Partly sunny start to the week, highs around 60ºF. Cold front coming tomorrow bringing showers with highs in the mid-60s. Behind this front, cooler temps in the mid-50s through mid-week as Canadian high pressure builds in. Cooler than normal trend set to continue into the weekend and early next week.
Rest of today – partly sunny with high temperatures around 60ºF. Mostly cloudy overnight with lows around 50ºF.
Tuesday – mostly cloudy, chance of showers, with high temperatures in the mid-60s ahead of an approaching cold front. Following the cold front, lows will drop back to the upper-40s.
Wednesday – mostly sunny with high pressure building behind the aforementioned cold front. Cooler, with high temperatures in mid-50s. Overnight lows in the upper-30s!
Thursday– another mostly sunny but cooler than average day with high temps in the mid-50s and overnight lows only around 40ºF.
The holiday weekend starts of with sunny skies and mid-60s temps. A cold front Saturday brings rain, and much cooler temps by Easter Sunday only in the low-50s. This cooler trend will continue into Monday as clouds increase ahead of the next storm system. Temps the second half of the weekend will be 8-10ºF below normal, a big contrast from this week!
Rest of today (Good Friday, Passover) – sunny with high temperatures in the mid-60s. This will be the best day of the weekend. Overnight lows in the low-50s with clouds building.
Saturday – cloudy with rain showers developing later in the day, with high temperatures in the low-60s. Temperatures will fall into the low-40s after a cold front passes through. Shower activity should taper off overnight.
Sunday (Easter) – mostly sunny but much cooler, with high temperatures only hitting the low-50s. This is 8-10ºF below normal for this time of year. Overnight lows dropping back into the low-40s.
Monday– clouds increasing ahead of the next storm system affecting us, with high temperatures again below normal in the low-50s. Overnight lows in the mid-40s with rain developing.
Rain clearing early today, highs in the low-70s. Slight drop to the mid-60s tomorrow, then a big warm up Thursday ahead of a cold front, highs in the mid-70s. Some thunderstorms possible with this front. Temps back off into the mid-60s to end the week with mostly sunny skies.
Rest of today – showers passing through the next couple of hours. Skies should clear out steadily during the rest of the day. Temperatures should warm up nicely into the low-70s as a result. Overnight lows around 50ºF
Wednesday – partly sunny with high temperatures in the mid-60s as the cold front that passes through today returns north as a warm front. Temps could go higher if the warm front passes early in the day. Little moisture or lift is available with this warm front so not expecting rain at this time. Overnight lows in the mid-50s.
Thursday – with the region in the warm sector of a parent low moving into eastern Canada, temperatures are set to soar into the mid-70s. Inland areas could see 80s. These temperatures would be nearly 20ºF above normal for this time of year. A cold front will sweep through later in the day and could bring some thunderstorms. Overnight lows around 50ºF with showers passing.
Friday– high temperatures moderating back down to the mid-60s with sunny skies after the cold front. These temps are still about 10ºF above normal. Overnight lows around 50ºF.
Sunny and mild Friday in the low-60s followed by a seasonable weekend with highs in the mid to upper 50s. This will be punctuated by passing showers Saturday. Return to sunnier skies Sunday, though isolated showers still possible due to shortwaves/disturbances rotating around a closed upper low moving slowly into Quebec. Warm up next week into the mid-60s.
Rest of today – above average warmth with high temps topping around or just above 60ºF. Sunny skies giving way to increasing clouds overnight. Lows in the upper-40s with scattered showers developing.
Saturday – cloudy with high temperatures in the upper-50s and chances for scattered showers, esp. early in the day. Overnight lows in the low-40s with skies clearing up somewhat.
Sunday – mostly sunny skies but with scattered showers possible at times. High temps in the mid-50s. Overnight lows in the low-40s.
Monday– warming up with high temperatures back in the low-60s under mostly sunny skies. Overnight lows in the upper-40s.
Surge of spring-like warmth today ahead of a cold front. Showers and gusty winds accompany the passage of the front and usher in a much colder air mass Tuesday. High temps dropping from mid-60s today to low-40s tomorrow. Wed, we could get clipped by outer precip bands from an offshore low, with enough cold air in place to cause some snow flurries.
Rest of today – unseasonably warm and mostly cloudy with highs rising to the low-mid 60s. Breezy southerly winds 10-20 mph with higher gusts. Overnight lows dropping rapidly into the mid-30s behind the passage of a cold front, bringing showers around 7-9 PM tonight.
Tuesday – much colder with high temperatures topping out in the low-40s. Clearing skies, partly cloudy. Overnight lows in the low-30s.
Wednesday – snow showers likely, with possible light accumulations up to 1″ in the city (more likely on unpaved areas) due to the impact of an offshore storm. The GFS model seems more bullish on colder air/heavier precip while the Euro shows more of a dusting. High temperatures in the mid-30s. Overnight lows in upper-20s.
Thursday– mostly sunny with high pressure building briefly in. High temperatures in the low-40s. Overnight lows in the upper-30s with rain chances increasing going into Friday as another storm system approaches from the west.
It’s been a long hiatus for me posting content to this blog. Been a bit preoccupied with everyday life, but getting back into the swing of things with a detailed meteorological summary of the tragic and deadly extreme flash flooding event that took place on the evening of Sept 1, 2021. Credit for this goes in part to my friend and colleague Phil Lutzak, a fellow graduate of the PSU World Campus Weather Forecasting Certificate Program.
Synopsis
In this overview of the NYC flooding event of September 1st, 2021, the main goal is to ascertain why such severe flooding occurred in light of the preceding and concurrent weather conditions for that day. While it was quite well forecast by the NHC and NWS office forecasts in terms of a significant flood threat, clearly no national office could pinpoint the areas that would suffer the worst flooding until the day of the event when it was much clearer where the heaviest rains would be falling, nor could they possibly have gotten the exact severity correct given current forecasting capabilities. In hindsight we will examine the existing conditions during and just before the most intense period of the flooding and try to determine which developing synoptic and mesoscale parameters gave the most clues as to why much of the worst flooding conditions would be directly within the New York City metropolitan area.
Forecasts Leading Up to the Event
There was a misconception after the event that the meteorological community failed to forecast the possibility of this event occurring. In fact, National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center had a solid grasp of the risks associated with the post-tropical remnants of Ida, having issued a high risk for flash flooding for areas of the Mid-Atlantic and Southern New England in the early morning hours of Wednesday, 01 Sept 2021 (4:20 AM EDT).
The forecast discussion behind this excessive rainfall outlook was chilling in its prescience, specifically citing the possibility of deadly flash flooding and 3-8” rainfall totals.
In MPD #0925, WPC forecasters referenced 2-3+” per hour rainfall rates being possible due to a combination of factors, most notably very strong low-mid level forcing via frontogenetical influences and highly efficient, deep layer warm/tropical rain processes – a characteristic of Ida’s hybrid tropical/extratropical nature.
The importance of Ida’s unique blend of tropical transitioning to extratropical character is also underscored in MPD #0923, in which WPC forecasters discuss the presence of a developing south-southwesterly low-level jet. This feature would reach peak strengths of 35-55+ knots at the height of the event, and became a critical ingredient in creating the exceptionally efficient moisture transport into the NYC area, shown in the following sections.
By 9:28 PM that evening, the worst-case scenario envisaged by forecasters leading up to the event came to fruition and the NWS OKX office issued its first ever Flash Flood Emergency for NYC, containing the emphatic “THIS IS A PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION” wording…
Meteorological History
Surface Conditions
The following chart shows the radar representation and surface charts of the 48-hour progress of tropical depression Ida from the lower Mississippi valley into the Tennessee and Ohio River valleys and then into the mid-Atlantic and northeast regions. In the middle image it is clear that the heaviest precipitation was reduced as its inflow was becoming detached from the very moist Gulf of Mexico. The third, rightmost image shows how the tropical low, now merging with the warm front, was elongating north to south but at the same time tapping into a very moist airflow from the Atlantic Ocean, strongly enhancing the area of heaviest precipitation near the center of lowest pressure.
Low and Mid-Level Conditions
While the high precipitation producing ability of tropical depression Ida was still in evidence, the position of its southerly flow in relation to the fairly stationary warm front allowed for maximum isentropic lift to focus right over NYC and surrounding areas, with much of the convection moving in from the south still having high precipitation producing energy powered by high theta-e tropical inflow.
Here’s the MUCAPE analysis from 0200 UTC showing 1,000-2,000 J/kg positioned over NYC,
… and the following showing the extremely high 850 mb level moisture transport over the NYC area at 0200 UTC.
The 925-850 mb frontogenesis chart shows clearly where maximum frontogenesis was occurring
and the surface moisture convergence and DMC charts show, not surprisingly, that a maximum for surface and deep moist convergence was occurring over NYC and surrounding areas.
Mid to Upper Levels
This situation was one of the clearest examples of how baroclinic forcing can convert a weak or decaying tropical cyclone into an extremely prolific rainmaker. The 500 and 300 mb conditions were critical in allowing this approaching tropical low to make a fairly quick transition to a strong extratropical low. The result was the previously discussed extremely high moisture convergence right over the city.
The 300 mb chart from 8PM EDT shows the right rear entrance region of a quite strong jet streak for late summer (100-120 knots) moving into position almost directly over the low which was just southeast of the NYC area, allowing for maximum divergence above the low center as it was merging with the warm/stationary front. This allowed for very high divergence to position over an equally strong low level convergence zone.
In addition, the 500 mb analysis shows an ideal placement of the area just east of the trough base over the lower-level low circulation to allow strong upper-level divergence, resulting in intensification of the transitioning surface low.
All levels
For one final view that ties activity at the previous levels together, here’s the ARL simulated skewT diagrams for 0100 and 0200 UTC at New York City that evening. Clearly the atmosphere was saturated throughout with very high theta-e values at the lowest levels.
Conclusion
From the NY Times, September 2nd, 2021:
The rain broke records set just 11 days before by Tropical Storm Henri, underscoring warnings from climate scientists of a new normal on a warmed planet: Hotter air holds more water and allows storms to gather strength more quickly and grow ever larger.
In New York City, the dead ranged in age from a 2-year-old boy to an 86-year-old woman, the police said. Some drowned in basement apartments in Queens, where a system of makeshift and mostly illegally converted living spaces has sprung up.
Below are two dramatic images of the flooding in NYC. On the left is severe subway flooding that occurred in lower Manhattan (courtesy NY times). At right are multiple stranded vehicles on the Major Deegan Expressway in the Bronx borough of NYC (courtesy Craig Ruttle/AP).
It’s likely not possible at this time, nor in the near future, to use RAP or any of other quickest analytical tools to anticipate imminent flooding at the smallest mesoscale any more than we are currently able to. At this stage of the science, the most skilled forecasters use the best modeling tools currently available along with their own invaluable experience in watching unfolding precipitation patterns on radar loops and, combined with mesoscale graphics such as we have displayed here, anticipate where the heaviest precip is moving and whether it will intensify, weaken or remain stable.
In light of this, a critical takeaway is to encourage better education of the public about what an “Emergency” and what a “Particularly Dangerous Situation” mean in practical terms. In other words, when the public receives an EAS alert with these terms in it, they need to be acutely aware of what preventive actions to take immediately rather than just dismiss this as another alert that probably won’t affect them. One other challenge with this system is that these alerts are often only translated to only one or two other languages. This is a problem for a city with hundreds of thousands of immigrants speaking myriad languages, many of whom are not literate in English, as this renders these vital, lifesaving alerts essentially useless to a wide range of the public, with predictably tragic consequences.
A brief warmup Tuesday as highs rise into the upper-80s to near 90ºF before a cold front swings through Wednesday bringing showers and thunderstorms. Seasonable and drier conditions behind the front in the mid-80s to end off the week with plenty of sun.
Rest of today – mostly sunny with high pressure briefly building and temperatures rising to 90ºF. Overnight lows dropping into the low-70s.
Wednesday – partly cloud with a cold front crossing the region during the day. High temperatures in the mid to upper 80s. Showers and thunderstorms possible in the evening. Overnight lows in the upper-60s.
Thursday – drier, cooler, with high temperatures in the mid-80s and mostly sunny skies. Overnight lows in the upper-60s.
Friday– high temperatures again in the mid-80s with partly cloudy skies and chance of showers and thunderstorms. Overnight lows in the upper-60s.
A wet, cool start to the week with an early round of thunderstorms that moved through this morning. Another is likely to follow early in the overnight tonight. Lingering showers Tuesday with a weak surface low in the vicinity. Highs below normal in mid-70s Monday, then warming up to average by midweek with sunny weather returning. The warm up continues into the weekend – Father’s Day looking good weather-wise so far!
Rest of today – high temperatures in the mid-70s with mostly cloudy skies. A second frontal boundary will push towards the area later this evening, with showers and thunderstorms again possible into the early overnight hours. Temperatures falling into the mid-60s.
Tuesday – mostly cloudy still with a chance for showers early. High temperature near 80ºF. Overnight lows in the low-60s with clearing skies.
Wednesday – high pressure builds in behind what should be a dry cold frontal passage and resulting in a mostly sunny day with high temperatures around 80ºF. Overnight lows in the upper-50s given that the high pressure will usher in cooler, drier Canadian air.
Thursday– mostly sunny with high temperatures in the upper-70s. Pleasant conditions with the high pressure above still in control. Overnight lows in the low-60s.
Upper-80s heat and humidity will spawn scattered heavy rain and thunderstorms over the next couple of days. Low vertical wind shear and weak overall steering currents mean the primary threat from these storms will be possible localized flooding. A backdoor cold front drops in from Canada Wednesday night leading to much cooler temperatures Thursday in the low-80s. Rain and even cooler temperatures arrive Fri when we may only just hit 70ºF.
Rest of today – partly sunny with high temperatures in the upper-80s, and a muggy feel to the day. Scattered thunderstorms bring the potential for heavy downpours later in the evening, perhaps starting around 7PM. Overnight lows in the low-70s as showers roll through early.
Wednesday – high temperatures again in the upper-80s. Mostly cloudy with yet another shot for some heavy downpours especially later in the afternoon as a cold front draws nearer. Overnight lows around 70ºF as a backdoor cold front eventually pushes through.
Thursday – with the backdoor cold front already south of us by Tuesday morning, high temperatures should cool off to around 80ºF. Chance for afternoon showers and thunderstorms. Overnight lows around 60ºF.
Friday– much cooler with persistent clouds and showers possible through the day, high temperatures perhaps only around 70ºF. Overnight lows around 60ºF with rain chances continuing.
Muggy with thunderstorms rolling through later this afternoon and highs in the upper-70s. The story this weekend is about building heat and humidity. A Bermuda high becomes the dominant feature bringing an extended period of 90ºF+ heat into next week. While this high is anchored in the western Atlantic, we won’t see any appreciable chances for rain at least until later in the week next week.
Rest of today – mostly cloudy with high temperatures in the upper-70s. HRRR simulated radar runs this morning consistently signalling the arrival of a line of thunderstorms around 3-4PM this afternoon. Behind these storms, temperatures overnight expected to be in the mid-60s.
Saturday – sunny with high temperatures much warmer in the upper-80s. Overnight lows in the low-70s. Humidity will be building as well due to the influence of southwesterly/westerly flow bringing in a warmer and moisture-laden air mass.
Sunday – high temperatures around 90ºF with mostly sunny skies. Overnight lows in the low-70s.
Monday– with a Bermuda high still in place, expect high temperatures to once again reach around 90ºF with higher heat index values due to the humidity. Overnight lows in the low-70s.