As well covered by ITSY (cheers), there are some significant warming events appearing on the latest ECM, JMA and NAVGEM runs.
If GFS moves in line any time soon (surely it can't wait much longer if it's going to do so - it all kicks off in 5 days time) then more signs of change should appear in the far reaches of the output, given that the likes of ECM are signalling a rapid propagation of the warming down to the troposphere.
So rapid, in fact, that the day 10 ECM 12z op run 500mb chart is already starting to mirror the heavily split stratospheric setup which sees a rapid demise of the Canada/Greenland vortex lobe, leaving a rather frail, increasingly weak Scandinavia/Siberia vortex lobe in charge.
Some stratospheric eye candy for you (actually looks like candy!):
In both cases the core temperature of the warming (orange/red colours) rockets from -40*C to -8*C in the space of a few days. The vortex lobes (blue colours) are split very far apart and JMA is rapidly weakening the Canadian vortex while shoving it east. NAVGEM is also pushing it further away from us, but isn't weakening it so rapidly.
Note also the mangled state of the formerly Scandi/Siberia vortex lobe on these runs. They seem to be dealing more damage to that one than ECM does and it appears that JMA is on course to take both lobes out completely.
What's more these only go out to day 8, and ECM shows the warming becoming even stronger days 9-10... but I think this is more a case of JMA and NAVGEM showing a faster rate of warming rather than a larger event overall.
For those who can bear to look at it, GFS only has a core temperature of -20*C for day 8:
http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gfs/runs/2014122912/gfsnh-10-192.png?12
...after which the warming starts to fade. A similar story on GFSP too... unless we get some sort of halfway house, this is going to be very embarrassing for either these two or the other three.
Given that it's a top-down warming (top of strat. to bottom), I guess this comes down to how the models handle the strat. more than what they're up to down here in the troposphere. In terms of their reputation with this, ECM leads the way, followed by JMA.
As a final point for now, here's a Tweet which suggest that we're closely following a theoretical precursor pattern for SSW events:
https://twitter.com/webberweather/status/549633284138106880
Look at the top chart and then the one on the bottom-right. Not identical but some striking similarities across much of the hemisphere.
Far more entertaining than the trop. output at the moment, regardless of what we get from it
Originally Posted by: Stormchaser