Low-level
clouds and southeasterly winds prevented it from cooling below 64F last
night. There was enough sun and warm advection for a high of 77F today,
though it apparently didn’t warm up after noon perhaps due to some
cooling from the shelf waters of the Gulf of Mexico and some clouds. The
sunshine apparently mixed down strong winds down from aloft with a
maximum of 23 kt, higher than USL, which is uncommon. A relatively weak
cold front with some showers and possibly thunderstorms will arrive late tonight
into tomorrow morning, though the parent storm is way off to the north
and not strengthening, limiting the dynamics, and we lose the daytime instability with the late night timing of the cold front, which is why all models
have only a relatively weak line of showers and thunderstorms with
generally <0.2” of total rainfall. Still, sometimes even weak convection in warm, moist low-levels can be efficient rain producers, leading to a tricky rainfall forecast. The lack of a strong squall line
and nocturnal timing limiting instability also means that the cold front
will accompanied by only modest winds of <20 kt. However, there
could be stronger winds in the southerly flow ahead of the cold front
tonight (40 kt winds aloft but with lack of vertical mixing at night) or
with the westerly flow that is more well mixed due to sunshine allowing
for mixing of winds down to the surface tomorrow afternoon (though with
winds aloft weaker than tonight).
Although there will be a temperature drop with the cold front, the high
will actually be behind the cold front tomorrow as winds turn westerly,
not advecting cold air rapidly, but the cool advection favoring descent
and clearing skies just in time for afternoon high temperature, and
models are usually too cool for highs in this setup, showing the cold
air moving in too fast (especially HRRR). The westerly winds also mean
no cooling influence from Lake Pontchartrain. The low will be at the end
(Saturday 06z) with cold advection with westerly winds, though the air
mass behind the cold front is still rather mild, and there looks to be
just enough wind to prevent ideal radiational cooling even with clearing
skies, keeping temperatures still on the warm side of models.
| Source: PivotalWeather |
That band of rain falling apart right as it reached KMSY really hurt
ReplyDeleteYeah that was a bit surprising given that just about everything had at least a little. That band seemed to skip over and then rain a bit to the east. Oh well, showery/convective rain is always difficult to forecast.
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