


Prognostic Meteorological Discussion
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
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577 FXAK02 KWNH 032354 PMDAK Alaska Extended Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 754 PM EDT Thu Apr 3 2025 Valid 12Z Mon 07 Apr 2025 - 12Z Fri 11 Apr 2025 ...Heavy coastal rain and mountain snow threats across the southern tier of Alaska continue into early next week... ...Overview... Most guidance shows a general area of mean troughing aloft with one or more embedded upper lows from the Arctic through the western mainland and into the northeastern Pacific. However there is a lot of spread and variability for details within this axis of lower heights. Even with the spread for specifics aloft, there is a majority cluster advertising surface low pressure staying close to the southern coast Monday-Wednesday and maintaining rain/higher elevation snow which should be heaviest early in the week. The overall area of low pressure may wobble farther southeast later in the week, confining organized precipitation more to the southern Panhandle. On the western side of the mean trough, digging energy may support a wave/front and some light snow near the southwestern coast and Alaska Peninsula around Monday-Tuesday. Meanwhile western Pacific low pressure will most likely track south of the Aleutians late in the week, but with some uncertainty for its latitude. ...Guidance/Predictability Assessment... With the various dynamical and machine learning models differing significantly for specifics of energy aloft and where one or more embedded upper lows may form/evolve within the overall area of mean troughing, the primary objective of the forecast was to reflect the most common themes at the surface and aloft. In particular, a relative majority of solutions show deeper western mainland through southern coast/Gulf of Alaska upper troughing and low evolution versus latest GFS/GEFS runs, keeping Gulf surface low pressure much closer to the coast than reflected in the GFS/GEFS. Although the 12Z UKMET keeps its best defined upper low well northward over the Arctic like the GFS, it does ultimately dig some stronger dynamics southward like most other guidance so its Gulf surface low fits within the non-GFS cluster. Also of note, the majority cluster shows lower surface pressures over the North Slope and vicinity versus the GFS/GEFS during Tuesday-Thursday. After midweek there are significant differences to the west as well, with GFS runs lifting northwestern/northern Pacific low pressure farther north into the Aleutians while in turn displacing the northwesterly flow aloft seen over the eastern Bering Sea in other guidance. At least the 12Z and 18Z GFS runs represent a more suppressed surface trend compared to earlier versions that pushed a frontal system well into the Bering Sea. 00Z/06Z machine learning models also favored a suppressed track south of the Aleutians, albeit with various details, though a couple 12Z ML models have lifted a bit northward. In order to reflect primary guidance themes while downplaying very uncertain specifics, the early-mid part of the forecast started with an even blend of the 12Z ECMWF, 00Z ECens mean, 12Z CMC, 12Z CMCens mean, and 12Z UKMET. After Wednesday the CMC strayed to the deep and persistent side of the spread with its western mainland upper low, so Thursday-Friday started with 30 percent 12Z ECMWF and the rest 12Z CMCens/00Z ECens means. The new 12Z ECens mean conformed to the main aspects of the preferred blend. ...Weather/Hazards Highlights... Upper dynamics and surface low pressure near the southern coast of the mainland should continue coastal rain and inland/higher elevation snow over the far south and Panhandle into early-mid week. Expect heaviest activity to extend from the weekend into Monday, with the Days 3-7 Hazards Outlook depicting an area from the far eastern tip of the Alaska Peninsula to the far northern Panhandle valid Sunday-Monday. Precipitation should trend lighter after Monday but with continued uncertainty for specifics. Some areas of lighter and more scattered precipitation (mostly snow) may extend farther north over the mainland. A wave dropping southeastward could bring a brief period of light snow to the far southwestern mainland/Alaska Peninsula around Monday-Tuesday. The overall pattern should produce brisk northwesterly winds over and near the Alaska Peninsula early-mid week but with speeds likely staying below hazardous criteria. The Aleutians could see some influence from North Pacific low pressure after midweek, depending on the system`s latitude. The upper trough forecast to be over the western mainland at least through midweek will support below normal temperatures over the western half or so of the state while the east remains above normal. Anomalies for morning lows should be warmer than those for daytime highs. While some degree of upper troughing may persist later in the week, it should at least trend weaker and allow temperatures over the west to return closer to normal. Rausch Additional 3-7 Day Hazard Information can be found on the WPC medium range hazards outlook chart at: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/threats/threats.php WPC medium range Alaskan products including 500mb, surface fronts/pressures progs and sensible weather grids can also be found at: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/alaska/ak_5dayfcst500_wbg.gif https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/alaska/akmedr.shtml https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/alaska/ak_5km_gridsbody.html $$