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AccuWeather's Geoff Cornish breaks down the potential for snow in the days surrounding Thanksgiving.
Transcript
00:00The weekend is upon us, the weekend preceding Thanksgiving.
00:04The holidays are virtually here, whether you're ready for them or not.
00:07And with the forecast feed, we're going to be sniffing out snow.
00:10There will be some measurable snow in the north-central U.S.
00:15and into the Great Lakes region at times over the next seven days.
00:18The plows will be out, some of you will be shoveling,
00:20and it's time to get those snowblowers ready.
00:22Let's look at some headlines, then we're going to jump into the details here
00:26with some models, and we'll come back to our graphics
00:28to kind of summarize things.
00:30So we are saying there's a chance.
00:31This is inspired by Dumb and Dumber, but there's nothing dumb about our forecast.
00:36We're taking a look at a transition to much colder air
00:40across the Great Lakes, the upper Midwest especially,
00:44and into next weekend, the northeast as well,
00:47with potential for some significant snow near the Great Lakes.
00:49And even some of this may not be lake effect.
00:52We actually have a larger-scale storm system
00:54that could bring some meaningful snow as well.
00:57Denver, we're even looking at you.
00:59More extensive cold will follow into early December,
01:01and we're going to be watching the area from the northern plains to New England,
01:04and at times the front range.
01:06Denver will be watching.
01:08You have some snow potential in your forecast.
01:10Now, before we get into the models,
01:12just a quick look at Thanksgiving.
01:14We're going to be dealing with some colder air in the north-central U.S.
01:18There will be some lake effect snow.
01:20You can see the wind streamlines on here.
01:22I'm going to draw some arrows just to indicate the flow across the Great Lakes,
01:26and that is, again, what's going to deposit some snow
01:28in all the usual spots downwind of the Great Lakes.
01:32But as we jump into the models, we have a little bit of a disparity here,
01:36as always, between the GFS and the European model.
01:39These are two of the primary computer models that we look at
01:42that generally have the most success when we're looking at maybe 3 to 10 days into the future.
01:47And here we're looking 20,000 feet up into the atmosphere.
01:51These bright colors, I know it may be kind of a,
01:54it looks like just a kaleidoscope of nonsense,
01:56but this is vorticity, a measure of spin in the atmosphere.
02:00If you have those bright colors to your west,
02:02and if it's coming your way, the atmosphere is likely to produce lift.
02:06That leads to more cloud production, more precipitation production,
02:09and that's the stormy setup that we often look to.
02:12Now, with the GFS, this is kind of the more interesting of two scenarios.
02:17What I want you to notice is we're watching two separate disturbances.
02:21The primary trough in the northern branch of the jet stream,
02:24and then there's the southern branch of the jet stream that is contributing this disturbance.
02:29If these are close enough to one another, if the larger one can absorb the other,
02:34it's fed by some of the energy, it imports more moisture into the system,
02:38and we get into business in snowflake production.
02:41And you'll notice that the GFS model, they are close enough to one another.
02:46The disturbance over Nebraska gets generally ingested into the circulation for the most part.
02:53It's not perfectly together, but ultimately it gets ingested into that storm system,
02:58and it feeds, at least a contribution of that helps to feed the strength of the low-pressure system
03:04Tuesday night and Wednesday here in the central U.S.
03:06That's the GFS.
03:07With the European model, we actually see kind of more of a separation.
03:11Here we are Tuesday morning, and you can see this disturbance is all the way down in Indiana compared to the Dakotas.
03:18So Indiana and Dakotas compared to more of a Wisconsin, Iowa, and Dakotas.
03:25So again, there's more interaction in the GFS compared to the European,
03:29and that makes this midweek storm that will be causing travel trouble,
03:33Anna's been telling us about this here on the AccuWeather Network and on AccuWeather.com.
03:37You can see some of the videos.
03:38That leads to a difference.
03:39So in the real world, at the ground, where it all matters, that's where we live,
03:44again, the GFS, you get a slightly more energetic storm system with some pretty good snow
03:49into the Dakotas with this one Tuesday into Wednesday.
03:53Meanwhile, in the world of the European, remember, this was the weaker system
03:56because the two disturbances were more separated from one another.
04:00Here, you can see there's some snow out there, but it doesn't have much staying power,
04:04and it gets cold.
04:06It does get cold.
04:07In fact, if you look at the thickness lines here, the 540 thickness line,
04:12if the atmosphere is warm, it expands.
04:14If it's cold, it constricts.
04:15So we get lower thicknesses.
04:17The atmosphere is more compressed in a colder air mass.
04:19It's going to be colder regardless of how this plays out.
04:22But again, do we see decent snow last for a couple days in the Dakotas, Tuesday, Wednesday?
04:27Or is it really just a little bit of maybe a one- or two-inch event that quickly scoots away?
04:32And again, there's potential out there because of the interaction between the two.
04:37If the GFS is correct, it could be significant plowable snow,
04:41maybe half a foot in some parts of the upper Midwest.
04:44Now, that's the first storm system.
04:45Let's go back to the upper-level flow, and then we get into the weekend.
04:48And here we have the GFS model.
04:51It's one trough.
04:52It scoots east and pulls out.
04:54And then we have another big trough, really sets in, a big, deep one,
04:58across the southwest on Sunday afternoon.
05:01This is the Sunday following Thanksgiving.
05:03In the European, I'm going to take us from that time, a little bit different out there.
05:07Look at this.
05:08You can see this trough cuts in a little more aggressively, a little more eastward.
05:14And by Sunday evening in the European,
05:16we've got a pretty good negatively tilted trough sloped down and to the right.
05:20That's the type of storm system that produces a stronger impact.
05:25In the GFS, it's positively tilted.
05:28Therefore, it's a little bit weaker.
05:29We have impacts in California, but it would not have the same firepower.
05:34So weaker impacts for the central U.S. and the north central in the GFS.
05:39In the weekend storm, stronger set up here in the European.
05:43Remember, there's cold air in place ahead of this.
05:45So how does this play out at the surface?
05:47Let's go to the stronger solution here.
05:51Just again, just to get everybody on the same page, including myself,
05:54in the European stronger scenario for the weekend, GFS weaker scenario.
05:59So let's go to the European.
06:00Look at this.
06:01This is a pretty powerful storm system.
06:03Look at all these isobars, tightly packed, strong winds.
06:05This could lead to near blizzard conditions for some,
06:08and also some stronger storms in the southern plains.
06:11It'd be one of those late November storms that bring a variety of impacts.
06:15Pretty good snow there in Denver.
06:16Meanwhile, as this ramps up Sunday and Monday, that's a high-impact storm.
06:20Look at this Monday evening.
06:22Heavy snow for parts of the Dakotas and into Minnesota.
06:26And meanwhile, slightly weaker setup, but still an impactful storm,
06:30no matter how this plays out, scenario one or scenario two.
06:34It may be even more delayed with the one.
06:35But regardless, ending with just a summary forecast,
06:40next weekend, there is potential.
06:42We could even arguably include parts of the area around Denver in this,
06:47but especially in the upper Midwest, there's no potential.
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