BUT w/ NO 50-50 Low in place or block everything hinges on the location of the PV. The GGEM has it a bit further Southeast than the 12z ECMWF which would suppress the s/w a bit more and cause it to track further SE.
Does this mean there is going to be a snowstorm in the I-95 cities? NO! It means that the track of the 500h low/shortwave trough should be from Central TX to the SE lakes which suggests a SIGNIFICANT winter storm for N KS, NRN MO, S WI, N IL, MI, OH, N NY, VT, NH, ME…NORTH of the track of the s/w and SLP area where the deformation zone sets up.




According to the GGEM the SLP would track from SE OK on WED to C PA on THU while deepening to 993mb.
IGNORE the warm bias, the GGEM is noted for it and its one of the reasons why you see the 1000-500mb critical thicknesses warmer than the required criteria for winter precip where I have just mentioned it would be based on the s/w and SLP tracks. Taken at face value they would imply rain for the aforesaid areas, and maybe if we were to be disgustingly objective—and assume a warm thickness bias-- one could argue FRZRA or IP due to a shallow cold layer below a warm wedge caused by elevated WAA.
There could also be YET ANOTHER severe wx episode in the warm sector.
The 0z GFS has a similar scenario. The PV is still strong and suppressive--notice 500mb heights ~486 dm over Hudson Bay. This is a GOOD position for the PV. BUT sill NO signs of a 50-50 low, although the downstream response to the PV forces the ridge to come back over Greenland setting up a weak –NAO.
The GFS s/w is an open wave and the associated trough initially is positively tilted whereas the GGEM is indicating a relatively mature/negatively tilted trough w/ closed low over the South central plains.

By 144hrs the s/w progresses eastward into the OV and COMES CLOSE to phasing w/ an appendage associated w/ the PV as it lifts ENE.

Based on the SLP track this would also be a SN event for the same areas as the GGEM suggested.
The system then merges w/ the PV and causes it to develop a DUAL structure w/ one center pin wheeling around the other. This is known as the FUJIWHARA effect.
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... 0_174l.gif
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... 0_180l.gif
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... 0_192l.gif
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... 0_204l.gif
Ill remind you however the GFS resolution truncates to 77KM (T170) at this range…so please observe w/ CAUTION.
The FUJIWHARA effect describes two storms rotating around a fixed axis while moving in a specific direction. In our situation above the PV as a whole is moving to the East; however the two centers rotate around one another as the entire package moves eastward.
These may be UNSTABLE trends in the data so pay attention to future runs