WEEKEND WEATHER FORECAST

Update Sun 08/21 @ 8:41 PM — We had some break out showers Sunday afternoon that went through Citizen’s Bank Park. These had very limited coverage as they moved northward.

So…Are we really going to get about an inch of rain by Monday evening?

The latest RAP and GFS were in the 0.8- 1.0 inch range.

The NAM-NEST had the heavy rain splitting into two areas: far north of Philadelphia and far south of Philadelphia. The immediate PHL area was just getting about 0.4 inches—

18z NAM-NEST shows the heaviest rain far north and far south. It’s an outlier, but not to be ignored. It’s sorta what I expect during a drought where this sort precipitation miss has occurred several times before in recent months. (Click on image for a larger view.)

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6 thoughts on “WEEKEND WEATHER FORECAST”

    1. Ordinarily, my confidence would be high, with so many models on board for this event. But considering the current drought scenario, with soil moisture so low, I’m a bit skeptical. As mentioned, we’re also dealing with the poorly understood, but well correlated rising phase of the sunspot cycle, specifically the 22 year Hale cycle. Do a https://scholar.google.com search on “drought and sunspot cycle” for remarkable scientific info.

  1. I would like to encourage you *not* to resist the temptation and to in fact update later tonight (and again tomorrow morning!), but that’s just one vote, and yours is the only one that counts. 🙂

      1. If you have a moment at some point, could you explain what you mean by “model spin up issues”? It seems like you were dead on about it. Weird to a non-specialist that models would go wonky right before an event; I would have (incorrectly) expected the opposite.

        1. Model spin up is the time a model takes to combine initial conditions at the start of the model into a state of thermal and mass-velocity equilibrium. Models are very complex mathematical constructs that incorporate starting conditions and observations, in a process called “initialization”, to accurately simulate and blend (and not conflict) with its past simulation so that it maximally captures ‘reality’ at the start. Short range models can take 3 or more hours to spin-up. The new models being developed by NOAA have a built in ‘cold start’, followed by an intentional 6 hour spin up!

          Most current models do not ‘cold start’ but still have a spin up time to ‘mesh’ past runs into equilibrium with new observations. The 00z models from last night all have new upper air measurements that need to blend into equilibrium with the previous run.

          Thus, spin up time is needed. If heavy rain is falling in our area at the start of initialization, it can throw off the first few hours of precipitation forecasts until equilibrium is reached. Weather models are well beyond what I studied as a physics major and my guess is that most real meteorologists don’t concern themselves with this. It’s a special elite breed of atmospheric physicists and advanced mathematicians that would know more.

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