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Alaska Area Forecast Discussions


862
FXAK69 PAFG 221538
AFDAFG

Northern Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Fairbanks AK
638 AM AKST Sun Dec 22 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Northerly winds through the Bering Strait will gust 60 to 70 mph
today and remain strong through early next week. An extended
period of light snow begins in the Northern Interior this evening
and will extend across the Western Interior and E Arctic Coast
Monday and Tuesday with the highest totals in the N Western
Interior.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Key Weather Messages...

Central and Eastern Interior...
- Winds along the Dalton Highway Summits will increase today with
gusts as high as 45 to 50 mph and continue to blow through
Monday afternoon. Blowing snow will reduce visibility to a half
mile or less at times.

- An extended period of snow will begin in the N Interior this
afternoon. 2 to 4 inches are expected for areas north of the
line from Tanana to Eagle through Monday. On Wednesday, areas
West of the Dalton Highway can expect another 4 to 6 inches
while areas east expect another 1 to 2 inches.

- High temperatures in the parts of the Interior will reach into
the low double digits today through Tuesday and the Yukon Flats
will see highs near or above zero during this period before a
cooling trend begins.

West Coast and Western Interior...
- Northerly winds with gusts up to 60 to 75 mph will blow through
the Bering Strait from Point Hope to St. Lawrence Island today.
Wind will continue to gust greater than 50 mph through the
early week, then start to weaken Tuesday night into Wednesday.

- A widespread and long-lasting period of snow will impact the
Western Interior and Southern West Coast. The heaviest band of
snow looks like it will bring 6 to 10 inches of snow to the area
between Kaltag to Shungnak to Bettles, from Monday morning to
Wednesday morning. 2 to 4 inches of snow are expected for that
time period for most areas except the W Seward Peninsula and W
Brooks Range.

- Tuesday into Wednesday, the combination of strong winds and
falling snow along the Norton Sound and YK Delta coasts could
lead to reductions in visibility down to a half mile.

North Slope and Brooks Range...
- Northeasterly winds along the Western Arctic Coast near Point
Hope will reach speeds near 45 mph today with gusts near 60
mph. These winds will diminish to 20 to 30 mph on Monday and
continue to gradually weaken through the week.

- A band of light snow will spread north and west across the
Brooks Range on Monday, reaching the Central North Slope and E
Arctic Coast Monday night and persisting through the middle of
the week.

- Northerly gap winds in Atigun and Anaktuvuk Pass will get up to
35 mph with gusts near 50 mph today and Monday. Blowing snow
will reduce visibility to a half mile or less at times.

Analysis and Forecast Confidence...
At 500 mb, high pressure persists over eastern Siberia and Canada
as a 500 dam low sits in place over the Alaska Peninsula near
King Cove and a shortwave trough deepens over the W Arctic Coast.
These areas of high and low pressure are creating a deformation
zone stretching from Norton Sound to the Yukon Flats. Tonight,
light snow will fall mainly in the N Interior. However, as the 500
mb trough over the Arctic Coast deepens, the area of snow will
stretch diagonally across the state from the YK Delta to the E
Arctic Coast. Confidence in the positioning of the heaviest bands
of snow associated with this deformation zone has improved with
the greatest snowfall occuring along an arctic front stretching
from Kaltag to Bettles Monday through Tuesday. However, there is a
possibility this front ends up farther west, in which case parts
of the West Coast could see impacts due to blowing snow. The
trough will continue to deepen through Tuesday night, causing the
area of snow to become oriented more north/south across the
Western Interior.

At the surface, the gradient between a 1028 mb high in E Siberia and
a 962 mb low over the Alaska Peninsula has strengthened through
the Bering Strait. This pressure gradient and the resulting winds will
remain strong until another low in the N Pacific moves east South
of the Aleutians on Tuesday and continues into the Gulf of Alaska
on Wednesday. High pressure over Canada is creating a gradient
over the Interior that will strengthen today then weaken through
Tuesday. Meanwhile, a series of lows move north in the Gulf of
Alaska resulting in fluctuating winds through the Alaska Range
passes through the middle of the week.

Extended Forecast...
North winds in the bering will begin to weaken as a 953 mb
surface low over the Alaska Peninsula moves east into the Gulf of
Alaska becoming sub-gale force by Thursday morning. A broad band
of precipitation will stretch over the Western Interior and into
the E Arctic coast and may create problems along the Norton Sound
and YK Delta coasts together with the stronger winds in those
areas causing blowing snow and reducing visibility. The band of
snow will weaken as it is pushed eastward by an arctic trough
deepening along the West Coast. This arctic trough will cause
temperatures across the state to drop. However, models are still
in disagreement as to the exact strength of the trough, widespread
temperatures in the -20 to 30 F are expected.



Coastal Hazard Potential Days 3 and 4...
Strong northerly winds in through the Bering Strait through
Tuesday night. Coastal erosion at St Lawrence Island is the main
concern at this time.


&&

.AFG WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
AK...High Wind Warning for AKZ801.
Winter Weather Advisory for AKZ814>816-832.
High Wind Warning for AKZ820-821-827.
PK...Heavy Freezing Spray Warning for PKZ801-816-817-851-854.
Gale Warning for PKZ802.
Gale Warning for PKZ803.
Gale Warning for PKZ804>807-810-811-852-856-857.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ808.
Gale Warning for PKZ809.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ812.
Storm Warning for PKZ816.
Storm Warning for PKZ817-854.
Gale Warning for PKZ850.
Storm Warning for PKZ851.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ855.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ858.
&&

$$



589
FXAK68 PAFC 221732 CCA
AFDAFC

Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion...CORRECTED
National Weather Service Anchorage AK
832 AM AKST Sun Dec 22 2024

.SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA (Days 1 through 3)...

Southcentral Alaska`s pattern of persistent southeasterly flow
pumping in the warm air will continue through the next few days
with a series of lows moving through the region during that time.
Early this morning, a weak low was tracking over the upper Cook
Inlet region and bringing in some rain and freezing rain to the
Anchorage area. Temperatures around the Anchorage Bowl, even east
Anchorage should warm above freezing by noon. This, and the
precipitation diminishing, will end the Winter Weather Advisory
for Anchorage at noon today. The Western Kenai Peninsula has a
little bit of rain spilling over off the Kenai Mountains with the
eastern Kenai under rain with freezing levels over 2000 ft.
Therefore all precipitation in these areas is expected to be rain
today. The Matanuska Valley is also mostly above freezing with
little precipitation making it over the mountains.

As the day progresses, a larger complex low will move through the
Gulf from southeast to northwest. This low will bring another
shot of rain to the Gulf coast. There may be some freezing rain
that makes it north of Thompson Pass to the southern portion of
the Copper River Basin so the Winter Weather Advisory was retained
through 6 PM this evening. The most likely place for this is
along the Richardson Highway from Tonsina to near Thompson Pass.

Monday looks rather warm again, though maybe not quite as warm as
today across Southcentral. Temperatures are expected to drop a
little more on Tuesday which should start to switch the
precipitation type from rain or freezing rain back to snow for
portions of Southcentral not along the immediate coast.

Due to the nature of these complex lows that develop and propagate
in this southeasterly flow, there remain an unusually large amount
of uncertainty in the forecast through the middle of the week.

&&


.SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA/BERING SEA/ALEUTIANS
(Days 1 through 3: Through Tuesday afternoon)...

A low embedded within a broad, complex trough extending across
much of the Bering Sea and North Pacific has moved across the
Alaska Peninsula (AKPen) this morning, now situated north of Cold
Bay. Areas of light mixed precipitation that affected parts of
Bristol Bay and the Kuskokwim Delta yesterday evening and into
the overnight have also since pushed offshore. Some of this
precipitation northwest of the low center has now made it to the
Pribilofs Islands where primarily wet snow is falling.

Looking to the forecast, the last in a series of lows that have
continuously been crossing the outlook area from east to west is
expected to approach the AKPen from the Gulf of Alaska by this
afternoon into tonight. This system will merge with the weakening
low sitting out over the Bering as it opens up into an east-west
oriented surface trough. Models have backed off on the idea that
the new system approaching will ever make it into Southwest, with
the latest consensus depicting the low slowing to a crawl as it
approaches Bristol Bay from tonight into Monday. Still, there
should be enough forcing and lift near the upper shortwave trough
associated with this low to fill precipitation back in over
Bristol Bay as the low reaches Kodiak Island later today. A warm
nose of air above freezing aloft will still be in place initially,
while northerly flow out of the Kuskokwim Valley advects cooler
air back south at the surface. This will once again provide a
favorable setup for freezing rain, with the best chance for
accumulating freezing rain up to a tenth of an inch focused
between Koliganek and Dillingham. The Winter Weather Advisory has
been extended out to Monday morning due to the potential for the
additional round of freezing rain beginning by this afternoon. The
entire column will cool below freezing by Monday afternoon,
allowing any lingering pockets of freezing rain to switch over to
snow.

Taking a broader look and a bit further out into the week ahead,
the underlying pattern will finally begin to shift as a North
Pacific low pushes a strong front into the Aleutian Chain between
Monday and Tuesday. Storm force winds will initially be possible
as the front reaches the western Aleutians on Monday, but the
front should quickly weaken to gale force as it continues to lift
northeast into the far southern Bering. Models have struggled
quite a bit to resolve rapid formation and dissipation of
successive triple-point lows along this front, and there may be
changes to the wind and precipitation forecast for Monday into
Tuesday due to this inherent uncertainty for the location of
these smaller low developments. There is a general consensus for
the main low to eventually shift or redevelop towards the AKPen
by Tuesday night. Strong northeast winds will also continue to
spread across the Bering Sea as a colder air mass begins to spread
south from the Arctic by Tuesday night.

-AS

&&

.LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7: Wednesday through Saturday)...

An elongated upper level trough extends from the Arctic through
the Eastern Bering into the North Pacific on Wednesday, with
several low centers rotating through the pattern. This trough will
slip over the Central Mainland into the Gulf of Alaska by the
weekend. A ridge over the Bering trailing the trough moves into
Southwest Alaska by Saturday. A second upper trough moves in from
Kamchatka over the Western Aleutians by Saturday. An upper ridge
over Southeast Alaska moves into the Canadian Provinces through
the end of the week. The ECMWF/GFS/Canadian models handle the the
strengths and tracks of the weather producers through the end of
the forecast period.

Most of the jet support rides across the North Pacific to the
South of the Aleutians and Alaska Peninsula. On the surface, a
series of lows and fronts will track over the Eastern Aleutians
and AKPEN over Kodiak Island into the Gulf before pivoting into
the North Gulf Coast. This will bring repeated rounds of locally
heavy rains to the Southcentral and AKPEN coastal zones and Kodiak
Island. Gusty Easterly winds spread over the Northern Gulf
Wednesday, and diminish Thursday. With cold air seeping across the
Interior from Canada, a band of mixed rain and snow or freezing
precipitation away from the coasts along the Northern edges of the
Precipitation areas, with snow mostly further inland. Gusty
Northeasterly winds just below gale force spread over the Central
and Eastern Bering and across the Aleutians and AKPEN through the
forecast period.

&&

.AVIATION...

PANC...VFR conditions to persist. Light NE`ly sfc winds will be
offset by E`ly flow above 1500` leading to areas of LLWS thru the
TAF period. A passing front will keep rain in the vicinity,
though the morning PANC sounding shows a dry layer from 1000` to
4000`, which will keep any rain light. Warmer temps over the
terminal will keep the threat of freezing rain low.

&&


$$



780
FXAK67 PAJK 221411
AFDAJK

Southeast Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Juneau AK
511 AM AKST Sun Dec 22 2024

.SHORT TERM...Winds, rain, and potentially even some accumulating
snow (for the Haines Highway) are all in store as a storm force
system sweeps into the panhandle on Sunday.

Satellite and radar imagery reveal a broad area of precipitation
moving into the panhandle associated with a broad area of low
pressure over the central gulf as of the time of writing. The
mid-level trough responsible for the parade of systems the past
week has shifted slightly eastward, bringing stronger conditions
associated with the lows themselves into the panhandle directly.
Due South of the panhandle, along the frontal band, cyclogenesis
has resulted in another low spinning up driven by favorable
dynamics in the low to mid levels of the atmosphere. Behind it,
yet another low is taking shape.

For the panhandle, this means rain and wind for most locations.
Respectable rain totals are expected. Given the dearth of dry air
currently over SE AK and the healthy amount of moisture
associated with the system, anticipate between 0.5 and 2 inches of
rainfall over the next 24 hours with the system. The greatest
rainfall totals will be over the southern panhandle, the Outer
Gulf Coast, and at areas of upper elevation. No flooding is
expected at this time.

Wind wise, after multiple days where cooler temperatures courtesy
of lingering outflow contributed to an inversion, a change is
underway. While the inversion resulted in the strongest winds
largely going aloft for many areas in the central and northern
panhandle, warming temperatures near the surface have resulted in
stronger winds finally mixing down. This has helped the long-
anticipated warmup across most of the panhandle finally arrive as
the lingering pockets of cooler air have been largely displaced
from most locations barring the Haines and Klondike Highways.
Consequently, anticipate unseasonably warm weather for most areas
barring the far northern panhandle on Sunday, with 50s not out of
the question for the Outer Gulf Coast and parts of the southern
panhandle. Wind-wise, alongside storm force winds in the gulf and
gales and small craft conditions for the inner channels, strong
winds are expected. In particular, an initial burst of wind Sunday
through Sunday morning will see wind surging, especially in the
southern panhandle. Another low racing up from the S will see
another surge of winds Sunday night into Monday. Snow is expected
for the Haines Highway and the Klondike Highway, as lingering
cooler air will prove harder to fully scour out. A Winter Weather
Advisory is in effect for the Haines Highway.


.LONG TERM.../Monday through Friday/...The mid level low over the
western gulf that has been main steering mechanism that past few
days will finally shift to the east mid week, and then is replaced
by another mid level low over the western gulf by the end of the
week. The development of a low near Haida Gwaii Monday was the
previous forecast question for the start of the week, it is still
a question. There is more consensus that the system will split
into a small fast moving gale force low track up from the south
moving northwestward with second feature remaining over Haida
Gwaii. This complicates nailing down precip for these days as
still timing and location differences. So expect some periods of
moderate precip with breezy conditions and possible breaks
in between. Overall precip with fall a rain due to warm temps and
the SW flow with the exception being boarders along the Haines
and Klondike Highway where at least a few inches of snow will
fall. Pressure gradient keeping small craft to some gales over
the inner channels initially before a general diminishing of
winds late in the week, just in time for another in the series of
lows to move up and start this round of windy and wet weather for
SE AK.

&&

.AVIATION...Very active aviation weather over the next day as a
strong windy front will be stalling along the outer coast today
followed by a trailing trough that will push the front inland
tonight. Winds will be the main concern with low level wind shear
(mostly speed shear) and turbulence over a wide area with the
worst conditions over the south and along the outer coast. Wind
speeds both aloft and near the surface will start to diminish late
Sunday night, but there will be a period of directional shear at
low levels as winds aloft turn more SW as the trough moves through
while surface winds may stay more southerly or southeasterly. As
for visibility and ceilings, MVFR conditions with mostly rain for
most areas, through isolated periods of IFR are possible in
heavier rainfall. Freezing levels range from around 3500 ft in the
south and along the outer coast to around 500 ft or lower near
Skagway, Haines, and the Chilkat Valley.

&&

.MARINE...A storm force system on Sunday will bring storm force
winds to the outer coastal waters, and gale and small craft
conditions for the inner channels. A series of gale force fronts
through the week will keep elevated winds in the outer coastal
waters and potentially in the inner channels.

&&

.AJK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
PUBLIC...Strong Wind until 6 AM AKST early this morning for AKZ317-332.
Winter Weather Advisory until 6 AM AKST Monday for AKZ319.
Strong Wind through late tonight for AKZ323.
Strong Wind through this afternoon for AKZ327.
Strong Wind from this evening through late tonight for AKZ327.
Strong Wind through this evening for AKZ328.
Strong Wind until 3 PM AKST this afternoon for AKZ329.
Strong Wind late tonight for AKZ329.
Strong Wind until noon AKST today for AKZ330.
MARINE...Storm Warning for PKZ641-661>664-671-672.
Gale Warning for PKZ022-031-033-035-036-642>644-651-652.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ021-032-034-053.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...GFS
LONG TERM....PRB
AVIATION...EAL
MARINE...GFS

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