• Major winter storm to bri

    From Mike Powell@454:3/105 to All on Fri Jan 23 09:15:08 2026
    FOUS11 KWBC 230858
    QPFHSD

    Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    358 AM EST Fri Jan 23 2026

    Valid 12Z Fri Jan 23 2026 - 12Z Mon Jan 26 2026

    ...Major winter storm to bring the potential for crippling icing,
    significant sleet, and heavy snow from the Southern Plains through
    the Southeast and up the Atlantic Coast into New England...

    Forecast remains largely on track with only minor changes compared
    to the previous cycle, with typical uncertainties surrounding the
    depth and northern push of the mid-level warm nose. While this
    uncertainty is rather minor from a synoptic scale, local forecasts
    can still be drastically impacted by this feature. The event will
    begin this morning across the Southern Plains and expand towards
    the MS VLY tonight. The driver of this winter storm is an
    impressive overlap of intensifying synoptic ascent with increasing
    subtropical moisture.

    The synoptic pattern becomes favorable today in response to the
    evolution of multiple shortwaves rotating through an amplifying
    trough across the eastern CONUS. A closed 500mb low off the Baja
    Peninsula will begin to open and shear to the east, at the same
    time dual shortwaves dig out of Saskatchewan/Alberta and into the
    Northern Plains. As the northern shortwaves dive south and the Baja
    low ejects east, the interaction of these features will lead to
    increasing mid-level divergence overlapping pronounced height falls
    to produce rich deep layer lift. The northern shortwave has
    trended a tad slower with overnight guidance and allows for more
    ridging out ahead of this system, helping shift the mid-level warm
    nose farther north. Regardless, the impressive ascent will be on
    top of an arctic cold front that will be sagging southward into the
    Southern Plains and eventually work its way southeast to the Gulf
    and Atlantic coasts by Saturday. This overlapping ascent will
    materialize atop a moistening column as subtropical moisture
    downstream of the Baja low streams northeast reflected by IVT that
    reaches above the 97th percentile according to NAEFS, in a broad
    swath from Texas to the Carolinas, with above the record (CFSR at
    00Z) climatology by Sunday evening in the east.

    This increasing moisture will result in a large swath of
    precipitation expanding from the Southern Plains today, to the
    MS VLY and TN VLY Saturday, into the Carolinas and Mid- Atlantic
    by Sunday, and finally reaching the Northeast Sunday night. This is
    a very large and impactful system across a huge portion of this
    country. While impacts will be considerable in many areas (aided by
    extreme cold), the icing (and sleet) and snow will be most
    impressive across two distinct areas.

    Freezing Rain and Sleet:
    Arguably the most lasting impact associated with this winter storm
    could be from heavy accumulating freezing rain and sleet stretching
    from the Southern Plains, Mid- South, Tennessee Valley, and
    southern Mid-Atlantic. This is due to very cold low-level arctic
    air being reinforced by the strong high over the north-central U.S.
    (and enhanced by pronounced mid-level confluence over the Great
    Lakes and New England) and a warm nose aloft (at around 750mb per
    cross section model soundings) melting snow as it falls through the
    column before refreezing just before or at the surface,and in some
    places this re-freezing layer is above the 90th percentile in
    terms of depth, suggesting some locations will experience
    exceptional sleet accumulations.

    The greatest freezing rain amounts and impacts are currently
    forecast across northeast TX through northern MS as favorable
    thermal profiles linger for over 24 hours beginning Friday night.
    WPC 72-hour probabilities for >0.5" of freezing rain are high >70%
    across southern AR/northern LA into parts of northern MS. Here,
    ice accretion could be crippling and exceed 0.75-1.00", (WPC
    probabilities 40-50% for 1" of ice) which would almost certainly
    lead to widespread long-lasting damage to infrastructure, including
    power outages and tree damage. Major sleet accumulations are also
    likely just north of the freezing rain area stretching from
    southern OK/north TX through central AR and into the Mid- South,
    with more than a few inches of sleet possible. The consistency of
    the guidance in both placement and amounts for this area are
    resulting in high confidence in an extreme event, leading to long-
    lasting impacts both to travel and infrastructure due to the
    bitterly cold airmass expected to linger into next week over the region.

    Heavy icing is also expected farther east into the southern
    Appalachians and southern Mid-Atlantic. The setup across the
    southern Mid- Atlantic down as far south as northern GA and areas
    just inland from the coasts of the Carolinas is an extreme case of
    CAD with a 1040mb high situated over the Interior Northeast on
    Saturday night. While regional soundings indicate there may be
    considerable sleet in this area as well, especially across southern
    VA into northern NC, these CADs are notorious for their effective dry/isallobaric flow, enhanced by precipitation, leading to dry
    wet-bulb advection offsetting the latent heat of freezing during
    freezing rain. With such an impressive high in place at
    precipitation onset, this will likely result in considerable
    accumulations of sleet and freezing rain here, too, with WPC
    probabilities indicating a moderate-to-high risk (60-80%) of at
    least 0.5", highest across the Piedmont and northern GA. The
    guidance has trended just a bit colder this afternoon, but
    significant icing is also possible as far north as Richmond, VA and
    towards southern MD.

    Heavy Snow:
    North of the mixed precipitation area and closely tied to both a
    favorable LFQ of a zonally oriented 180kt upper jet and strong
    700mb fgen, snow is the primary precipitation type stretching from
    the southern High Plains of east-central NM and the southern
    Rockies through the Plains, Mid-Mississippi Valley, Ohio Valley,
    Mid-Atlantic, and reaching the Northeast by Sunday evening (with
    additional expansion beyond this forecast period).

    Favorable upslope flow as the strong arctic high pressure noses
    southward along the High Plains behind a strong cold front starts
    on Friday across the southern Rockies, with light snow and even a
    chance for freezing drizzle at onset across the central Plains
    until the column fully saturates. Heavy snow is then forecast to
    begin breaking out Friday night from the central/southern Plains
    through the mid-Mississippi Valley and spanning much of the Ohio
    Valley and parts of the Midwest on Saturday. Snowfall rates could
    near 1"/hr as strong lift through WAA/fgen intersects with a
    region where the DGZ is forecast to be extremely deep (SREF
    probabilities above 70% for >100mb of depth). This would allow for
    efficient formation of dendrites where ample lift can fully
    moisture the column. While this depth is impressive, regional
    forecast soundings indicate that the best ascent may lie below this
    DGZ in many areas, and there is only modest indication of any
    isothermal layer beneath the DGZ to maintain aggregates. Despite
    this, efficient and fluffy SLRs are likely in this area, and with a
    long duration event expected, WPC probabilities are moderate
    (40-60% )for at least 12 inches from southeastern KS and
    northeastern OK into southern MO, with widespread 4+ inches
    extending all the way back into the TX Panhandle and lower MS VLY.
    Trends have been more favorable for snow vs lately on D1 across
    eastern OK and central AR as guidance depicts stronger mid-level
    fgen and dynamic cooling aloft to keep the entire column below 0C.
    00z HREF also depicts the potential for 1"/hr snowfall rates in
    this region. Will monitor this for potential adjustments downstream.

    Farther east, some heavier snowfall is becoming more likely for
    parts of the Ohio Valley, and into the Mid-Atlantic, and especially
    Northeast. Here, pronounced WAA and accompanying 850-700mb fgen
    will drive pronounced ascent into a rapidly moistening column
    thanks to IVT above the 90th climatological percentile. As the
    upper trough (interaction of the southern and northern streams)
    deepens over the Plains, downstream ascent will maximize and a
    period of impressive WAA snow with snowfall rates >1"/hr are
    likely. As secondary low pressure develops offshore (in a Miller B
    type evolution), banded structures within the WAA are likely to
    translate northward from the Mid-Atlantic into New England, and
    then may pivot and drift eastward Sunday night into Monday. Where
    this occurs, the heaviest total snowfall accumulations are
    probable, reflected by WPC probabilities that are already above 60%
    for 12+ inches. While there is some uncertainty into how much
    mixing will pivot northward, especially from Washington D.C.
    through Long Island, the interior portions (NW of I-95 and into
    southern New England which will remain cold as the secondary low
    develops and tracks near the 40/70 Benchmark) will remain mostly
    snow with above- climo SLRs leading to significant snowfall
    accumulations. One other uncertainty that has creeped into the
    forecast is a pesky dry slot moving into the Mid-Atlantic and
    Northeast Sunday night. This could dry out the mid-level and
    drastically cut both precipitation and SLRs. In fact, freezing
    drizzle could develop early Monday morning from northern Va to
    northern NJ in this scenario before stronger westerly flow picks
    up on Monday. Many areas are expected to receive more than 12
    inches from the Ohio Valley through the Mid- Atlantic and into the
    Northeast before this system winds down in New England on Monday /D4/.

    Key Messages for this system are linked below (Key Message 2)

    ...Great Lakes... Day 1...

    Expansive mid-level low centered over the Hudson Bay will begin to
    shear open and translate to the east today as a secondary
    shortwave rotates through its base and atop the Great Lakes this
    evening. Behind this impulse, shortwave ridging will amplify
    across the area, bringing an end to the persistent CAA and
    associated lake- induced ascent on D1.

    The subsequent W/NW flow and accompanying CAA will lead to
    impressive lake effect snow (LES) in the favored W/NW snow belts
    D1, with some pivoting to more N/NW by early Saturday. The
    heaviest snowfall is likely east of Lake Ontario D1 where WPC
    probabilities indicate a moderate risk (50-70%) for at least 8
    additional inches in the Tug Hill Plateau. Elsewhere, WPC
    probabilities suggest a moderate risk (50-70%) for at least 6
    additional inches across the northeastern U.P.

    Additionally, as an arctic cold front pivots into the Northeast,
    snow squalls along and behind this front are possible. For more
    details on the snow squall threat in the Northeast through Friday,
    please refer to our Key Messages (Key Messages 3) below.

    Snell/Weiss

    ...Winter Storm Key Messages are in effect. Please see current
    Key Messages below...

    https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/LatestKeyMessage_1.png

    https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/LatestKeyMessage_2.png

    https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/LatestKeyMessage_3.png

    $$
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