Portastorm wrote:SATURDAY MORNING UPDATE ... I see no reason to budge from my thinking. Major pattern change impacts Texas and southern Plains beyond Feb. 6. Arctic air intrusion and possible wintry weather episode around Feb. 10-11. Modeling and ensembles confirm.
The Arctic Express may not have left the station but passengers continue to board and it's leaving soon!
OK....I have a brief second to post before I'm off to do other thigns.
Yes...the passengers are still boarding. Now, we have the Canadian picking up on the pattern shift in the day-10 run...and closely matching what the GFS is putting out with a nice 1050mb high ready to slide down. The interesting thing to start watching once the low pressure moves from Alaska is if the pressures start to build...that is your true signs that Texas is getting an arctic outbreak.
Per the conversation earlier on, someone had said when the cold air is in Alaska it is Texas bound not bound really for the southeast. Someone had countered that Alaska was our source region, but that it didn't mean cold air in Alaska only had one outlet. The latter is a truer statement. Alaska is the cource region for our arctic outbreaks but there are numerous examples where extreme cold in Alaska gets pushed east with the trof and backdoors Texas with only cold weather but not anything earth-shattering.
What MUST happen in order for Arctic air to slide south, especially given the current setup of upper air with an active southern jet remaining strong (in otherwords...the trof is NEVER forecasted to become some monster dipping the jet all the way into central Mexico), is that the pressures with the associated bitterly cold air (and do NOT kid yourself some of you...this air is bitterly cold...and unusually cold even for Alaska...I discussed...as did others...a long time ago that the pattern in late January would be more conducive for bringing the Siberian Air into Alaska instead of Asia like it had been...and that is what is happening) ...anyway...the cold air msut also be associated with a strong high pressure system so the air is even more dense than normal. This way it slides southward an overwhelms the pattern. The Feb 1989 outbreak was a classic example of this.
So until we see that 1050+mb high ACTUALLY forming in the central Alaska/Yukon (arctic highs actually build some as they move southward so a 1050 there would be a 1060 in western Canada) and then when we see the ridge nosing up...that's when Texas will get arctic air. IF we see 1030 highs getting nosed out by the pattern, expect those highs and their cold air to more east into the eastern US.
Note: It is very difficult for the models to forecast the formation of these highs...they will pick up on some of it...but the intensities will be of a bit. By looking at the pattern now, we should start to see this in about 216-240 hours...5-7 Feb. Afterwards, the western ridge should start the train from Siberian and the air reinforced from there.