Baseballdude2915 wrote:Euro came in about the same as last run temperature wise from what I can read. Nothing significantly different.
Check out low to the west:
Baseballdude2915 wrote:Euro came in about the same as last run temperature wise from what I can read. Nothing significantly different.
The Euro as well as other models are suggesting an Upper Air disturbance will linger to our W after the Arctic Cold front passes on Tuesday. There appears to be some moisture as well, but not much and as we have seen this is a long way out in model world. What the overnight run have suggested is that it's going to get cold, mighty cold and likely the coldest of the season. Cloud cover may well be likely as well as some severe/heavy rainfall chances on Tuesday as the front pushes in from our N and W. As Jeff mentioned yesterday, the front looks to slide straight S into Deep S TX and move S and E. The model are converging on a solution regarding the front and drying conditions after the front passes. Then we have that lingering disturbance to our W. That may well suggest cloud cover and very chilly temps most of mid to late week. Should there be enough moisture and the lower levels moisten up enough, then we could see a very slight chance of something wintry reaching the ground. Still way too much uncertainty to speculate on anything further than that. The bottom line is a strong Arctic cold frontal air mass will settle across TX and our area and points E. I also wanted to show some temp changes over the past 24 hours. Note the 'cool down' just N of the US/Canadian Border. The Arctic air mass is still to the N of that area and heading S...cristina99 wrote:could you elaborate on the last the poast - about what the euro saw last night or early this morning?
I've stickied or pinned the January Discussion thread. Let's keep our discussions concerning this weekend in that thread as it is still January and a lot of folks are wanting information with the running of the Chevron Marathon tomorrow.wxman666 wrote:TexasBreeze wrote:I don't know about there being too much severe weather. The air is really stable and it would have to become unstable really fast. Clouds will roll in too. Anything's possible though! It's been awhile since a bonifide severe weather outbreak around here recently.wxman666 wrote:SPC Update: SLIGHT Risk of Severe Wx for much of Southeast TX Saturday eve. Damaging winds, large hail the main threats....isolated tornado cannot be ruled out.
http://www.spc.noaa.gov/products/outlook/day1otlk.html
SPC believes destabilization will occur towards late afternoon and early evening, eroding the cap...thereby producing elevated tstms. We should reach about 1000 j/kg by night fall, with support for rotating updrafts overnight, according to SPC. I'm guessing they had grounds for upgrading to slight risk for such a large area...which didn't seem to occur with the past few fronts...even though there was isolated severe.
Wow! It is a very long way away from land.srainhoutx wrote:A look a GOES W Water Vapor Imagery shows our next week trouble maker off the Pacific NW spinning up as well as tropical thunderstorms associated with yet another Upper Low N of the Equator and E of HI...
http://weather.unisys.com/satellite/sat ... oop-12.gif
srainhoutx wrote:The 12Z GFS suggests a deeper trough as our Upper Air disturbance dives S into N MX...that model is trending colder as well...
Yea 850mb temps reach all the way to -11C! This is different.srainhoutx wrote:A big step in the right direction (correction, if you will) for the GFS concerning that cold air. In fact that model suggests we will stay cold through Friday.
Well the 12Z Canadian (GEM) suggests otherwise...wxman57 wrote:I still see nothing to indicate any "threat" of winter weather in our area. Even if the worst-case scenario plays out (Arctic air slips south faster than models are projecting), all we'd see would be colder rain vs. warmer rain. Any snow threat is in north to northeast Texas, not in our area.
wxman57 wrote:I still see nothing to indicate any "threat" of winter weather in our area. Even if the worst-case scenario plays out (Arctic air slips south faster than models are projecting), all we'd see would be colder rain vs. warmer rain. Any snow threat is in north to northeast Texas, not in our area.
The cold air is though.biggerbyte wrote:wxman57 wrote:I still see nothing to indicate any "threat" of winter weather in our area. Even if the worst-case scenario plays out (Arctic air slips south faster than models are projecting), all we'd see would be colder rain vs. warmer rain. Any snow threat is in north to northeast Texas, not in our area.
Ditto!!! Sorry, guys. In reality, as of now, it's just not there.
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