Daily Archives: December 31, 2018

NYC New Year’s Day Detailed Forecast – Jan 1, 2019

A wet, windy New Year’s Eve in NYC will give way to a very mild day to start 2019. However, for reasons outlined below, I don’t believe that record warm temperatures will be broken tomorrow. Strong winds will be a distinct possibility, though, and as such the National Weather Service has issued a wind advisory for the area. I think sustained winds could reach 30 mph, especially early in the day.

My Forecast

High: 57°F | Low: 36°F | Max sustained winds: 30 mph | Total precipitation: 0.04″ –
verification for temperatures and precipitation will come from METAR data for the period between 1AM Tuesday and 1AM Tuesday (06Z Tuesday to 06Z Wednesday) at LGA. Wind speed verification will draw on the daily climate summary from the National Weather Service.

Verification

High: 60°F | Low: 40°F | Max sustained winds: 36 mph | Total precipitation: 0.02″ – this wasn’t a great forecast, aside from the precipitation. I was once again overly conservative on max wind speeds. Following layer mean wind analysis results would have yielded an almost perfect forecast here. For temperatures, I think the main issue was that the low level clouds I thought would materialize based on the forecast soundings available the day before just never came to be. This allowed high temperatures (and hence low temperatures) to become warmer than I forecast. In this case, perhaps it would have been prudent to consider that winds would be downsloping from the northwest, hence drying out somewhat at lower levels. This wind direction also favors clearing conditions following a cold front passage from the west.

Weather Prediction Center surface forecast for 7AM Tuesday

Synoptic Set Up

NYC will start the day off in the warm sector of a low pressure center tracking northeast through New England. This low will continue to deepen as it progresses east. The tightening pressure gradient will induce strong winds, and a trailing cold front will cross the region bringing about much colder air in its wake. Temperatures will peak early in the day and drop steadily through the day. The low temperature will occur late in the forecast period.

High Temperatures

Steady warm advection overnight with a warm front and warm sector associated with the parent low above will mean that temperatures increase to the mid-50s by day break. Forecast soundings from both GFS and MOS indicate, persistent, low overcast that I believe will be pivotal to keeping temperatures from going above 60°F. These low overcast clouds should block out enough sun to keep things a bit cooler than otherwise would be. Forecast soundings also show some upper level clouds that would help block additional sun. For these reasons, I’m siding with cooler NAM MOS guidance that calls for 55°F, and bumping up a couple degrees. Cold advection should take hold quickly in the afternoon in the wake of the trailing cold front. This will usher in westerly and northwesterly winds, which will downslope and warm a touch but will still overall bring colder air into the area. Once this cold advection takes place, temperatures should start to fall.

GFS forecast sounding for 9AM Tuesday, showing a well mixed layer up to about 825 mb and low clouds around 800 mb.

Low Temperatures

Because of the factors above, the low temperature should end up coming in late in the evening/overnight period going into Wednesday. I believe there’s not too much reason to deviate from MOS guidance which averages out to be about 35°F.

Max Sustained Winds

A well-mixed boundary layer is forecast to develop with pretty strong winds aloft in the late morning hours. A period of efficient downward momentum transfer should allow fast winds from above to mix down to the surface. Layer mean wind analysis suggests that winds could be as strong as 35 mph, however, I’m going a bit lower with sustained winds topping out at 30 mph since neither set of MOS guidance goes over 20 mph.

Total Precipitation

It’s clear at this point that the bulk of precipitation will fall before the beginning of the forecast period. However, both sets of MOS guidance, SREF and GEFS means all suggest some precipitation early in the overnight period. I’m going with a composite average of various sources at 0.04″.

NYC New Year’s Eve Weather – Dec 31, 2018

New Year’s Eve this year looks like a washout, but temperatures will be very mild. In fact temperatures will maintain a non-diurnal trend, warming through the night. New Year’s Day could see the possibility of record warmth before a return to more normal conditions mid-week. Another storm system approaches for the end of the week.

Rest of today – cloudy with high temperatures in the upper-40s. A warm front approaching from the south and west will start to bring steady rain to the area by late afternoon. A favorable low-level jet, along with robust isentropic lift (overrunning of warm air above cold air along the warm front) should enable plenty of moisture and enough instability to trigger bouts of heavy rain later in the evening and overnight. Unfortunately, the bulk of rain looks to fall right during periods when revelers will be out on the town celebrating the new year. Winds will pick up as well with the pressure gradient tightening and efficient downward momentum transfer of low-level jet winds during periods of precipitation. As mentioned above, temperatures will follow a non-diurnal trend, with the warm front and warm sector of this storm advecting milder air from the southeast. Temperatures will actually rise into the mid-50s overnight.

NAM (North American Model) forecast of 850 mb relative humidity and winds for 10PM tonight. The blue hues indicate saturated air, while we can see some wind barbs showing winds > 60 knots. These are classic signs of a low-level jet that is often implicated in producing heavy precipitation events.
Weather Prediction Center surface forecast for 7AM Tuesday. Note the tight packing of isobars (black lines) around the parent low that’s going to bring us rain. This indicates a tight pressure gradient that will drive strong winds. This surface forecast also suggests that our time in the warm sector of this low (outlined in light orange above) will be brief. Warm advection (transport of warm air) won’t last long into Tuesday.

Tuesday (New Year’s Day) – I’ll follow up with a detailed forecast, the start of 2019 will be quite interesting for a couple reasons, one being possible record warmth and the other being strong, gusty winds. Temperatures will be rising throughout the night into Tuesday such that high temperatures will peak early in the day. Depending on exactly when this happens, temperatures could push above 60ºF, which would be nearing or exceeding records. The record high for January 1st at Central Park is 62ºF set in 1966. A lot will hinge on whether clouds clear up early enough to allow for a few hours of solid sunshine. This warmth will be short-lived though, because we won’t spend that much time in the warm sector of this parent low. As a trailing cold front moves through, winds will shift to the northwest and result in cold advection. As a result, temperatures will be falling during the day into the upper-40s by sunset. Temperatures are forecast to continue dropping overnight into Wednesday with lows bottoming out around freezing in the city.

Wednesday – a rude awakening to normal temperatures for this time of year. There will be a cold start to the day with high temperatures 20ºF cooler than Tuesday, in the upper-30s. Partly cloudy skies. Overnight lows in the mid-30s.

Thursday – warmer than Wednesday with another storm system approaching. So far, looking at a mostly cloudy day with highs in the low-40s. Rain may start as early as the overnight hours. A lot of uncertainty still at this time with the timing, scope, and precipitation type of this next storm though.