters support potential 
for thunder as well. 


Thursday through Saturday... very warm air aloft with 850 mb temperatures 
around 16c. Dewpoints are expected in the low to middle 60s. Mixing 
should support maximum temperatures in the middle and upper 80s...dewpoints point 
to humid air with night mins in the 60s. Shower potential looks low 
Thursday and Friday. An approaching cold front may bring a chance 
of showers Saturday especially north of the Mass Pike. But the 
strength of the upper ridge may keep this front to our north and 
preclude showers. So the precipitation forecast is low confidence by next 
Saturday. 


&& 


Aviation /23z Saturday through Thursday/... 
forecaster confidence levels... 


Low...less than 30 percent. 
Moderate...30 to 60 percent. 
High...greater than 60 percent. 


Overview... 


Tonight...moderate confidence. Snow may mix in with the rain 
across the higher terrain in western Massachusetts and southwest New Hampshire. Showers 
will keep conditions variable across the region. MVFR ceilings over 
the coastal plain and north of mass Route 2...MVFR/IFR visibilities along 
the East Coast. VFR conditions possible elsewhere. 


Sunday...moderate confidence. Precipitation tapers off from S-north 
with VFR conditions most everywhere by late Sunday afternoon. 


Sunday night...high confidence. VFR. 


Kbos terminal...moderate confidence in taf. Low confidence in 
overall timing. 


Kbdl terminal...moderate confidence in taf. Low confidence in 
overall timing. 


Outlook...Monday through Thursday... 


Monday through Thursday... generally VFR. Early morning IFR possible 
in fog and low clouds. Local MVFR ceilings/visibilities in showers/thunderstorms 
Wednesday and Wednesday night. Sea breezes at the coast Tuesday. 


&& 


Marine... 
forecaster confidence levels... 


Low...less than 30 percent. 
Moderate...30 to 60 percent. 
High...greater than 60 percent. 


Northwesterly winds and seas increase tonight into Sunday as low 
pressure rotates in the Gulf of Maine and then moves into the 
Maritimes Sunday. Small craft advisories are up for all marine 
zones at some point through Sunday night. West-northwesterly winds 
take awhile to kick up on the eastern waters so advisories begin 
later over those interior zones where seas remain below 5 feet. 
Winds will be stronger on the southern outer waters so have opted 
for gale warnings across those waters...especially given the 
busier Holiday weekend. Showers and fog may limit visibilities 
through Sunday morning with showers tapering off Sunday afternoon. 


Outlook...Monday through Thursday... 


Monday through Wednesday...winds and seas below small craft 
thresholds. South winds may gust near 25 knots nearshore of the 
cape and islands Wednesday afternoon. 


Thursday...southwest winds gusting near 25 knots nearshore of the 
cape and islands. The southwest wind will build seas with 5-6 foot 
values on the outer waters...possibly on Rhode Island and Block Island sounds 
as well. 


&& 


Hydrology... 
while there may be periodic heavier rain showers across southern 
New England through early Sunday...not thinking it will be 
persistent enough to result in flooding. Will have to monitor the 
possibility of training cells though. No headlines planned at this 
time. 


&& 


Tides/coastal flooding... 
high astronomical tides are expected along the East Coast of 
Massachusetts this weekend. At Boston...a high tide of 12.2 feet 
will occur early Sunday morning at 12:12 am. After high tide this 
afternoon...there was about a half foot of surge lingering at 
Boston. With estofs indicating up to 0.7 feet surge...seems 
reasonable that it could reach 13 feet even with minimal wave 
action offshore. Confidence not high enough to issue a coastal 
Flood Advisory especially being a marginal event but opted to 
issue a coastal flood statement for the eastern Massachusetts 
zones for the potential of some splashover. 


&& 


Climate... 
several climate records could be reached over the weekend. While 
Boston...Providence...and Worcester were several degrees over 
their record low maximum temperature this afternoon...Hartford has 
tied its record low maximum of 48 so far. If their temperature GOES up 
even a degree the record set in 1967 will hold. However...think 
theres a good chance that we will tie that record in Hartford. 


Tonight...the forecast low at Worcester...34 degrees...would break 
the current record low of 35 degrees set in 1992. The forecast 
lows at Providence...Hartford...and Boston are within 2-3 degrees 
of the previous records /see below/. 


Hartford - forecast low - 39 record low - 36 (1992) 
Providence - forecast low - 38 record low - 35 (1972) 
Boston - forecast low - 41 record low - 39 (1882) 


&& 


Box watches/warnings/advisories... 
CT...none. 
Massachusetts...none. 
New Hampshire...none. 
Rhode Island...none. 
Marine...Small Craft Advisory until 4 am EDT Monday for anz232>234. 
Small Craft Advisory from 2 PM Sunday to 4 am EDT Monday for 
anz230-231-251. 
Small Craft Advisory until 9 PM EDT Sunday for anz236. 
Small Craft Advisory until 4 am EDT Monday for anz235-237-250- 
254. 
Gale Warning until 7 am EDT Sunday for anz255-256. 


&& 


$$ 
Synopsis...dunten/rlg 
near term...wtb/rlg 
short term...rlg 
long term...dunten 
aviation...wtb/dunten/rlg 
marine...dunten/rlg 
hydrology... 
tides/coastal flooding... 
climate...