Transcript Slide 1

“The January 21-22, 2007 Winter Storm and its
Impact on Southeast Arizona”
http://www.azstarnet.com,Photo: Robert Kolbert
Glenn Lader,
NOAA/National Weather Service Tucson, AZ
Introduction
•
•
•
A significant 500mb low
moved south from Southern
Utah early on January 21st
south into the Southern
Arizona deserts late January
21st and January 22nd
This system took an entirely
overland track which is
typically cold but has very
little moisture
A unique aspect of this storm
is that it followed a rather
significant storm January 19th
that moistened up the lower
levels
Standardized Anomalies
Courtesy: Rich Grumm, NWS State College, PA
Water Vapor Loop & RUC 500mb heights 9z
January 20-18z January 22
RUC 500mb Heights/Vorticity Loop 18z
January 21 to 21Z January 22
• This system
had extremely
impressive
dynamics to
work with
including strong
frontogenetic
forcing, vorticity
advection and
upper level
divergence as it
approached
Southern
Arizona.
Four Panel 500-300mb Q Vectors, Div Q
GFS, NAM80, NGM, NAM40 valid 00Z January 22
2330Z January 21 IR Image
• IR imagery
showed cloud
tops of -40C
coinciding with
tropopause near
400mb on the 0Z
KTUS sounding
indicating strong
lift and convective
precipitation. It
was during this
period that snow
mixed in across
the city of Tucson
even with
temperatures still
in the mid 30’s
before sunset
Hourly Radar Loop 18Z January 21-16Z
January 22
•A solid area of
precipitation moved
into the Tucson area
early-mid afternoon
with a frontal band
which significantly
cooled the atmosphere,
even across the lower
elevations into the midupper 30’s.
•Snow levels were
initially above 3000 feet
•As precipitation
continued into the early
evening, snow levels
dropped to valley floors
including city of Tucson
(2500 feet).
Hourly Radar Loop 18Z January 21-16Z
January 22
•After a short lag of
precipitation, a second
round of precipitation
organized across
Southwest Tucson and
moved across the
Southern and Eastern
Portions of the city
between 130Z and 03Z
•This second round was
right along the interface
between the dry slot
wrapping in near the
center of the upper level
low and moist inflow
•This portion was mostly
snow and gave the city
measurable snowfall
anywhere from a dusting
to isolated 3” with
temperatures hovering
near or just above freezing
12Z January 21 and 00Z January
22 KTUS Sounding
Evolution of event across
Southeast Arizona
• After 03Z the precipitation came to an end in Tucson
as the dry slot moved in and skies cleared
• As temperatures and dewpoints dropped into the
upper 20’s, freezing fog developed and all bridges in
Tucson saw icing conditions with numerous
accidents
• Farther east across Cochise, Graham and Greenlee
County, snow continued all night into January 22nd.
Areas along the pivot point along the moist axis from
Bisbee (elev 5500ft) to Safford (elev 2800ft)
received very impressive snowfall with amounts
ranging from 8 to 10 inches.
Snow Totals Across Southeast Arizona
Pima County/Southeast Pinal County
Central Tucson, Elev 2500ft, 1-2 inches
Vail, Elev 3200ft, 3 inches
Mt. Lemmon, Elev 7810ft, 12 inches
Oracle, Elev 4510ft, 6 inches
Santa Cruz County
Sonoita, Elev 4900ft, 3 inches
Patagonia, Elev 4000ft, 3-4 inches
Cochise County
Bisbee, Elev 5500ft, 8.3 inches
Sierra Vista, Elev 4600ft, 2-4 inches
Paradise, Elev 5670ft, 8.3 inches
Graham/Greenlee County
Safford, Elev 2800ft, 6-9 inches
Clifton, Elev 3520ft, 3 inches
Hannagan Meadow, Elev 9560ft, 24 inches
How did the numerical models do?
12Z January 18th ECMWF (left) and GFS (right)
•The models were quite late getting a handle on this system. All
guidance 3-5 days ahead were showing trough staying east with little
moisture across Southeast Arizona.
How did the numerical models do?
•The guidance trended west
with the 12Z January 19th. This
was especially the case with
the ECMWF and UKMET.
•Even with this run the models
showed limited moisture
availability.
•The 0Z January 20th GFS and
UKMET made the first real
aggressive change to a
moister/wetter solution.
•The NAM was the last to
adjust the upper level low track
west across Southern Arizona.
•It took until the 12Z January
20th run for the models to have
a consistent handle on
moisture availability and track.
12Z January 19 ECMWF, GFS and UKMET
Concluding Thoughts
• A storm moved through two days prior to this event which
moistened up the atmosphere and provided adequate
moisture for significant precipitation. This also likely
contributed to the numerical models being underdone with
qpf.
• 500mb heights being 2-3 standard deviations is unusual, but
not unheard of. We see similar systems several times per
season. The main difference with this event was the moisture
availability and strong lift.
• Tucson averages measurable snowfall once every five years.
If the storm had been a bit farther west, the 6-9 inches that
occurred at 2800 feet in Safford (a record amount for them)
could’ve been in the city of Tucson. Being in the desert by no
means precludes us from having significant winter weather!