Friday, December 14, 2012
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Winter '12 / '13 - White Christmas

White Christmas in the US is defined as 1" on-the-ground on 25-DEC. The criteria are different in other countries.
The probability of an event is determined by dividing the number of times something happened in the past by the number of times it could have happened.
If there was a white Christmas five times over 20 years...the probability is 25% in any given year.
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Folklore predictions...
- A green Christmas; a white Easter.
- If there's thunder during Christmas week...
The Winter will be anything but meek.
- The nearer the New Moon to Christmas Day...the harder the Winter.
[ed: New moon 13-DEC-12]
- If Christmas day be bright and clear
There’ll be two winters in the year.
- Thunder in December presages fine weather.
- Like in December like all the year long.
Winter '12 / '13 - Go to Sleep and Dream of Snow
Repost from JAN-07...
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Snow
It won't be long before we'll all be there with snow
Snow
I want to wash my hands, my face and hair with snow
Snow
I long to clear a path and lift a spade of snow
Snow
Oh, to see a great big man entirely made of snow
Where it's snowing
All winter through
That's where I want to be
Snowball throwing
That's what I'll do
How I'm longing to ski
Through the snow-oh-oh-oh-oh
Those glist'ning houses that seem to be built of snow
Snow
Oh, to see a mountain covered with a quilt of snow
What is Christmas with no snow
No white Christmas with no snow
Snow
I'll soon be there with snow
I'll wash my hair with snow
And with a spade of snow
I'll build a man that's made of snow
I'd love to stay up with you but I recommend a little shuteye
Go to sleep
And dream
Of snow
Monday, December 10, 2012
Winter '12 / '13 - AER Goes All In for Eastern Cold

Based on Eurasian snow cover in October: Ridge-W / Trof-E!
From OurAmazingPlanet...
...the model forecasts cold weather through February for the United States from the Rockies to the East Coast, Cohen said...last week at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union.More...
...cold-hardy Alaskans are complaining about the unusually bitter weather so far, counter to the model's prediction. An omega block, a center of atmospheric pressure sitting over the Bering Sea, is keeping the state at below-freezing temperatures. According to the National Weather Service, November 2012 was the sixth-coldest November for Fairbanks on record.
"When the Arctic Oscillation is negative, as it is now, Alaska is supposed to be warm, but it's not... The North Pacific seems to be doing something separate from what would normally happen," said Cohen.
Cohen/s AGU conference presentation abstract here.
Winter '12 / '13 - Siberian Express

The ECMWF has been advertising a significant cold intrusion into the lower 48 over the past few runs...along with a cross-polar shift of the polar vortex from Baffin Bay toward a position INVOF the south Kara Sea bordering northern Russia.
The yellow region on the map marks the location of 'warm' air at 100 mb. This area is also where low heights in the troposphere are found.
This Siberian visitor should be enough to change the long wave flow regime just in time for the holidays.
Sunday, December 09, 2012
Saturday, December 08, 2012
Winter '12 / '13 - Eurasia Snow Cover: November
Actual: 22,031,257 km2
Normal: 20,334,319 km2
Eurasia/s November snow cover was one standard deviation (dashed yellow line) and 8% above normal. Second year in a row November was above normal.

Blue - observations
Red - 9-point binomial filter
Orange - median
Dash yellow - one standard deviation
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Eurasian snow cover and departure from its median year-to-date.
July/s snow cover was 84% below normal.

October/s charts here.
Raw data here.
Thursday, December 06, 2012
Winter '12 / '13 - Stratospheric Sudden Warming: Watch #1
UPDATE2: Earlier suggestions of a fizzled SSW event appears to have fizzled. No long lasting effects are expected from this short-lived event; however...the PV did reverse course as forecast. Warm colors shown on the stage-right image from the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) depict easterly wind flow. East winds over the Pole means an anti-cyclone has replaced the normal cyclonic circulation associated with the PV.
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UPDATE: Earlier suggestions of a SSW event appears to have fizzled.
The effects would be felt at the surface in about three weeks if this feature develops as forecast.
Deep layer easterlies are also progged over high latitudes by D+10 indicating the presence of an Arctic anticyclone.
The QBO determines the character of the early winter, leading to a colder and more stable polar vortex in December and January during the west phase of the QBO and a more disturbed and warmer Arctic during the east phase of the QBO.(1)
Pronounced weakenings of the NH wintertime stratospheric polar vortex tend to be followed by episodes of anomalously low surface air temperatures and increased frequency of occurrence of extreme cold events throughout densely populated regions such as eastern North America, northern Europe, and eastern Asia that persist for ~2 months.(2)The Arctic Oscillation (AO) is heading for a cliff. The GFS forecast takes the AO on a deep dive where it remains negative through D+10.
Winter '12 / '13 - Blocking
Blocking forecast to shift from Bering Sea to Greenland by mid-month!

That...and no evidence of the Gulf of Alaska LOW...heralds winter/s over-due arrival on the east coast.
Winter '12 / '13 - North Atlantic Oscillation - Analog Update
NOV/s NAO index: -0.58

A 2x2 contingency analysis suggests there/s a 57% probability for the NAO index to average negative during meteorological winter (D-J-F) when NOV/s NAO is negative.
Top analog remains 1998...an el Niño winter. QBO was fading out and flipped from east to west in JAN. AO averaged positive. Not good if it comes to pass given winter/s NAO also averaged positive.
Up one tick are 2008 and 2003...the latter being a good match as AO/s top co-analog along with QBO...and a strong showing by SOI. ENSO was a warm Nada. DC measured a paltry 13" and RIC 6". The good snows that winter were in mainly in south coastal NE and the northern M-A [PVD (119%)...BDR (189%)...BGM (137%)...NYC (155%)...ABE (124%)...EWR (177%)...and RDU (199% from a late season low-latitude thump)].
Season-total snowfall at NEWxSFC Contest stations during Winter '03 / '04 totaled 999"...8" above period-of-record normal (PoRN).
None of the analog years look particularly promising b/c almost all go positive in JAN and FEB. Negative NAO falls into the nice-to-have category but it's not all that important for it to be in such a constant state.






