If you ask any Western Washington meteorologist about the most important local weather phenomenon, the answer is immediate: the Puget Sound Convergence Zone.
Today, we had a spectacular example....let me show you.
For those of you who are unfamiliar with this feature, such convergence zones occur when the low-level winds on the coast are westerly or northwesterly (from the west to northwest).
The air is deflected around the Olympics and then convergences somewhere over Puget Sound (see figure below). Converging air at low levels forces upward motion, resulting in clouds and prediction.
A convergence zone is born!
We typically get 10-20 convergence zones per year, with the greatest frequency from March through June.
A strong convergence zone occurred this afternoon, with associated heavy rain quite evident on the weather radar around 3 PM (see below). You see the east-west precipitation band (yellow and green colors)/ That is the convergence zone, which extends into the western foothills of the Cascades.
The location of the flash is shown below (again, about 3 PM). We call this a "one-flash wonder"
When I was a graduate student many years ago, the origin of the convergence zone was not known. Weather Service forecasters thought there was a strong band of rain offshore that sometimes moved in off the ocean and then took up housekeeping over the central Sound.
Today we understand the critical role of terrain and particularly the Olympics.
But there is something else that changed: the ability of high-resolution models to predict convergence zone precipitation well in advance. For example, below is the predicted 3-h precipitation ending at 5 PM on Monday.
When it is sufficiently cold the convergence zone can produce a very well-defined band of snow across Puget Sound, something that happened in 1990. Even yesterday, there was convergence zone snow above approximately 750 ft ASL. Here is a picture sent to me by Dr. Peter Benda at around 1200 ft in the hills above Bellevue (3 inches of snow!).
Under very rare conditions, the snow band can get very, very narrow 😈