#BOTS #BOTS #BOTS BABY!!!

Well, here it is. Finally. We have a very good chance of seeing some snow later this week. There are too many snow maps and graphics out there so be careful about what you trust as weather gospel. I have seen some very funny memes out there though. Check out this one that calls for two feet of snow.


So here is what the National Weather Service is saying:


Winter Storm Watch

URGENT - WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
National Weather Service Indianapolis IN
302 PM EST Mon Jan 31 2022

INZ061>065-067>072-011100-
/O.EXA.KIND.WS.A.0001.220203T0000Z-220204T0600Z/
Greene-Monroe-Brown-Bartholomew-Decatur-Knox-Daviess-Martin-
Lawrence-Jackson-Jennings-
Including the cities of Linton, Bloomfield, Jasonville,
Worthington, Bloomington, Nashville, Columbus, Greensburg,
Vincennes, Washington, Loogootee, Shoals, Bedford, Mitchell,
Seymour, and North Vernon
302 PM EST Mon Jan 31 2022

...WINTER STORM WATCH IN EFFECT FROM WEDNESDAY EVENING THROUGH
LATE THURSDAY NIGHT...

* WHAT...Heavy mixed precipitation possible. Total sleet and snow
  accumulations up to 3 inches and ice accumulations of one tenth
  to one quarter of an inch possible.

* WHERE...Portions of central, south central, southeast and
  southwest Indiana.

* WHEN...From Wednesday evening through late Thursday night.

* IMPACTS...Power outages and tree damage are likely due to the
  ice. Travel could be nearly impossible. The hazardous
  conditions could impact the morning or evening commute.

* ADDITIONAL DETAILS...There remains some uncertainty on the path
  of the storm which could impact precipitation types and amounts.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

Monitor the latest forecasts for updates on this situation.
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Indianapolis IN
252 PM EST Mon Jan 31 2022

.Short Term...(This evening through Tuesday night)
Issued at 252 PM EST Mon Jan 31 2022

Quiet weather will continue tonight into early Tuesday, ahead of an
approaching cold front that will begin wave one of a substantial mid
week winter storm.

Broad southerly flow aloft and at the surface will produce a
substantial warmup ahead of the front into Tuesday with 50 degree
readings likely to make inroads well into central Indiana tomorrow
afternoon. Precipitation onset could be as early as Tuesday
afternoon in our northwest but will likely hold off until later in
the day as it will take some time for the atmosphere to fully
saturate. Will ramp pops up steadily late Tuesday afternoon to
categorical in the northwest by evening, then everywhere by late
Tuesday night.

The vast majority of Tuesday evening and night`s precipitation will
fall as rain, before the cold front makes enough progress into the
area to allow for a rapid transition to snow in the far northwest by
daybreak Wednesday. This transition zone will continue to make slow
but steady progress southeast beyond the short term period and into
the long term.

&&

.Long Term...(Wednesday through Monday)
Issued at 252 PM EST Mon Jan 31 2022

Key Points:

-- Still significant uncertainty on placement and amounts of ice,
and southern extend of more significant snowfall.

-- Significant snow amounts with potential tree limb and roof
impacts across the northern portion of the area.

-- Greater concerns for freezing rain and icing further south.

-- A swath of significant sleet accumulation possible.

-- Significant impacts to travel and some power grid impacts
possible.

-- Event-total liquid 2-3 inches raises concern for river flooding.

Meteorological Analysis and Uncertainties:

There are some synoptic-scale shifts that are contributing to
uncertainty, but the general pattern of waves of anafrontal
precipitation has been consistent in deterministic and ensemble NWP.
Specific details of where the baroclinic zone/front is, thermal
profile, and inherent microphyics considerations for precipitation
type are all not entirely clear at the moment. Of course, these have
significant implications for precipitation type, and timing
transitions within the context of QPF can make accumulation amounts
of freezing rain, sleet, and snow very difficult. We expect to gain
more clarity and overall forecast confidence in the next 24-36
hours.

We are concerned about the consistent QPF signal amidst supportive
thermal profiles for snow across our northern counties for
significant impacts. One limiting factor appears to be microphysics
related, and tied to the character of the thermal profile perhaps
supporting relatively low (near or just below climo) snow-liquid
ratio. It`s a broad warm nose with a deep isothermal layer just on
the cold side of 0C even for northern portions of the area, and some
riming may occur. This is the primary reason for questioning the
more extreme amounts of explicit 10:1 and Kuchera. Nevertheless,
snow impacts to travel and also including weight on roofs and trees
need to be considered within this heavy snow swath.

Since flow from the initial wave veers/weakens and mean flow
parallels the front, thus resulting in more anafrontal precipitation
with time, areas further south closer to the I-70 corridor may
experience a slower precipitation type transition. Initial shallow
cold surge will change rain to freezing rain, but for much of the
area the frontal slope should intrude far enough that the cold air
becomes deep enough for refreezing and sleet. A significant amount
of sleet may accumulate somewhere across the area depending on
timing of waves of ascent/precip and character of the warm nose. A
more amplified frontal wave and stronger flow atop the frontal slope
would support this. Sleet would be most likely south of the axis of
heavy snow and north of where the frontal slope is sufficiently
shallow for freezing rain.

There are growing concerns for freezing rain impacts, particularly
further south where shallow cold air mass seems likely to reach.
Even across the northern portion of the area a transient period of
freezing rain may be enough for a glaze of ice. We adjusted the
forecast for earlier arrival of cold and the entire area should be
sub-freezing by around sunrise Friday. Once we have higher
confidence on precipitation amounts within the time frame the
thermal profile is supportive of icing, and better assess accretion
potential using FRAM concept we will be more specific about amounts.
For now there is enough of a signal to include the southernmost
portion of the area in the Winter Storm Watch.

Storm total liquid equivalent precipitation of 2-3 inches raises
concern for river flooding late in the week and this weekend.

Forecast confidence decreases considerably once this system departs.
Some medium range deterministic guidance and ensemble members bring
a short wave trough into the area with enough moisture/ascent for
light precipitation this weekend. This seems low probability at this
time.



No comments:

Post a Comment