Saturday, February 16, 2019

Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Saturday 02/16/2019 8:00 pm MST


Summary:  Cool temperatures and scattered snow showers will impact Utah through the weekend. A broad  trough will keep unseasonably cool temperatures and well-mixed conditions through next week. A stronger storm is possible later next week.

No persistent cold-air pools are forecast for the next 7 days at this point, and with the climatological end of "inversion season" in mid-February, it is looking almost certain that the winter pollution season is over.



Monday, February 11, 2019

Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Monday 02/11/2019 1:00 pm MST 

 

Summary:  Another storm system will approach Utah Wednesday afternoon through Thursday, increasing southerly winds and keeping the air clean. The storm looks to be primarily a rain/snow mix in the Valley locations.

Yet another cold front and snowstorm is possible Saturday, with cold and unsettled conditions with light snow lingering into early next week.   

No persistent cold-air pools are forecast for the next 7 days at this point, and with the climatological end of "inversion season" in mid-February, it is looking increasingly likely that the winter pollution season is over.

Daily forecast info will be provided once a persistent cold air pool period has been identified in weather guidance models.

Friday, February 8, 2019

Persistent cold-air pool forecast

Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Friday 02/08/2019 7:00 pm MST 

 


Summary:  A storm system will approach Utah Sunday afternoon, increasing southerly winds and keeping the deep snowcover and cold temperatures from generating much pollution build-up.

Another snowstorm is possible Sunday night into Monday morning. Unsettled conditions with another cold storm possible Wed-Thursday next week.   

No persistent cold-air pools are forecast for the next 7 days at this point.

Daily forecast info will be provided once a persistent cold air pool period has been identified in weather guidance models.

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Wednesday 02/06/2019 6:00 pm MST 



Summary:  A major storm system generally brought between 9 and 14 inches of snow to Utah Valleys Wednesday with more lake effect possible into Thursday morning. See https://www.cocorahs.org/ for a map of snowfall totals.

A large trough over the western US will keep air quality good through next weekend with breezy conditions and moderating temperatures.  Snow possible Monday. Yet additional storms may affect the region going into the middle of Feb.

Daily forecast info will be provided once a persistent cold air pool period has been identified in weather guidance models.

Saturday, February 2, 2019

Persistent cold-air pool forecast


Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Saturday 02/02/2019 1:00 pm MST 


Summary:  A complex series of storms will traverse the western US through the next week.  Rain will predominantly fall in the Valleys this weekend, melting the remaining snow. A chance of snow if forecast with colder systems by the middle of next week No persistent cold-air pools are forecast for the next week at least.

Sunday 3 February:
Rain.
High 48 F Low 41 F
  
Monday 4 February:
Rain.
High 49 F Low 42 F


Tuesday 5 February:
Rain with possible snow mix.
High 43 F Low 29 F
  
Wednesday 6 February:
Chance of snow.
High 36 F Low 25 F

Thursday 7 February:
Partly cloudy.
High 32 F Low 24 F

Friday 8 February:
Partly cloudy.
High 35 F Low 23 F

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Persistent cold-air pool forecast


Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Wednesday 01/30/2019 5:00 pm MST 

Summary:  A weak persistent cold-air pool (high pressure and associated capping inversion is not that pronounced, meaning the pollution builds into a deeper layer, and also surface snow cover is partially gone) will continue through Friday, with PM2.5 concentrations increasing ~5 microgram/m3 each day. A series of weather systems will clean the air starting Saturday and bring Valley Rain this weekend, followed by Valley snow early next week.


Thursday 31 January:

Partly cloudy, increasing haze within cold-air pool.
High 37 F Low 27 F
 
Friday 1 February:

Partly cloudy, increasing haze within cold-air pool.
High 42 F Low 25 F

NAM Forecast Model showing temperature inversion in place on Friday morning showing a surface inversion and inversion aloft.

Saturday  2 February:
A chance of showers in the afternoon.  
High 45 F Low 32 F.
  
Sunday 3 February: 
   
Rain showers likely, changing to snow showers Sunday night.
High  40 F Low 30 F.

Monday 4 February
 
A chance of snow.
High  39 F Low 23 F.
Tuesday 5 February
 
A chance of snow.
High  32 F Low 21 F.

Sunday, January 27, 2019

Persistent cold-air pool forecast

Sunday, January 27, 2019 5 pm


Weather Synopsis:

Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Sunday 01/27/2019 4:00 pm MST 


This will be updated every 2-3 days except before and during major PCAPS (will be updated daily).

Summary:  Weather models have backed away from any major PCAPS for the next 10 days. A weak cold-air pool this weekend will end Monday with a dry cold system coming from the north. Another weak 3.5 day duration cold-air pool will extend from Tuesday evening - Friday. 
Pollution levels may slowly increase to 15+ micrograms/m3 by Friday, but this is not expected to be a very significant inversion episode. 
A series of storm systems are now forecast to bring rain and snow to Utah from next Saturday - Tuesday (February 2 nd-5 th).

Monday 28 January:

Mostly cloudy,
High 38 F Low 25 F
 
Tuesday  29 January:

Mostly sunny.
High 35 F Low 24 F

Wednesday  30 January:
 
Sunny. 
High 36 F Low 23 F.
  
GFS Forecast Model showing weak inversion in place on Wednesday morning.
Thursday 31 January: 
 
Mostly sunny.
High 39 F Low 27 F.
GFS Forecast Model showing weak inversion continuing Thursday morning.
Friday 1 February:    

Mostly sunny.
High  41 F Low 25 F.

Saturday 2 February
 
A chance of rain and snow.

High  40 F Low 32 F.

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Tuesday 01/22/2019

Tuesday, January 22, 20194 pm


Weather Synopsis:

Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Tuesday 01/22/2019 4:00 pm MST 

This will be updated every 2-3 days except before and during major PCAPS (will be updated daily).
Summary: A major  storm system brought widespread snow  accumulations to Utah Valley ranging from 4-16 inches. Thus, a significant snowpack is in place to support intense inversions.

 To view snowfall accumulations see https://www.cocorahs.org/Maps/ViewMap.aspx?state=usa

However, a series of weak weather systems progressing around a high pressure system off the West US coast will keep temperatures aloft from warming much through Saturday.  Thereafter, cold-air pool conditions may become established starting Sunday but it is too far out to have much confidence in the forecasts. The 3-5 day forecast is also unusually uncertain. If the high pressure over the west coast shifts east more than currently forecast, a persistent cold-air pool could form later this week. Stay tuned for updates.


Wednesday 23 January:

Mostly cloudy flurries possible.
High 36 F Low 22 F
Thursday  24 January:

Mostly cloudy.Chance of snow Wed. night into Thurs morning.
High 37 F Low 27 F

GFS Forecast Model showing light snow and short-wave trough
impacting Northern Utah Thursday morning.

Friday  25 January:
Mostly cloudy slight chance of snow.
High 36 F Low 24 F.
  
GFS Forecast Model showing light snow and short-wave trough
impacting Northern Utah Friday night.


Saturday 26 January: 
 
Mostly sunny, cool.
High 37 F Low 24 F.
 
Sunday 27 January:

GFS Forecast Model showing high pressure ridge building over Utah on Sunday.


 
Mostly sunny, cool.
High  37 F Low 25 F.

Monday 28 January

Mostly cloudy chance of light snow.
High  36 F Low Monday night 20 F.

Friday, January 18, 2019

Friday, January 18, 2019 noon.


Weather Synopsis:

Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Friday 01/18/2019 12:00 noon MST 

This will be updated every other day unless during major PCAPS (will be updated daily).
Summary: A major  storm system brought heavy rain and snow to Utah is winding down on Friday. Weak high pressure will result in brief cloud-topped cold-air pool/inversion through the weekend, with only minor impacts to Valley air quality. A major snowstorm is looking more likely for Monday. This could set the stage for a large high pressure system over the Western US with snow on the ground in northern Utah Valleys, potentially leading to a major persistent cold-air pool episode beginning around Saturday 26 January if current model forecasts hold. Stay tuned. 

Saturday 20 January:

Mostly cloudy with sprinkles or flurries possible in the morning. Weak cold-air pool in place in the cloud-topped inversion. PM2.5 concentrations between 5-10 micrograms/m3.
High 42 F Low 33 F
NAM model sounding showing the deep cloudy inversion layer between the surface and mountaintop (700 mb):
Sunday  21 January:

Partly cloudy. Weak cold-air pool in place.
PM2.5 concentrations between 8-14 micrograms/m3.
High 45 F Low 33 F

Monday 22 January:
Cloudy, 70% chance of snow. Significant accumulations possible.
High 35 F Low 21 F.
 
Tuesday 23 January: 
Mostly cloudy, cold.
High 30 F Low Saturday night 24 F.
 
Wednesday 24 January:
Mostly cloudy chance of light snow.
High  37 F Low Sunday night 25 F.

Thursday 25 January

Mostly cloudy chance of light snow.
High  38 F Low Monday night 24 F.

Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Weather Synopsis:


Persistent cold-air pool forecast valid Tuesday 01/15/2019 7:00 pm MST 

This will be updated every other day unless conditions warrant.
Summary: A weak storm system will clean out the remaining pollution Wednesday. A windy and wet pattern will ensue through Thursday night with several feet of snow in area mountains as a a strong Pacific storm system traverses the Western US. An inch or two of snow is possible in the Valleys Thursday night into Friday morning. A short 60-hr cold-air pool episode is forecast Friday afternoon through Sunday night followed by a cold front and mix-out to clean conditions late Sunday night or Monday morning. PM2.5 Pollution levels will stay below the NAAQS on Saturday and Sunday. Cool, clean northwest flow will follow into Monday and Tuesday. 


Wednesday 16 January:

Remaining pollution from last episode will be mixing out by mid-afternoon. 70% chance of rain and snow mix.  Winds 5-10 kts from south.
High 40 F Low Wednesday night 37 F
 
Thursday  17 January:

Clean air in Utah Valleys. Rain likely (90% chance), heavy at times. Too warm for Valley snow accumulation in the Salt Lake Valley until late Thursday night with 1 inches possible toward dawn Friday. Winds 5-10 kts from south.
High 46 F Low Thursday night 33 F

Friday 18 January:
Clean air in Utah Valleys. Snowshowers likely (70% chance). 1-2 inches possible.  
High 37 F Low Friday night 30 F.

Saturday 19 January: 

Weak pollution episode begins with cold-air pool conditions being established.
High 37 F Low Saturday night 26 F.
Forecast model inversion sounding late morning Saturday showing descending mountaintop subsidence inversion associated with progressive short-wave trough:
Sunday 20 January: 

Weak pollution episode continues through Sunday night. PM2.5 levels likely to remain below NAAQS. 
High  40 F Low Sunday night 29 F.
Forecast model inversion sounding in the morning Sunday showing the mountaintop subsidence inversion has descended and the low-level inversion has strengthened:
Monday 21 January


At this time (weather models could change) another cold front will end the short weekend episode with a chance of snow. Stay tuned.

High  38 F Low Monday night 25 F.