Ah, yes, our old "friend" James Madden again. The short answer is we don't know. There is a possibility that very cold weather could arrive around the middle of February. This is MUCH too far away to be making statements that sound like facts, but that has never stopped the newspapers before.
As always, there is more uncertainty the further ahead you go, and this is well illustrated by a couple of recent ensemble charts.
This was the mid day run from the GFS yesterday:
Note the position of the thick green line towards the right hand side of the graph. This is showing very cold upper air temperatures, but there are also rainfall spikes, which would almost certainly be snow. The green line is one of the coldest runs - the average of all the runs (white line) is actually above the 30 year average for the time of year. But it is the green line (operational) that is what appears when you look at the GFS charts on weather websites.
Here is the corresponding precipitation type chart for 14 Feb:
Plenty of snow there, so anyone looking at this particular run of the GFS would be able to say that snow is being forecast, although well into the unreliable timeframe.
However, the latest run of the GFS ensembles looks like this:
Now look where the green line is! However, there are more lines going below the red 30 year average line, indicating that there is still a chance of cold. This is typical of what is happening at the longer range - things look completely different from one run to the next.
As always the outcome is critically dependent on the exact position of high pressure. At this point I have to say that I can't in all honesty see the difference in the charts that I see for these 2 runs on 14th February. Both have high pressure building over Scandinavia, both have winds in from the south east, and both have a green coloured air mass over us. I don't have the experience or knowledge to spot the critical differences.
14 Feb from the cold middy run yesterday:
14 Feb from the milder 6am run today:
It certainly wants watching, but I can't stress enough that at the moment it is too far ahead to make predictions. For the time being we are in an unsettled and milder period, with some potentially very windy weather ahead, and also a good deal of rain. The setup is such that weather fronts could get stuck over the top of us because they are unable to move away to the east due to the large area of high pressure which is still sitting over the continent. The models all have this drifting gradually north to Scandinavia, and the question is whether it will position itself so that it drags the air in from the east or north east (very cold) or the south east (quite cold) or whether the storms in the atlantic manage to suck up high pressure from the south which joins us up with the high over Scandinavia, which would put us back into the cloudy, chilly, frost and fog scenario that we have seen so much of recently.
Nobody knows which of these will happen. It will depend on how the stratospheric warming (which has now occurred and continues to develop) plays out, and there simply isn't enough data for the weathermen to make a call on this. Some think that we could see a sudden "flip" in the model output as the effects of this event unfold. We shall see.
As always, there is more uncertainty the further ahead you go, and this is well illustrated by a couple of recent ensemble charts.
This was the mid day run from the GFS yesterday:
Note the position of the thick green line towards the right hand side of the graph. This is showing very cold upper air temperatures, but there are also rainfall spikes, which would almost certainly be snow. The green line is one of the coldest runs - the average of all the runs (white line) is actually above the 30 year average for the time of year. But it is the green line (operational) that is what appears when you look at the GFS charts on weather websites.
Here is the corresponding precipitation type chart for 14 Feb:
Plenty of snow there, so anyone looking at this particular run of the GFS would be able to say that snow is being forecast, although well into the unreliable timeframe.
However, the latest run of the GFS ensembles looks like this:
Now look where the green line is! However, there are more lines going below the red 30 year average line, indicating that there is still a chance of cold. This is typical of what is happening at the longer range - things look completely different from one run to the next.
As always the outcome is critically dependent on the exact position of high pressure. At this point I have to say that I can't in all honesty see the difference in the charts that I see for these 2 runs on 14th February. Both have high pressure building over Scandinavia, both have winds in from the south east, and both have a green coloured air mass over us. I don't have the experience or knowledge to spot the critical differences.
14 Feb from the cold middy run yesterday:
14 Feb from the milder 6am run today:
It certainly wants watching, but I can't stress enough that at the moment it is too far ahead to make predictions. For the time being we are in an unsettled and milder period, with some potentially very windy weather ahead, and also a good deal of rain. The setup is such that weather fronts could get stuck over the top of us because they are unable to move away to the east due to the large area of high pressure which is still sitting over the continent. The models all have this drifting gradually north to Scandinavia, and the question is whether it will position itself so that it drags the air in from the east or north east (very cold) or the south east (quite cold) or whether the storms in the atlantic manage to suck up high pressure from the south which joins us up with the high over Scandinavia, which would put us back into the cloudy, chilly, frost and fog scenario that we have seen so much of recently.
Nobody knows which of these will happen. It will depend on how the stratospheric warming (which has now occurred and continues to develop) plays out, and there simply isn't enough data for the weathermen to make a call on this. Some think that we could see a sudden "flip" in the model output as the effects of this event unfold. We shall see.
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