I should be clear, even as things stand we are still looking at widespread snow:
e.g. https://modeles16.meteociel.fr/modeles/wrfnmm-eur/runs/2026012306/nmm-26-120-0.png?23-12
one of the reasons why I'm so confident is that if the relatively low res models are picking this up (10km+) the high res models will show even more snow, because they are just better at resolving the effect of evaporational cooling. We aren't in range yet of models like the AROME or the higher res WRFs but we are already seeing the UKV show alot of snow for example.
Perhaps more importantly, the sort of upgrade that we need to make snow alot more widespread is really small; it really comes down to tiny variations in wind speed and direction on sunday evening and how well warmer (warmer as in high potential temperature) air aloft is mixing with colder air lower down (again referring to thetas here rather than temperatures). We don't need a big pattern shift that would now be almost impossible.
Also I follow American twitter, and those guys are going through a similar existential crisis trying to work out where their ice and snow is going to end up. The models will not handle snow and ice accumulations well, and in an environment with alot of ascent; the precip type and accumulation at the surface affects stuff higher up. So assuming the models are not going to accurately predict precip type and accumulation distributions in the state means they will also miss modifications to the boundary layer which will propagate out and cause minor changes early next week.
Also I should add despite being a clear cold ramper, I have become self aware in recent years. If its a fools errand I will caveat my posts strongly with phrases like 'a possible straw to grab is ...'. I don't think that this time, I think there is genuine potential here, and yes we might be talking about a wet cyclonic snow event rather than the arctic blast people want but I'm sure people would still have hunted for this with glee had it happened last month.
Originally Posted by: Quantum