Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
614 FOUS11 KWBC 080907 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 407 AM EST Sat Nov 8 2025 Valid 12Z Sat Nov 08 2025 - 12Z Tue Nov 11 2025 ...Strong and deep low develops over the Great Lakes Sunday with notable Lake Effect Snow through Tuesday... ...North-Central Plains to southern Michigan... Day 1... Shortwave trough/vort max over eastern MT early this morning swings southeast to southern Iowa today and Ohio tonight. Ongoing snow banding over the Dakotas ahead of this wave shifts southeast through western Iowa this morning where marginal thermals should be overcome in the better banding to allow accumulations. Day 1 WPC probabilities for >4" are around 10 percent in west-central IA. Forcing intensifies over the Midwest late tonight into Saturday. There is a moderate threat for CSI banding along the southern MI border due to fgen overlapping the DGZ and driving ascent into a region of theta-e lapse rates of 0C/km. This may lead to snowfall rates of 1.0"/hr at times per the 00Z HREF. Day 1.5 snow probabilities for >4" snow are 30-60% over northern IN and southern MI up to the Detroit metro as well as far northwest OH. ...Lake Effect/Enhanced Snow tonight through Tuesday... A reinforcing shortwave trough rounding a deep low shifting south from Hudson Bay crosses the Upper Midwest tonight with a deep second lobe developing over Michigan Sunday that swings south before tracking over the Interior Northeast Monday night. The surface low rapidly develops over Ohio tonight downstream of the initial shortwave trough. The reinforcing trough importantly slows the progress of the surface trough along the Northeast coast Sunday which prolongs the following flow over the Great Lakes for lake effect/enhanced snow tonight of Lake Superior shifting through all the Great Lakes before easing off Lake Ontario on Tuesday. Strong CAA brings a winter-like airmass to the region, headlined by 850mb temperatures between negative 10 and 12 degrees C. This cold air (near or below the 10th climatological percentile) over the warm Great Lakes (temperatures of +10 to +15C) will result in an impressive convective environment with model soundings indicating steep lapse rates and deep mixing heights to near or above 700mb. Given lake temp and 850mb air temp delta Ts of 20 to 30C, the environment will be rather supportive for lake effect/enhanced snow production. North-northwest to northerly surface winds along with increasingly unidirectional winds aloft will act on the instability and support the development of a few prominent north-south lake effect snow bands, particularly downwind of Lake Superior tonight through Monday, Lake Michigan Sunday night through Monday, Lakes Huron and Erie Sunday night through Monday night, and Lake Ontario Monday night/Tuesday. Day 2 WPC probabilities for >6" are over 80% in the Huron Mtns of the U.P. of MI and up to 40% in the Porcupine Mtns while 40-80% for portions of the western L.P. shoreline and all of the Indiana shoreline. Day 3 WPC probabilities for >6" are 60% over Northern Indiana for continued banding threats (most notably in the 00Z experimental RRFS), around 80% near Port Huron, MI (the exact wind direction will determine which side of the border gets hit worst), 40-80% south of Lake Erie east of Cleveland, and around 10% in the Tug Hill. Cold upslope northwesterly flow and a moist fetch from Lake Michigan will also cause upslope snow showers for the Central Appalachians Sunday night through Monday night with Day 3 WPC probabilities for >6" 40-70%. Jackson $$