QBO Falls Again

Winter Weather Discussion

Moderator: S2k Moderators

Forum rules

The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K.

Help Support Storm2K
Message
Author
donsutherland1
S2K Analyst
S2K Analyst
Posts: 2718
Joined: Mon Sep 15, 2003 8:49 pm
Location: New York

QBO Falls Again

#1 Postby donsutherland1 » Wed Aug 04, 2004 8:00 am

In July, the QBO fell to 9.96, continuing its reversal that began in June. At this time, over the past 3 months, the QBO most closely resembles that of 2002:

Year.........May..........June.........July
2002........14.16.......13.26.......10.05
2004........12.97.......11.75.........9.96

In 2002, the QBO switched to east in December. However, at this point in time, I have little reason to change my initial thinking that the switch will likely occur in January or February 2005. As the above comparison shows, at this point in time, 2002's QBO was falling more quickly than that of 2004.

If the QBO fluctuates higher at any point over the next several months, that could signal an even more delayed transition to east.

For now, the new QBO number continues to point to a switch to east this coming winter. Consequently, it also serves to reinforce the 1969-70 analog that has been part of the larger discussion concerning possible analogs for the coming winter.
0 likes   

User avatar
yoda
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 7874
Joined: Tue Jan 13, 2004 3:51 pm
Location: Springfield VA (20 mins south of DC)
Contact:

#2 Postby yoda » Wed Aug 04, 2004 8:19 am

Hey Don, If the QBO switches to the East, does that mean that there is less of a chance of having a big snowy winter in the MA and NE? Because 1969-1970 wasn't real snowy in this area.
0 likes   

donsutherland1
S2K Analyst
S2K Analyst
Posts: 2718
Joined: Mon Sep 15, 2003 8:49 pm
Location: New York

#3 Postby donsutherland1 » Wed Aug 04, 2004 1:16 pm

Yoda,

It will depend on which analog ultimately prevails. There are a few QBO East winters that were very snowy for the DCA area. Two stand out in particular based on my expectation that the December-March QBO will probably come out somewhat below that of 2002-03 and almost certainly between the averages for those two winters:

December-March QBO Average:
1986-87: -11.5
2002-03: -1.7

1986-87: Moderate El Niño, East QBO throughout: 31.1" snowfall
2002-03: Fading El Niño (moderate in OND/weak JFM), Switched to East QBO in December: 40.4" snowfall

Also, the 1986-87 solar flux was somewhat lower but reasonably close to that which is likely this coming winter. However, a closer look at the factors behind possible analogs will determine whether or not 1986-87 proves viable even if some similarities are intriguing at this time.
0 likes   

User avatar
USAwx1
Professional-Met
Professional-Met
Posts: 936
Joined: Mon Apr 26, 2004 5:57 pm
Location: Marineland, FL

#4 Postby USAwx1 » Wed Aug 04, 2004 2:57 pm

2004 -4.84 2.61 5.45 10.46 12.97 11.75 9.96 -999.00 -999.00 -999.00 -999.00 -999.00

2002 4.64 8.00 9.32 14.03 14.16 13.26 10.05 10.60 8.90 7.66 4.46 -0.50
2003 -1.39 -1.44 -3.30 -8.57 -13.94 -18.01 -22.99 -24.64 -22.51 -20.34 -17.86 -11.38

1993 9.63 10.81 11.36 12.60 13.56 6.55 0.38 -1.20 -1.14 -4.04 -5.76 -6.00
1994 -7.64 -9.84 -11.29 -14.71 -18.03 -23.09 -28.65 -27.02 -19.07 -10.29 -0.30 5.93

The two closest matches for the QBO cycle are 1993, and 2002, based on the time at which the positive phase peaked. Now 2002 saw a secondary increase in AUG of +.55 from JUL 2002, while 1993 continued to decline and did not have any secondary jumps.

The 1993-94 winter of course was a neutral/east winter, while 2002-03 was a Moderate El Nino East winter.

I could not find any other years back to 1948 with a similar QBO peak in MAY. What is interesting through is the conditions in the Gulf Of AK during the late fall and early winter of those years were very close and associated with a frequently negative EPO and Positive PNA pattern (thanks to all the warm water in the GOA).

Those are two winters which had the same extreme in the NAPC SSTA configuration, but otherwise were completely dissimilar WRT other indices. Solar flux was different, the Atlantic and PAC were in the warm phase (2002 was in the cold phase); 1993-94 was a neutral winter, 2002-03 a moderate El Nino.

Anyway, It would take a bunch of additional research to potentially prove this theory, but it would seem as if the extremes in the EPAC signal MIGHT be associated with the QBO cycle in some way.

As a result, any secondary upswing in the QBO index may be LESS significant this year than the time at which the cycle peaks.

IF El Nino conditions develop and the QBO turns East, then yes, 1986-87 becomes an analog, as well as 1965-66, and 1968-69. None of those were boring winters.

Snowfall in those years went like this:

City, 1965-66, 1968-69, 1986-87
BOS: 44.1, 53.8, 42.5
NYC: 21.4, 30.2, 23.1
PHL: 27.4, 23.7, 25.7
DCA: 28.4, 9.1, 31.1

1968-69 SUCKED in the DCA area, while 1986-87 had 31.1” which as good, w/ 1965-66 sort of the middle ground. Go up to NYC though, and 1968-69 was a GREAT winter w/ over 30”, same with BOS which saw over 50 in.
0 likes   

donsutherland1
S2K Analyst
S2K Analyst
Posts: 2718
Joined: Mon Sep 15, 2003 8:49 pm
Location: New York

#5 Postby donsutherland1 » Wed Aug 04, 2004 5:54 pm

Great post, USAwx1.

For what it is worth, the only seasons that saw the QBO switch to East in the December-March period during a weak or moderate El Niño were 1969-70 and 2002-03.

For Washington, DC, the following data is available, including the month on which the QBO switched to East:

Season......Month..........Temp........Snowfall
1969-70.....February......36.3°.........14.0"
2002-03.....December ...37.3°.........40.4"
0 likes   

User avatar
Wnghs2007
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 6836
Age: 36
Joined: Wed Mar 24, 2004 11:14 pm
Location: Gwinnett-Barrow Line; Georgia
Contact:

#6 Postby Wnghs2007 » Wed Aug 04, 2004 5:58 pm

Why do yall always do DC and NY and Bos and Philly. Try somewhere else for a change. LIKE ATLANTA!!!!!!!!LOL :D :P
0 likes   

User avatar
USAwx1
Professional-Met
Professional-Met
Posts: 936
Joined: Mon Apr 26, 2004 5:57 pm
Location: Marineland, FL

#7 Postby USAwx1 » Wed Aug 04, 2004 6:05 pm

donsutherland1 wrote:Great post, USAwx1.

For what it is worth, the only seasons that saw the QBO switch to East in the December-March period during a weak or moderate El Niño were 1969-70 and 2002-03.

For Washington, DC, the following data is available, including the month on which the QBO switched to East:

Season......Month..........Temp........Snowfall
1969-70.....February......36.3°.........14.0"
2002-03.....December....37.3°.........40.4"


Temps are fairly close, however there is almost a 26" difference in the snowfall totals for two seemingly similar seasons WRT global indices. Presonally, w/ all the analogs which we have discussed thus far, there arent any others which had below 15" of snow. IMO its a BIG outlier season.

Wnghs2007 wrote:Why do yall always do DC and NY and Bos and Philly. Try somewhere else for a change. LIKE ATLANTA!!!!!!!!LOL :D :P


I did give you an idea of what the analogs suggest for ATL, KC. read the "winter of 1962-63" thread.
0 likes   

User avatar
yoda
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 7874
Joined: Tue Jan 13, 2004 3:51 pm
Location: Springfield VA (20 mins south of DC)
Contact:

#8 Postby yoda » Thu Aug 05, 2004 8:44 am

USAwx1 wrote:2004 -4.84 2.61 5.45 10.46 12.97 11.75 9.96 -999.00 -999.00 -999.00 -999.00 -999.00

2002 4.64 8.00 9.32 14.03 14.16 13.26 10.05 10.60 8.90 7.66 4.46 -0.50
2003 -1.39 -1.44 -3.30 -8.57 -13.94 -18.01 -22.99 -24.64 -22.51 -20.34 -17.86 -11.38

1993 9.63 10.81 11.36 12.60 13.56 6.55 0.38 -1.20 -1.14 -4.04 -5.76 -6.00
1994 -7.64 -9.84 -11.29 -14.71 -18.03 -23.09 -28.65 -27.02 -19.07 -10.29 -0.30 5.93

The two closest matches for the QBO cycle are 1993, and 2002, based on the time at which the positive phase peaked. Now 2002 saw a secondary increase in AUG of +.55 from JUL 2002, while 1993 continued to decline and did not have any secondary jumps.

The 1993-94 winter of course was a neutral/east winter, while 2002-03 was a Moderate El Nino East winter.

I could not find any other years back to 1948 with a similar QBO peak in MAY. What is interesting through is the conditions in the Gulf Of AK during the late fall and early winter of those years were very close and associated with a frequently negative EPO and Positive PNA pattern (thanks to all the warm water in the GOA).

Those are two winters which had the same extreme in the NAPC SSTA configuration, but otherwise were completely dissimilar WRT other indices. Solar flux was different, the Atlantic and PAC were in the warm phase (2002 was in the cold phase); 1993-94 was a neutral winter, 2002-03 a moderate El Nino.

Anyway, It would take a bunch of additional research to potentially prove this theory, but it would seem as if the extremes in the EPAC signal MIGHT be associated with the QBO cycle in some way.

As a result, any secondary upswing in the QBO index may be LESS significant this year than the time at which the cycle peaks.

IF El Nino conditions develop and the QBO turns East, then yes, 1986-87 becomes an analog, as well as 1965-66, and 1968-69. None of those were boring winters.

Snowfall in those years went like this:

City, 1965-66, 1968-69, 1986-87
BOS: 44.1, 53.8, 42.5
NYC: 21.4, 30.2, 23.1
PHL: 27.4, 23.7, 25.7
DCA: 28.4, 9.1, 31.1

1968-69 SUCKED in the DCA area, while 1986-87 had 31.1” which as good, w/ 1965-66 sort of the middle ground. Go up to NYC though, and 1968-69 was a GREAT winter w/ over 30”, same with BOS which saw over 50 in.


Yep, 68-69 did suck. I wouldn't mind having a good winter with about 30 inches of snow. However... are we stating that this winter will have a weak El Nino and an Easterly QBO?
0 likes   

User avatar
HalloweenGale
Category 1
Category 1
Posts: 377
Joined: Sun Aug 01, 2004 7:31 pm
Location: Nantucket Ma
Contact:

#9 Postby HalloweenGale » Thu Aug 05, 2004 7:21 pm

I was there in '69 we had 50 inches, seemed as if the storms came non-stop.
0 likes   

User avatar
USAwx1
Professional-Met
Professional-Met
Posts: 936
Joined: Mon Apr 26, 2004 5:57 pm
Location: Marineland, FL

#10 Postby USAwx1 » Thu Aug 05, 2004 7:37 pm

yoda wrote:
USAwx1 wrote:2004 -4.84 2.61 5.45 10.46 12.97 11.75 9.96 -999.00 -999.00 -999.00 -999.00 -999.00

2002 4.64 8.00 9.32 14.03 14.16 13.26 10.05 10.60 8.90 7.66 4.46 -0.50
2003 -1.39 -1.44 -3.30 -8.57 -13.94 -18.01 -22.99 -24.64 -22.51 -20.34 -17.86 -11.38

1993 9.63 10.81 11.36 12.60 13.56 6.55 0.38 -1.20 -1.14 -4.04 -5.76 -6.00
1994 -7.64 -9.84 -11.29 -14.71 -18.03 -23.09 -28.65 -27.02 -19.07 -10.29 -0.30 5.93

The two closest matches for the QBO cycle are 1993, and 2002, based on the time at which the positive phase peaked. Now 2002 saw a secondary increase in AUG of +.55 from JUL 2002, while 1993 continued to decline and did not have any secondary jumps.

The 1993-94 winter of course was a neutral/east winter, while 2002-03 was a Moderate El Nino East winter.

I could not find any other years back to 1948 with a similar QBO peak in MAY. What is interesting through is the conditions in the Gulf Of AK during the late fall and early winter of those years were very close and associated with a frequently negative EPO and Positive PNA pattern (thanks to all the warm water in the GOA).

Those are two winters which had the same extreme in the NAPC SSTA configuration, but otherwise were completely dissimilar WRT other indices. Solar flux was different, the Atlantic and PAC were in the warm phase (2002 was in the cold phase); 1993-94 was a neutral winter, 2002-03 a moderate El Nino.

Anyway, It would take a bunch of additional research to potentially prove this theory, but it would seem as if the extremes in the EPAC signal MIGHT be associated with the QBO cycle in some way.

As a result, any secondary upswing in the QBO index may be LESS significant this year than the time at which the cycle peaks.

IF El Nino conditions develop and the QBO turns East, then yes, 1986-87 becomes an analog, as well as 1965-66, and 1968-69. None of those were boring winters.

Snowfall in those years went like this:

City, 1965-66, 1968-69, 1986-87
BOS: 44.1, 53.8, 42.5
NYC: 21.4, 30.2, 23.1
PHL: 27.4, 23.7, 25.7
DCA: 28.4, 9.1, 31.1

1968-69 SUCKED in the DCA area, while 1986-87 had 31.1” which as good, w/ 1965-66 sort of the middle ground. Go up to NYC though, and 1968-69 was a GREAT winter w/ over 30”, same with BOS which saw over 50 in.


Yep, 68-69 did suck. I wouldn't mind having a good winter with about 30 inches of snow. However... are we stating that this winter will have a weak El Nino and an Easterly QBO?


No I'm just examining our options here. I still expect the QBo to remain west at least to start the winter for the DEC-JAN period, Feb may be transitional, and march probably East. But since were only looking at the METEOROLOGICAL winter (DEC-FEB) the QBO will be west at for the first 75% of the winter. Especially if Don is correct about his idea on there being a secondary increase.

Im pretty confident about El Nino development over the next few months, but I don't expect it to get any stronger than perhaps borderline Mod. strength.
0 likes   

User avatar
WEATHERGURU
Tropical Storm
Tropical Storm
Posts: 109
Joined: Fri Nov 21, 2003 10:09 pm
Location: Wyandotte, Mi (15 miles south of Detroit)

#11 Postby WEATHERGURU » Wed Sep 01, 2004 11:00 am

Hey anyone seen the August QBO numbers?
0 likes   

User avatar
USAwx1
Professional-Met
Professional-Met
Posts: 936
Joined: Mon Apr 26, 2004 5:57 pm
Location: Marineland, FL

#12 Postby USAwx1 » Mon Sep 06, 2004 3:28 pm

the AUG QBO value was below +9.00


http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/correlation/qbo.data
0 likes   

User avatar
WEATHERGURU
Tropical Storm
Tropical Storm
Posts: 109
Joined: Fri Nov 21, 2003 10:09 pm
Location: Wyandotte, Mi (15 miles south of Detroit)

#13 Postby WEATHERGURU » Mon Sep 06, 2004 3:37 pm

IS this good for a good old fashion winter?
0 likes   


Return to “Winter Weather”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests