Next week's pattern just keeps on looking flatter.
The main culprit is a very strong jet stream that keeps being upgraded in intensity, now looking to be over 220 mph which is right toward the top end of the range.
As the subtropical jet (or southern arm) fires NE for a couple of days, warm air from the subtropics is thrown perhaps as far north as Southern England, while at the same time very cold Arctic air plunges south through Greenland. This creates a huge contrast in air masses that looks to be present over the middle of the North Atlantic Tuesday-Wednesday.
Originally, a low tracking from SW Greenland to the UK looked to move along quickly enough to dive SE ahead of the influence from the subtropical jet, but it has since been adjusted to a slower feature, which is unable to dive SE and also increases the extremity of the clash of air masses and hence the strength of the jet stream.
While that seems like yet more bad luck in a season so far riddled with it, we should perhaps count ourselves lucky that there doesn't look to be a major storm system situated in the right place to make the most of this, though given that it's still 6 days out, a rapid shortwave development can't be ruled out.
So, this period of raging jet looks to leave the atmosphere with a lot of work to do before colder conditions are able to return to the UK, as the Azores High is able to extend well east into Europe with flat westerlies and an abundance of mild conditions across England and Wales in particular. In fact, the middle part of next week could be about as mild as it gets at this time of year.
Beyond that, I still see the behaviour of the subtropical jet as a critical component in developments.
What we need is a nice cut-off low to form which can then sustain a strong East U.S./Canadian Ridge, cutting off the fuel supply to the Atlantic storm train and encouraging the Atlantic jet to track further south:
...as opposed to a low which is still tied to the main Atlantic jet and progresses NE, causing the East U.S./Canadian ridge to start collapsing:
Funnily enough this GFSP 00z run does then manage to about-face, as a cut-off low forms on the right-hand chart above and just happens to combine with sudden height rises in the Arctic to drive the ridge in the western North Atlantic right up through Greenland, giving a decent 24th-25th December:
This does represent the sort of thing that could easily manifest as a result of the polar vortex displaced increasingly far from the Greenland/Canada regions, but I reckon the stronger high on the ECM run would provide a more stable result than the above, which collapses after a two day wonder.
That ECM run seems to be the most favourable on offer this morning, with GEM close but not quite cutting the mustard.
The fact that GFSP still produces something does at least reflect a weakening of the Pacific Jet (actually very marked on that run) which reduces the ability of disturbances to push through the U.S. and on into the Atlantic without being held up by ridges of high pressure. That represents the removal of what has been a major spanner in the works of late.
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