I reckon with the air mass being sourced from higher latitudes this time around when compared to last week, there will be at least slightly better parameters for producing snow as opposed to rain.
For example, the GFS 12z has dew points below zero almost nationwide throughout Thursday, even across much of the North Sea. Could change of course - indeed usually I'd worry about the model not picking up on some mixing out of the cold at lower levels, but this particular run is actually relatively tame compared to the UKMO 12z which has both a deeper low and a better alignment of the flow, for both Thursday and Friday. Not much precipitation away from the windward coasts though.
Precipitation is, as always, a big head-scratcher, and that won't be resolved until the short range. Obviously windward coastal regions look well placed for a lot of snow (or at least wintry) showers.
We then see that mixing out of the air does turn things more marginal for the weekend on the GFS run. Looks like a bit less of an issue on the UKMO run, but mainly because it has such a clean low with a lack of shortwaves that has to be viewed with some skepticism. I think shortwaves are probable, and that the results next weekend are likely to be hit and miss with a lucky few doing well.
There's then the potential for another push of cold from the north early next week, and the big question becomes how soon that will be cut-off by the Atlantic, if it happens at all. It comes down to how much of a vortex is over Canada, to what extent that interacts with LP in the far-western North Atlantic, and how the vortex is split by high pressure across The Pole.
There is a strong tendency in the ensembles, appearing in various op runs too, for the split to break down by day 9 or 10, with the Canadian vortex drawing the life out of the Siberian one and becoming dominant over the following few days.
The most concerning development this evening is the loss of the strong ridge to the pole from Alaska by just +144 hours on the GFS and GEM 12z op runs, which is a significant departure (and downgrade) from the 00z runs.
Thankfully UKMO has not followed suit, with the ridge much stronger even at +120 hours (and notably stronger at just +96 hours), so the panic button can remain behind the glass panel, at least for now and hopefully for a long time!
Edited by user
24 January 2015 18:27:34
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