A One-Hundred Year Heat Wave Event Comes Into Focus
Update at 1PM Sunday. I will talk not only about the records but something else...the amazing temperature drop late Monday...one for the record books.
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As we get closer to the big heat event, powerful new forecasting tools are becoming available. Tools that provide a higher resolution and more nuanced view of the extreme heatwave event that is about to happen.
One such tool is ultra-high resolution numerical weather prediction models. My group at the University of Washington runs the highest-resolution operational weather prediction system in the region, with a grid spacing of 1.3 km. High enough resolution to get many of the local water bodies approximately correct, as well as the impacts of our regional terrain features.
Let me show you the surface air temperatures predicted today through Monday...all shown at 5 PM.
Today, Portland and the lower Columbia Basin surges above 100F and Seattle rises into the upper 90s. The kind of conditions we typically experience once or twice each summer.
Another powerful tool is high-resolution ensembles of many forecasts, which allow us to see the uncertainty in the forecasts.
Here is the University of Washington high-resolution ensemble prediction for the temperature at Seattle Tacoma Airport, with the black line indicating the mean of all the forecasts (a good forecast in general). Today (00/27) has the ensembles on the same page (the upper 90s). More variations on Sunday, but nearly all above 100F (man about 104-105). And on Monday the mean is around 110F, with a range of 100-115. Yikes.
The New Edition of My Book: The Weather of the Pacific Northwest Will be Available in August
The book includes new chapters on the meteorology of Northwest wildfires and the weather of British Columbia, and the rest of the book is greatly enhanced. It is available for pre-order on Amazon.
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