Daily Report for this evening and the next 48 hours from July 8, 2022 plus access to intermediate term Outlooks

This is still an experimental article (we are working to be sure all the images update)

Here is what we are paying attention to this evening and the next two days from this afternoon’s  NWS Forecast:

...Dangerous heat and humidity to continue from parts of the central and
southern Plains to the Southeast...

...Unsettled weather including severe storms and heavy rain to continue
along a slow-moving boundary extending from the central Plains to the
Southeast...

...Severe storms possible into the weekend across Montana...

Continuation of the NWS Short Range Forecast (It is updated twice a day and these updates can be found here.

With overnight lows only expected to drop into the 70s, and even the lower
80s in some locations, before climbing once again into the upper 90s and
100s tomorrow, excessive heat warnings and heat advisories remain in place
from the central and southern Plains to the Southeast.  High heat and
humidity is expected to persist from the southern Plains to the Southeast,
while building north into the northern Plains into the weekend.

A slow-moving frontal boundary remains in place from the central Plains to
the Mid Atlantic.  This boundary will remain a focus for showers and
storms as it drifts across the region tomorrow before pushing farther
south and east over the weekend.  Some of these storms may become strong
to severe -- potentially producing damaging winds and flooding rains.  The
greatest threat for severe weather late today extends from the lower
Missouri Valley to the Southeast, before the focus shifts a little farther
to the north over the Ohio Valley on Friday.  By Saturday, with the front
pushing farther south, showers and storms will be likely across the
Southeast, with severe winds and heavy rain possible.

Strong to severe storms will be possible later today and tomorrow across
Montana, before shifting east into eastern Montana and North Dakota on
Saturday.  Storms that develop will have the potential to produce damaging
wind and hail.

Some of the Images Associated with the Short-Range Forecast

First, the Day One and Two CONUS Forecasts: These Maps Update Daily.

Day One CONUS Forecast Day Two CONUS Forecast
Day 2 Forecast
These graphics update and can be clicked on to enlarge. You can see where the weather will be

The links for these two maps are  https://origin.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/NationalForecastChart/staticmaps/noaad1.png  and https://origin.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/NationalForecastChart/staticmaps/noaad2.png

This should play out something like shown in this 60 Hour Forecast Animation

Here is a national animation of weather fronts and precipitation forecasts with four 6-hour projections of the conditions that will apply covering the next 24 hours and a second day of two 12-hour projections the second of which is the forecast for 48 hours out and to the extent it applies for 12 hours, this animation is intended to provide coverage out to 60 hours. Beyond 60 hours, additional maps are available at links provided below. The explanation for the coding used in these maps, i.e. the full legend, can be found here although it includes some symbols that are no longer shown in the graphic because they are implemented by color-coding.

current highs and lows

Click here to update this animation

HAZARDS OUTLOOKS

Click here for the latest complete Day 3 -7 Hazards forecast which updates only on weekdays. It includes the full discussion which I do not update in this article but I only present the highlights.

Now the Day 3 – 7 Hazards Outlook Maps

The orange and red outlined areas are what is most concerning of the forecasted Day 3 – 7 Hazards. This graphic does not update during the weekend. There is a discussion that goes with this graphic and you can access that discussion here.

Looking out one more week

https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/threats/hazards_d8_14_contours.png

21 to 28 Day Forecast/Outlook (On Thursday it is a 22 day forecast and when the Week 3 – 4 Forecast Updates on Friday it becomes a 28 day forecast)

The following is provided to help the reader relate the maps to how NWS will describe an area of the U.S.

https://i0.wp.com/www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/bndrys1.gif?w=1100&ssl=1

Very short-term forecasts (expressed as absolute values) and then intermediate-term outlooks (deviations from Normal and associated probabilities.

First Short-Term

Day 3 Maximum Temperature

The

Then two views of cumulative precipitation.

Here are the short-term precipitation forecasts. First the cumulative for Days 1 – 3

https://i0.wp.com/www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/d13_fill.gif?resize=800%2C561&ssl=1

Then cumulative for Days 1 – 7

https://i0.wp.com/www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/p168i.gif?resize=800%2C561&ssl=1

The areas that have cumulative seven-day precipitation increase. You can see where QPF is accumulating.

Links to “Outlook” maps and discussions for three time periods. Days 6 – 10, Days 8 – 14, and Weeks 3 and 4.  An outlook differs from a forecast based on how NOAA uses these terms in that an “outlook” presents information from deviation from normal and the likelihood of these deviations.

I have not figured out how to have these maps update. So you will have to click on the links provided. You will get the updated forecasts plus a lot of additional information.  Once a week I will provide those maps either in this article or more likely in a separate article. They are here for you right now you just have to click the link.

Worldwide Tropical Forecast

(This graphic updates on Tuesdays) If it has not updated you can get the update by clicking here https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/precip/CWlink/ghazards/images/gth_small.png

 

https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/precip/CWlink/ghazards/images/gth_small.png

Now More Detail for the Western Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans

Below are three maps that summarize the situation for the Atlantic, Eastern and Central Pacific. Additional information can be accessed by clicking HERE

First the Eastern Pacific

Click to view the forecast map and have access to additional information https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/gtwo.php?basin=atlc&fdays=5

Then Eastern Pacific

Click to view the forecast map and have access to additional information https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/gtwo.php?basin=epac&fdays=5

Then Central Pacific

Click to view the forecast map and have access to additional information https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/gtwo.php?basin=cpac&fdays=5

And the Western Pacific

Click to view the forecast map and have access to additional information https://www.metoc.navy.mil/jtwc/jtwc.html

Now to our More Detailed Weather Report

500 MB Mid-Atmosphere View

https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/d3500wbg.gif

7 Day 500 MB Geopotential Forecast

Day 3 Above, 6 Below Day 4 Above,7 Below Day 5 Above.
Day 3 500mb Heights Day 4 500mb Heights http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/d5500wbg.gif
Day 6 500mb Heights Day 7 500mb Heights Day 3 to 7 500mb Heights
The above is the day-by-day projected pattern of highs and lows for Day 3 through 7. Updates can be found Here. Earlier we show the pattern for Days 1 and 2. https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/medr500.shtml

This graphic is about Atmospheric Rivers i.e. thick concentrated movements of water moisture. More explanation on Atmospheric Rivers can be found by clicking here or if you want more theoretical information by clicking here. The idea is that we have now concluded that moisture often moves via narrow but deep channels in the atmosphere (especially when the source of the moisture is over water) rather than being very spread out. This raises the potential for extreme precipitation events.

https://i0.wp.com/cw3e.ucsd.edu/images/gfs/images/ivt_NPac_latest_F0.png?resize=980%2C631

In and of themselves, Atmospheric Rivers are not a definitive predictor of extreme weather but it shows where concentrated “rivers” of moist air are forecast to be impacting North America and that is part of the equation for severe weather.

 

North America GFS IVThttps://econcurrents.com/wp-admin/_wp_link_placeholder

This view provides a better view of the Northeast, the Antilles and also Europe.

 

 

World Forecast

Forecast for Day 6 (Currently Set for Day 6 but the reader can change that)

World Weather Forecast produced by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. Unfortunately, I do not know how to extract the control panel and embed it into my report so that you could use the tool within my report. But if you visit it Click Here and you will be able to use the tool to view temperature or many other things for THE WORLD. It can forecast out for a week. Pretty cool. Return to this report by using the “Back Arrow” usually found top left corner of your screen to the left of the URL Box. It may require hitting it a few times depending on how deep you are into the BOM tool.

Below are the current worldwide precipitation and temperature forecasts for six days out. They will auto-update and be current for Day 6 whenever you view them. If you want the forecast for a different day Click Here

BOM Temperature Forecast 5 days.

I mostly rely on the reader to interpret world maps that update frequently.

Again, please remember this graphic updates every six hours so the diurnal pattern can confuse the reader.

Now Precipitation

Surface Pressure & Rainfall over Globe at Wed Sep 26 06:00:00 2018 UTC

This is a forecast for one particular day (Day 6). But it shows the surface Highs and the Lows which is useful information.

 

Month to Date Information

Temperature

 

Precipitation

Month to date Temperature can be found at https://hprcc.unl.edu/products/maps/acis/MonthTDeptUS.png

Month to date Precipitation can be found at  https://hprcc.unl.edu/products/maps/acis/MonthPNormUS.png

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