Radiation Weather News USA Miami 661 CPM L.A. San Diego 432+ 3-3-2016 Rad Update
US Hazards OutlookAn area of upper-level low pressure is forecast to move inland from the east
Pacific this weekend and then advance to the central
U.S. by the middle part of next week, while an area of upper-level high pressure builds along the
East Coast.
Strong onshore flow is likely to persist along the
West Coast through mid-March.
Surface high pressure is forecast to prevail across the
Bering Sea, while low pressure remains anchored over the
Gulf of Alaska.
Hazards
Heavy rain for western
Oregon and northern/central
California, Sat-Wed, Mar 5-9.
Heavy snow for the
Sierra mountains of California, Sat-Wed, Mar 5-9.
Heavy rain for parts of southern California, Sun-Mon, Mar 6-7.
Heavy rain shifting east across southeast
Oklahoma, east
Texas, the lower/middle
Mississippi Valley, lower
Ohio Valley, and parts of the
Southeast, Tue-Wed, Mar 8-9.
High winds expanding across the western U.S., Sat-Mon, Mar
5-7.
High winds for parts of the
Southwest and southern
Great Plains, Mon-Tue, Mar 7-8.
Periods of heavy rain for parts of Oregon and northern/central California, Thu-Mon, Mar 10-14.
Periods of heavy snow for the Sierra mountains of California, Thu-Mon, Mar 10-14.
Periods of high winds for northern/central California, Oregon, and the northern
Great Basin, Thu-Mon, Mar 10-14.
Severe
Drought across the northern
Rockies, the
Intermountain West, the
Pacific Northwest, California, and
Puerto Rico.
Detailed Summary
For Saturday March 05 - Wednesday March 09: A pattern change is likely during this period as an upper-level trough progresses across the western and south-central U.S. with a downstream ridge strengthening over the eastern U.S. Strong, onshore flow along with anomalous moisture originating from the tropics are expected to result in periods of heavy rain across western Oregon and the northern half of California with total amounts locally exceeding 7 inches, liquid equivalent, from March 5 to 9. Heavy snow, a few feet at the highest elevations from March 5-9, is expected across the northern
Sierras.
Snow levels are likely to lower on Sunday as the upper-level trough moves inland. On March 6 and 7, heavy rain is expected to shift south into southern California with potentially more than 2 inches of rainfall along favored terrain. Although snow is expected across the higher elevations of the
Four Corners region, snowfall amounts are generally expected to remain below hazards criteria.
Several days of gulf inflow coupled with 500-hpa height falls is expected to result in heavy rain (1 to 5 inches, locally more) shifting east from southeast Oklahoma and east Texas to the middle and lower Mississippi Valley from March 8 to 9. The deterministic 6Z/12Z
GFS model indicates rainfall amounts exceeding 7 inches across the lower Mississippi Valley which is plausible considering the evolving pattern. The risk of severe weather is likely to increase across the southern Great Plains and lower Mississippi Valley early next week.
Please refer to the latest day 4-8 convective outlook from the
Storm Prediction Center at www.spc.ncep.noaa.gov.
High winds (greater than 35 knots) are forecast to expand from the West Coast to the Great Basin and Southwest from March
5 to 7. The strongest winds are expected across northern California on March 5 when gusts of more than 80 knots are possible along the Sierra mountains ridges.
Early next week, high winds (gusts above 45 knots) are forecast to also affect parts of the Southwest and southern Great Plains. The gusty winds may lead to blowing dust across the Southwest and southern high
Plains.
Source: Netc.com & raditionnetwork.com
NOAA
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Kontinuum -
First Rain
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