A lot of people have requested a blog post explaining what the hell has been going on this winter. Well here goes.
I don't know.
At least that's the tl;dr summary.
OK, I can do a little better than that, but explaining the whims of the atmosphere is very difficult and I don't want to suggest that I'm some sort of mystic who knows what is going on. I'm not sure anyone is.
Let's start in the fall. As usual, a variety of seasonal outlooks were issued by various groups. These always get a lot of attention, but their value is often limited.
I will use the official forecast issued by the National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center as example. Below is the three-month outlook issued in November for December through February. Due to the presence of La Nina (which has now waned), the forecast suggested that the dice were loaded for a dry southwest and a wet northwest. Utah could go either way.
Mother Nature, however, had different ideas, and for the mountain west, basically flipped that forecast on its head, producing a wet southwest and a dry northwest.
Mother Nature 1, NWS Forecasters 0.
To be fair, the forecasts issued by the Climate Prediction Center are probabilistic. They don't say that the southwest will be dry and the northwest wet. Instead, they forecast a shift in the likelihood of possible outcomes. Pure chance for any given winter gives a 33.3% chance of above, near median, or below median precipitation (in this case, median is broadly defined as a range around median). Equal chances, as was forecast for Utah, says there's no loading of the dice and they simply don't know what is going to happen. Below median, as was forecast for the southwest, indicates a shift to something like a 25% chance of above median, 35% of near median, and 40% of below median (the exact numbers vary somewhat regionally). Thus, the seasonal outlooks issued by the National Weather Service in November predicted a small shift from chance toward drier conditions in the southwest, although they are often interpreted or communicated in ways that make them seem more confident.
Long-lead-time forecasts, such as seasonal outlooks like the one above, are based largely on forecasts of more slowly varying components of the Earth's climate system that exhibit some predictability (over chance) at long lead times. For example, although the day-to-day weather cannot be reliably predicted after about two weeks, ocean temperatures in the tropical Pacific (e.g., La Niña or El Niño) exhibit some predictability at long lead times.
The outlook above was based largely on the presence and anticipated persistence of La Niña for this winter. Forecasts probabilities of above, near, or below median precipitation were based largely on what happened during past La Niña, with some consulting of computer models forecasts and expert judgment.
This sounds straightforward, but the the Earth is a complicated place. First, although we can anticipate La Niña with some skill, the forecasts aren't perfect or highly detailed. During La Niña the central and/or eastern tropical Pacific cools to below average, but the strength and coverage of the cold water varies. This in turn affects the distribution of thunderstorms and thunderstorm complexes in the tropical Pacific and in turn that affects the atmospheric circulation in different ways.
Then there is the inherent randomness of weather and weather systems. Waves and other flow patterns in the atmosphere can be highly chaotic. Think of a loose firehose. You can see there are waves in the hose, and they tend to exhibit preferred wavelengths and amplitudes, but there's also a lot of randomness. A firehose is relatively simple compared to the complex three-dimensional flows in the atmosphere where there are interactions between circulations near the surface and at upper levels and between the tropics, midlatitudes, and polar regions.
The existence of La Niña and other slowly varying characteristics of the Earth's surface (e.g., Arctic ice coverage, etc.) can affect some characteristics of the large-scale flow pattern, but there's still a lot of random stuff happening. How the atmosphere got the way it did during the 2022/23 winter is complicated, much like Harry Potter finding the sword of Godric Gryffindor.
Source: psl.noaa.gov |
Source: psl.noaa.gov |
And for December 2 to March 1, the story remains largely the same.
Source: psl.noaa.gov |
Source: psl.noaa.gov |
So, this general pattern of a trough over northeast Siberia, a ridge over the north Pacific, and a trough over the western US has been locked in for the better part of the winter. Overall, this pattern resembles something known as the negative phase of the Pacific-North American Pattern, or negative PNA, which is one of the leading patterns of atmospheric variability in the north Pacific and North America.
If what I'm seeing on Twitter is accurate, then Alta is only 13 inches away from having its all-time snowiest month ever. Looks like we should have a good shot at that assuming the Cottonwood magic works as usual tonight. Rapidly closing in on 800"...
ReplyDeleteSorry, posted this on the thread below by accident, but any credibility to the theory that a rapidly warming Arctic is destabilizing large-scale weather patterns and could possibly be (at least partially) responsible for our record snowfall this winter?
ReplyDeleteThe Arctic is look awfully warm lately, as of writing this Climate Reanalyzer has it sitting at a toasty +2.79 C, as far as a 2m temperature anomaly is concerned.
I'm not going to speculate on that. I have discussed some of the debate in previous posts, however, if you are interested.
Deletehttps://wasatchweatherweenies.blogspot.com/2020/01/perspectives-on-linkages-between-arctic.html
asl?
DeleteAlta 800!!!
ReplyDelete