Archive for December, 2007

A MAJOR Pattern Shift for the New Year

Monday, December 24th, 2007

As 2007’s weather ends on a mild and fairly dry note, except for a few scattered showers, we should lock-up the number 1 slot on the driest weather in Huntsville recorded history. But, by looking at the GFS computer model output, you can see that big changes are forecast to be on the way, as a major Arctic blast of air will be massing in the West to invade the east and southeast for the first week of 2008. 

New Year's Eve Surface Map

 The map above shows the Arctic air diving into the 4 corners and SW, heading toward the rest of the nation as 2008 begins.  The map below shows a deep ‘long wave trough’ developing over the west, and as the just stream winds start blowing North to South across the nation’s plains, the cold air will poor into most of the Tennessee Valley on the 2nd and 3rd of January of next week.  In advance of this, there will likely be a strong warm-up Christmas Eve and possibly Christmas Day.  This time of year, rapid warmth is usually followed by substantial plunges in temperatures.

New Year's Eve 500mb Map

Regarding the history of White Christmases in the TN Valley, the NWS in Huntsville has put together a great history lesson for us.

Keep following along this week and next and let’s test the reliability and accuracy of these long-range computer models with the forecasters here at Storm Force 31.

Happy New Year!

Brad Huffines, Chief Meteorologist / Storm Force 31

The Cause of Dec 20 Damaging Winds

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

 In the halls of science, new terminology is commonly introduced.  In the past few years the term Gravity Wave was introduced to the meteorological community.  And more recently there has been university research into the concept of Undular Bores.

 Radar Image from Dec 20, 2007

 So, this afternoon when a mass of rain moved through the Tennessee Valley underneath a very dynamic upper level wind profile, as Undular Bores began to form, a gravity grave was generated and translated some of that energy to the ground level, causing areas of damaging winds, downing powerlines and poles, tree limbs, and causing some property damage.  The diagram below is the wind speed graph from the UAH meteorological station showing increasing sustained winds after 2pm through nearly 4pm

Wind Profile whe Gravity Wave Blew Through

These waves are usually unforecastable with the present level of technology, and are usually found as they develop and cause damage.  In other words, these events are usually detected, and not forecast.  They don’t occur frequently, but as you hear the term ‘Gravity Wave’ and ‘Undular Bore’ in the future, this helps to explain what you are hearing.

Here are some interesting links to videos and pictures depicting this phenemenon. 

YouTube Video of a Gravity Wave by original author, KCCI-TV in Des Moines, Iowa.

Wave Clouds 

Gravity Waves over Arabian Sea

Gravity Wave Cloud Image

NEXRAD radar velocity image of Undular Bore Wave

Thanks for stopping by, and have a Merry Christmas and Happy Holiday Season, regardless of what event you may be celebrating.

Brad Huffines, Chief Meteorologist / Storm Force 31

Dreaming of a White Christmas ?

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007


Based on the climate data from 1970-2000, this graphic from the National Climatic Data Center shows the odds of having a “White Christmas” (they define it as having at least 1 inch of snow on the ground). For most of the Tennessee Valley, the probability is less than 5%, though it jumps to 5-10% in parts of Franklin and Lincoln Counties in Tennessee. Click the graphic to enlarge.


Across the Tennessee Valley, the odds are pretty slim, but it has been known to happen! (Check out the latest forecast to see if we might beat the odds.)Huntsville

According to the climate records, Huntsville has reported at least a trace of snow on December 25th 8 times since 1894, and 11 times on December 24th:

Christmas Eve (Dec. 24th) Christmas Day (Dec. 25th)

3.3″

1962

0.3″

1989

0.4″

1985

Trace

2002
1993
1985
1983
1980
1969
1909

Trace

1995
1990
1989
1983
1980
1966
1963
1961
1960

However, it didn’t actually accumulate to much! Only once has there been more than a trace of snow on the ground, and that was in 1963, when one inch was reported.

(Note: The featured photo from our photo album this week shows a White Christmas in Boaz in 1989.)

Muscle Shoals

It looks a little greener in the Shoals, where at least a trace of snow was reported 8 times on December 25th since 1890 (but never more than a trace), and just 6 times on the 24th:

Christmas Eve (Dec. 24th) Christmas Day (Dec. 25th)

0.5″

1989

Trace

1993
1992
1983
1980
1948
1913
1906
1897

Trace

1998
1990
1985
1980
1966

However, snow from earlier in the week kept 3 inches of snow on the ground in 1963, and one inch on the ground in 1989 and 1929.

Of course, the “mother of all snowstorms” in the Tennessee Valley actually occurred on New Year’s Eve and Day of 1963-1964. Huntsville reported 17.1 inches of snow over the 2-day period, while Muscle Shoals received 9.6 inches. (”Dreaming of a White New Year’s” just doesn’t sound the same…)

Our forecast for Christmas day this year is for plenty of cold temps, but little chance of seeing the white stuff.  Hope you have a merry time anyway !!

Gary Dobbs, Meteorologist / Storm Force 31

Improving Drought Forecasts

Friday, December 14th, 2007

Oh, how dry 2007 has been!  It will undoubtly be recorded in the annals of weather history as one of the driest years on record with most areas in Central and Eastern Alabama now reporting a twenty-five inch or greater rainfall deficit with lake and reservoir levels at an all-time low.  Droughts are extremely hard to forecast, that is, until it is the dead of summer and everything is exactly that, “dead”.  Parts of North Alabama will be recovering from the current drought conditions for many years to come but our friends and colleauges at NASA’s Marshall Spaceflight Center in Huntsville have recently discovered that “streamflow” can be used to help forecast times of drought.  Below is an interesting article on the breakthrough research that is currently being conducted.  

From the deserts of the American southwest to the pine forests of the Deep South, drought-weary residents have one thing on their minds: “I wish it would rain!” Technically, what they should be wishing for is “more streamflow,” says Dr. Ashutosh Limaye, a hydrologist at the National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) in Huntsville, Alabama.   Streamflow is a term used by water management specialists to mean, very simply, the amount of water in streams and rivers. Areas of drought have reduced streamflow, and experts believe they can better forecast droughts by studying this key indicator of dry conditions.

 

“Streamflow is always changing, from day to day and even minute to minute, for a wide variety of reasons: evaporation from the soil and from bodies of water, runoff from rainfall and snowmelt, transpiration by plants and trees, and other natural and human influences,” he explains. National Weather Service River Forecast Centers have to consider all of these factors when they forecast streamflow.  “If we can help forecasters estimate any of these elements more accurately, they can better predict drought conditions months in advance,” says Dr. Limaye. “These predictions are critical because they influence important decisions about measures like withholding water in reservoirs and restricting water use.”  When Limaye’s team asked National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) officials, including Dr. Mike Smith of the Office of Hydrologic Development, specifically how NASA could help them improve streamflow forecasts, the officials pinpointed one thing — clouds.   Why clouds? “Because most of the water that falls on the ground goes up in evaporation, evaporation is a huge component of the total surface water,” explains Limaye. “So it’s important to get those numbers right. Clouds affect radiation, which has a big influence on evaporation.”

National Weather Service cloud cover estimates from the 1960s to the 1990s went like this: A trained technician literally walked outside, tilted his or her head back, eyeballed the sky like an old farmer, and rated the cloud cover on a 1-8 scale.   In the 90s, these manual observations were replaced by a device called a “ceilometer,” part of the Automated Surface Observing System (ASOS), which has a laser beam that aims at the sky. Returns from this beam are used to detect clouds.   “Believe it or not, this newer method is not nearly as accurate as people just looking up,” says Dr. Limaye. “The ceilometer can only detect clouds up to 12,000 feet. If there are no low clouds to block the view, you and I can see way over 20,000 feet, up to where the wispy Cirrus clouds are floating. And Cirrus clouds way up high, even patchy ones, can influence the radiation that drives evaporation.”

This is where Dr. Limaye’s team can help. NASA scientists use satellite instruments to scan the Earth’s surface for things like vegetation cover, ground temperature, and other variables of interest. Normally, these researchers would view clouds as noise contaminating the signal they are trying to view. In short, clouds get in the way. “But one person’s noise is another person’s signal,” says Limaye. “We can use the cloud cover data. In fact, it’s exactly what NOAA wants to see.”  One NASA satellite instrument called MODIS, short for Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer, can detect clouds all the way up to the top of the atmosphere. NOAA’s ASOS can only see clouds up to 12,000 feet and lacks MODIS’s precision. ASOS, though, records cloud data continuously, providing a picture of what happened throughout the day, while MODIS passes overhead only twice per day. It made perfect sense to Limaye’s team to let the two tools work in concert and complement one another, each filling in what the other lacked.  “Together these tools produce much better radiation estimates than either can do alone,” says Limaye. “We’ll be able to reestablish what the National Weather Service lost when they stopped using manual observations for cloud cover.”  Preliminary analyses show that MODIS cloud data make evaporation estimates 25% more accurate. Now researchers are analyzing how adding the NASA data improves the actual streamflow estimates that rely on those evaporation estimates. Those numbers will be available soon.

After all that, do you think they could do something to make it rain?

Keller Watts/ Meteorologist/ Storm Force 31

Hooda Thunkit, A December Bike Riding Spurt

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

I have 3 boys.  2 who are ‘older’ from my first marriage (Benjamin, 20, at the United States Military Academy at West Point, and Brian, 16, a recent addition to the roadways of Houston, TX, as a licensed driver and a Cypress Creek High School Drumline member and percussionist), and 1 who is a blessing from my current marriage (Kyler, 18 months, and enough toddler for 2 who gives give his parents all they can handle 24/7), and each of the 3 have experienced one of my Rites of Passage into Huffines Boyhood.  That is being strapped to the back of my bicycle while riding the highways, biways, and greenways of their Dad’s choice.  I have been fortunate to live in parts of the country where this has been possible nearly every month in a year.  For my first 2, I was in Savannah, GA, that has a very temperate climate even in the dead of winter.  And ODDLY enough, that was the first place I had lived to see my first true White Christmas in 1989.  Yup, Savannah, GA.

Indian Creek Greenway Image

Well, with the present record highs, Kyler, his mother and my wife Jo, and I have enjoyed a couple days of bike riding both in my neighborhood in Hazel Green as well as the Aldridge Creek Greenway in the midst of wonderfully pleasant December weather.  While the only challenge has been my leg strength and letting my tires run with too low a pressure (making the mountain bike’s wide tires harder to keep moving on the aforementioned greenway) the weather has allowed us to have some great time outside, in shorts and t-shirts (and helmets I must add).  As for our string of December record highs, it will come to an end in a couple days.  But the future of my avid bike riding with another of my wonderful boys remains strong, and I hope my legs keep getting stronger.  Not to mention that a bike seat does get uncomfortable after a few miles.

Enjoy the Record Highs.  Me and Mine are (or more grammatically correct, I and mine are <am?>.)

Brad Huffines, Chief Meteorologist /Storm Force 31

The Winterization of the Tennessee Valley

Monday, December 3rd, 2007

Many of us have already seen our first few bits of wintry precipitation.  Last weekend, when the cold rains moved in, there were numerous reports of rain mixed with sleet, with a few in the mountains reporting a few flakes of snow.  But as everyone who lives in the Tennesssee Valley knows that the weather can be as fickle in the winter as in the spring severe weather season.

2006 Winter Weather Example

The National Weather Service in Huntsville has established the week as Winter Weather Awareness Week.  Taking an afternoon to prepare your family for the worst that winter can bring will make you and your family more comfortable and less affected by any winter storms that affect us this winter season.

Some good news from the previous month.  November 2007 ranked as the 50th warmest on record in Huntsville, a far cry from the heat of the summer this year.  We also ended up seeing about 1/2 the average November precipitation which kept most of North Alabama and Southern Middle Tennessee in the throes of drought.  It will take months of above average precipitation to make a long-term difference in the drought.

Time will tell if we will make any headway in the drought in December, but 2007 will most likely end up being the driest year in Huntsville history.

 Brad Huffines, Chief Meteorologist / Storm Force 31