November 15, 2020

A Meteorological "Bomb" Will Hit Northern Vancouver Island On Tuesday

In meteorology we have a name for midlatitude storms that intensify explosively.  Such storms, known as meteorological bombs, occur when the central low pressure of a storm drops at least 24 hPa in twenty four hours.   (A hPa is a unit of pressure, also known as a millibar.)

The forecast models are now emphatic that such explosive development will occur tonight and tomorrow over the eastern Pacific, with the resulting intense low pressure center headed for the northern tip of Vancouver Island.

Take a look at the latest forecast for Tuesday at 11 AM shown below:  a 961 hPa low center! Wow.  

One of the deepest lows to approach our region in years.  Our typical low center dropx to around 990 hPa and the greatest storm of all...the Columbus Day Storm of 1962 was 955 hPa.   (note the figures shows sea level pressure, shown every 1 hPa)

To get an idea of how unusual this storm will be, we can look at the anomalies of pressure from normal.  Below is the forecast anomaly at 11 AM Tuesday, divided by the standard deviations of pressure based on pressure analyses for many decades (this is called a standardized anomaly).  The central pressure is between 4 and 5 standard deviation from normal.   This is rare...the kind of event that only occurs every 5-10 years.


The winds with this hyper pressure gradient will be impressive.  

First, there will be powerful winds in front of the system associated with a strong front. The wind gust forecast at 7AM Tuesday shows strong winds, gusting to 60 knots on the Northwest coast, and even greater winds south and west of the low center.


And the winds six hour later, as the storm makes land fall, will reach 70 knots (red colors below)

Parts of western Washington will get a piece of this.  The coast for sure, but winds will accelerate over Northwest Washington, as shown by the predicted gusts at noon on Tuesday.  Gust so 50 kts in some locations in or near the San Juans.


And did I mention that this will be a bomb storm?  Below are the pressure forecasts for 7 PM tonight (Sunday) and Monday evening.  Pressure drops from 1007 hPa to 977 hPa (30 hPa) in 24 hours.  We have a bomb!



And even the European Center model is doing it, but slightly less intense (968 hPa)--see below

Finally, one can see the beginning of the storm in the visible satellite imagery, with the characteristic wave developing on a frontal zone in the Pacific.


There is a sign of something serious happening, if one looks at the water vapor imagery at the same time (water vapor imagery shows the temperature of water vapor in the atmosphere).  You see the profound darkening behind the storm.  That often occurs during the development of strong storms.  Darkening indicates strong sinking and drying--something that occurs behind strong upper level disturbances that can really rev up a storm!


The satellite imagery tomorrow should be impressive.

_________________________________________________________
Stream my podcast from your favorite services:

Or you can listen to it here:

Click the play button to listen or use your favorite streaming service


My blog on KNKX and the Undermining of American Freedom is found here











11 comments:

  1. "... meteorological bombs, occur when the central low pressure of a storm drops at least 24 hPa in twenty four hours."

    True at 60° latitude.
    Otherwise ... Δ hPa * (sin(ϴ) / sin(60))

    Δ 28 hPA at the Pole
    Δ 12 ΔhPA at 25°lat

    REF: Synoptic-Dynamic Climatology of the "Bomb"
    Sanders and Gyakim (p. 1589 Monthly Wx Review - 1980)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. CORR: Δ hPa * (sin(ϴ) / sin(60))should read 24 hPa * (sin(ϴ) / sin(60))

      Delete
  2. Why is there so much certainty in this one, but last friday's storm had similar certainty and didn't pan out at all for the puget sound area. Why should we believe the forecast for tuesday's low?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Maybe Fridays forecast didnt pan out in your area. We had gusts of 60 on Whidbey and the power was out for 12 hours.

      Delete
  3. Won’t do serious damage to us, touch wood. But I wouldn’t want to be on the north end of the island.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I hope Tofino and Port McNeil are ready for this, I love going up there regularly, along with Sooke as well.

    ReplyDelete
  5. We have had a few of these pressure bomb monsters....Inaugeration Day for Clinton...very high gusts!...and a few years before that, I remember one of those bombs took down the Hood Canal Bridge!....the Pacific Northwest is not always "pacific"!
    ":

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hi Cliff, how confident are forecasters that this system will stay on its projected track?

    ReplyDelete
  7. Is it my imagination or has it been much windier than average than average this Fall?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Hopefully it doesn’t track south of these projections

    ReplyDelete

Please make sure your comments are civil. Name calling and personal attacks are not appropriate.

Comet Viewing Tonight

 Tonight may be the best night this week to view Comet Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS in the western sky just after sunset. The biggest issue will ...