Support this site:

patreon
Add our blog feed to your favorite reader.

Advertisement

Posts by Date

January 2012
S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

Notes on the upcoming stratospheric warming

   Posted by Levi at 11:46pm on January 5, 2012

The above video explores stratospheric warming events that have occurred since 1979 during El Nino and La Nina winters. We are likely facing a stratospheric warming event forecasted to develop during the rest of January, and it is already being proclaimed as the kick to the bucket that will allow cold to pour into the eastern United States. While the pattern may turn colder overall for the U.S., the video shows how many strato-warming events never shove cold all the way into the eastern U.S. during La Ninas. The reason is that the stratosphere’s influence over the troposphere is not all-powerful, and is often overcome by other things happening within the troposphere itself, such as the PDO and ENSO signals which, when negative, often keep the southeast U.S. ridge intact, allowing warmth to remain. During El Nino winters, however, the Pacific pattern is aligned with what the stratospheric warming tries to do, and all of those events are very cold for the eastern United States.

It is not clear yet whether this upcoming warming event will work its way down to the troposphere and provide arctic blocking, but some models are supporting that idea along with a colder pattern for North America. If this happens, I have a feeling that the models will again overestimate the cold for the rest of the winter in the eastern U.S., and while a battleground may set up between warmth in the southeast and cold trying to invade the midwest and New England, overall the eastern seaboard will remain near normal to slightly above normal, rounding out the rest of the winter. Transient cold shots may still occur, such as the big one that just roared through the east during the last couple of days, bringing freezes to Florida. However, despite the potential development of arctic blocking, there may be more inviting places for the cold air to go than into the eastern United States, though overall the pattern will likely turn colder for the country as a whole.

We shall see what happens!


101 comments

   

Comments

  • TomTaylor says:

    Had a quick question; you posted an image on your Facebook page earlier today for ECMWF Ensemble mean (assuming that’s what “ECM En Mean” stands for) 360hr 10mb temperature forecast (image below), and I was just wondering where you found that image. In other words, what’s the link?

    Great blog as always, btw. I also really like that you are doing the winter blogs. Forecasting the upcoming patterns and indicies is actually quite a bit of fun, imo.

  • TomTaylor says:

    Well I guess the image won’t post, but it’s the same one that is in your video at 1:38

  • Gster says:

    Hi Levi, love the new site and your post.

    I was wondering: how do you think this will affect us in Southern France? If the cold doesn’t spill into the Eastern US, that means it’s probably heading our way, no?

    Keep up the great work

    • Levi says:

      Well if the big arctic vortex over northeastern Canada shifts westward during this pattern change, then it would be possible to get some cold to spill into parts of Europe, but if the vortex doesn’t move much, then the jetstream over the North Atlantic may remain strong and just flood Europe with warm Atlantic air, which is what has been happening so far.

    • Rahman says:

      . Your favorite jsoaftucitiin appeared to be on the internet the easiest thing to be aware of. I say to you, I definitely get irked while people consider worries that they just do not know about. You managed to hit the nail upon the top and also defined out the whole thing without having side-effects , people can take a signal. Will likely be back to get more. Thanks

  • InTheCone says:

    Nice Site! Really enjoyed the post about stratospheric warming and look forward to anything weather related you put out, I always learn a lot.

  • Bassis says:

    Great post as always. loving the forecast so far for more mild temps on the East coast

  • Bassis says:

    Great post as always. loving the forecast so far for more mild temps on the East coast

  • linux vps says:

    Magnificent goods from you, man. I have keep in mind your stuff prior to and you are just too magnificent. I really like what you have acquired right here, really like what you are saying and the way in which wherein you are saying it. You are making it enjoyable and you still care for to stay it wise. I can’t wait to learn far more from you. That is really a great website.| linux vps http://weidnerfoundation.org/en/index.php/member/6813/

  • Comments closed

    Basic HTML is allowed.