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SqueakheartLW

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Posts posted by SqueakheartLW

  1. 13 hours ago, Don said:

    July 2020 has been a back to front July 2015.  A good chance it will have the same CET of 15.9C, too!

    After such a cool and dismal July temperature wise this month doesn't deserve to get a CET of 16.0C or higher but both the 30th and especially the 31st could be enough to squeeze out a 16 CET month and could deny us a cooler than average month for the first time this year based on the readings on the CET website. This is where the CET stands provisional to 30th July 2020

    Month          CET          Anomaly          Notes

    January       6.4            +2.6

    February     6.3             +2.5

    March          6.7            +1.0

    April            10.4           +2.5

    May             12.5           +1.3

    June            15.3           +1.2

    July             15.8           -0.2                 provisional, to the 30th

    At one point that July CET was below June 2020's and it was looking for a while like we was going to get a cooler July than June but that is certainly off now and with the heat to end the month then a 16 CET is now looking very likely

    Just hope that the trend of 2015 doesn't continue as we all know what happened to the CET come December 2015

    • Like 1
  2. Looks like storm lovers may get something interesting later on. With the cold front still over N Ireland and the Irish Sea there's plenty of time to build up more heat further east. Showers have already broken out in SW England and another area of storms is appearing over France too and this looks like it could have the SE's name on it

    Untitled.thumb.jpg.6501bfff7220cf611daa2fea1a9a6e83.jpg

    • Like 2
  3. 16 minutes ago, Captain Shortwave said:

    Peak 850s for today;

     

    image.gif
     

    21c with the 20c across most of the south east/East Anglia. Interestingly this plume event has pretty much upgraded itself all the way up until today.

    Today will likely mark the moment where 35c has been reached/surpassed for the third year in a row.

    Around the 1990's and early 2000's to get over 30c used to be quite exceptional but since late 2000's onwards and especially since summer 2013 it has become very common to breach 30c every summer without fail and 35c+ events seem to now be as common as the 30c events used to be. It's only a matter of time now before 40c gets breached

    • Like 2
  4. 3 hours ago, Due South said:

    Hi. What's your thoughts on the upcoming winter regarding the QBO?

    I imagine it depends on whether the EQBO fails or reforms. We have the possible weak La Nina, low solar activity and surely a chance of a weaker polar vortex than that beast vortex of doom from winter 2019/20. Also it looks like the Indian Ocean Dipole is heading negative this winter instead of positive like it was last winter. With the possibility of an Atlantic tripole too then we have many factors in our favour already. What we don't need is something to go against us with a failed EQBO and a fully formed WQBO for this winter as no doubt knowing our luck in the UK the WQBO would override all of the other good signals. The main thing that is currently against us is the warm NE Pacific that refuses to do one. At least if we see the EQBO reform then this could help get us a colder winter. If you like mild winters then pray for an EQBO failure and a return of the WQBO.

    • Like 6
  5. The strange QBO situation still continues as the NASA Singapore site shows once again today as they have yet again altered their QBO status from Westerly back to West Descending Phase once more as shown

    qbo_phase_plot.thumb.png.e50c775286cc0f6dbe7f9c40ba285de7.png

    However there may be a small sign that the EQBO is trying to reform when I took this snapshot of 10hpa winds today

    1874069788_UntitledGlobe.thumb.jpg.446e2dddf83cd6af53249c8641bf08b9.jpg

    Within that circled region a small zone of easterly winds has appeared and is the first easterlies at 10hpa for a while now. Will this area expand and end up equator wide, we shall see

    2074872227_QBO1.thumb.jpg.90604f1c9861728eee0323549ada5076.jpg

    This could be backed up by what can be seen on the above image. Although it looks like there has been a standard EQBO when you can clearly see the easterly winds within the two orange lines this image isn't high resolution enough to see what has really happened. Notice the westerlies are weakening again at 3hpa. This upper region looks like it will be going back easterly again soon but will they get below 10hpa

    A more detailed version of the above is shown below

    5601266_QBO4.thumb.jpg.3a7325cfe1a33acfb218715593dfe4c0.jpg

    This is a daily version of the above and shows how quickly westerlies have taken over in the 30hpa to 3hpa region but although more detailed it is still not showing the full picture. The clear 3hpa weakening is also visible on this chart too

    1072375729_QBO3.thumb.jpg.5acca917a4d70c60c6e3a21fb675c959.jpg

    This chart focuses more on the 10 to 300 hpa region and shows up more of what is actually happening. The E shows that we have had an official easterly phase but not a normal one. This lower resolution chart clearly shows the four different regions of QBO we currently have and how confusing all this looks

    The more detailed version is below with daily readings

    751850417_QBO2.thumb.jpg.1c30b19b971076e752eb7982fbaeae6b.jpg

    1 - The new WQBO has clearly descended into the 10hpa region but it looks rather ragged and weak and sometimes bits and pieces of easterlies are visible within this region and in the last week or two has failed to descend any further and in fact looks to have pulled back upwards slightly too

    2 - A region of weak easterlies has managed to hang on in the 15 to 20 hpa region despite everything that has happened in the last few months and if anything this region looks to be slowly expanding, especially downwards. It would appear this area has got slightly stronger recently too. Maybe as a result of the weakening easterlies further down

    3 - The 30hpa westerlies have clung on with determination ever since the last WQBO "finished" as such and a couple of weeks ago looked to be getting their act together and started to strengthen again but in the last week they have persisted but look to have got a bit weaker again. Is this a good sign the EQBO is going to come roaring back once again. Could what has happened result in a failure of the next WQBO instead. This region of westerlies is clearly stealing some of the momentum needed for those higher up to strengthen and descend and if the 10hpa region does switch easterly again then we could end up seeing a reset to east descending phase rather than a failure and return to the west phase again

    4 - The 40 to 100 hpa region has been dominated by easterlies for a while now and this region is the main reason for the strange situation we have right now. The good news for the EQBO is that this region appears to be descending and weakening now, allowing the westerlies above to now descend too. The bad news for the EQBO is as long as this region still persists then this increases the chance of an EQBO failure rather than a reset to east descending phase once more.

    Finally we have the chart showing where we are at on the QBO phase

    1463168155_QBO5.thumb.jpg.e02802fdb130353557cc4c8ef693b9e0.jpg

    It is clear how we have taken a rather strange route across this chart after December 2019 although no where near as bad as 2016 which is the grey line that cuts across the chart on the opposite side between my two arrows. Now which way will things go after the June 2020 plot on this chart.

    1 - The WQBO returns after our very weak almost failed EQBO and we generally follow the direction of the red arrow until we are back to full strength or near full strength WQBO again or we could see a weakened version and curve slightly more to the left of the red arrow but still get a WQBO again. This would be the worse outcome overall and would be a near repeat of 2016 again

    2 - We see a failure of the next WQBO which although is unlikely cannot be ruled out based on the strange way the QBO is behaving at the moment and we end up cutting through the middle of the chart and see a reset to roughly where we was at in December 2019 with the QBO before it then continues round the chart where most normal EQBO's go. This is an outcome I would rather see and would make up for what happened in 2016 rather than seeing another repeat of the EQBO failure of that year.

    • Like 4
    • Thanks 2
  6. Couldn't help but laugh when I saw this one on Netweather's current temperature map this morning

    Untitled.thumb.png.9115d22fe079b3205f505e4df2a37e35.png

    Knew it was cooler and fresher today but look at that reading in the red circle at Cosford Royal Air Force Base near Wolverhampton.

    Thought it was supposed to cool down but nothing was ever said about freezing point temperatures

    Someone must be noticing that near 30C temperature dive from yesterday to now

    • Like 1
  7. This visual satellite view shows 3 main areas of interest. The first is between the red lines which looks like a decaying frontal system that did produce for some but not for me

    The second is the area to the west of the blue line. Is this the cold front someone mentioned earlier on that could either kill off storm chances or it could arrive in the right areas at the right time and create a big line of storms which could form a squall line too

    The third area is the yellow circle where it looks like clouds are beginning to form. Perfect breeding location to send fully formed storms to my area of the country in N Lincs later on if all stays on track

    Untitled.thumb.png.0310ccf0ec948cdc4673770e4d935603.png

    • Like 1
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