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Parameters required for guaranteed snow in Ireland

  • 19-01-2019 9:04am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,221 ✭✭✭


    This is a summary of some of the parameters that I find are necessary in order to be fairly guaranteed snow down to sea level in Ireland. Forecasting snow is notoriously tricky, as anyone on this forum will attest to, and as we're on the edge of an ocean, with no proper observations upstream, the task is made all the more difficult. However, if most or all of the parameters below are at least forecast to be met in the model output then we can at least have some certainty.

    By far the best forecasting tool is a sounding (vertical profile of temperature, humidity and wind), as in one image it gives a complete snapshot of all the vertical parameters listed below. Looking only at horizontal charts of one or two layers (e.g. the surface and 850 hPa) is usually not enough to give a good picture as you can miss many subtle features between these two levels. Forecast soundings for each model are available on meteociel.fr under "Sondages" while the actual observational soundings from weather balloons are available there under "Sondages obs altitude".

    Throughout the whole year most of Ireland's rainfall is actually melted snow, with the freezing level obviously varying widely throughout the seasons. What we're looking for in winter is that freezing level to come down close to the surface so that the snow has a chance of making it down without melting. But the temperature and moisture profile of that surface layer have a big influence on melt rate. For a given temperature profile, drier air there will inhibit melting due to sublimational cooling off the surface of the snowflake.

    Thickness
    Thickness refers to the vertical depth of the layer between two pressure levels. The hypsometric equation says that this thickness is a function of the average virtual temperature of the layer (virtual temperature is the temperature plus the latent heat stored in its water vapour). Cold, dry air will have the lowest virtual temperature and hence thickness, while warm, humid air will have the highest.

    The most common thickness quoted (but the least useful) is that of the level between 1000 and 500 hPa (the bottom ~5.5 km of the atmosphere). This gives a first guess of the possibility of snow, but its usefulness is limited due to so many other factors at play within various sublayers of that layer. But as a rule of thumb; if this thickness is under 522 decametres (dam, 5220 metres) then snow is favoured over rain, while under 516 dam it's guaranteed (because the whole layer is likely to be subzero in that case). Some say that 528 dam is what we need, but this is only true in the case of a deep isothermal layer near zero (an approaching upper frontal zone) overrunning a shallow sub-zero surface layer. In this case it would mean heavy snowfall, but in the case of showers, 528 is way too high.

    The most useful thickness is the 850-1000 hPa one as this shows what the lowest 1-1.5 km of the atmosphere is like. If this layer is cold and dry then snow will be favoured, so a thickness of 1290 m or less is the magic number. Above 1300 m usually means snow is less than 50:50 likely, except in the case of a warm front precipitating into a cold surface layer. The warm frontal layer near the 850 hPa level will add thickness to the overall layer, even though the temperature profile below it could be mostly sub-zero and supportive of snow. Again, this is where a sounding is crucial.

    Also check the 850 hPa theta-e (equivalent potential temperature) charts. In a showery setup, theta-e of about 10 °C or lower guarantees sea-level snow, but higher values can too if we're talking about a frontal situation

    The 700-1000 thickness is useful in conjunction with the 850-1000 as it shows what the lowest 3 km is like. 282 dam and below guarantees snow, while 286 dam means you have to look at more layers to see what's causing the thickness (e.g. a frontal zone again).

    850 hPa temperature ("uppers").
    This is the most widely quoted chart on the forum when it comes to snow, but it too comes with caveats. It's good for standard surface pressure and a showery setup (temperature falling rapidly with height), and a value of around -8°C or lower is the magic number. The 850 hPa level is likely to be at around 1300 m in this scenario, and with a lapse rate of around 6.5 °C/km, the temperature at the surface is likely to be at around 0, depending on the surface (e.g. sea) temperature, and snow should stay solid.

    For these showers to form over the sea the temperature difference between the sea and 850 hPa should be 13 degrees or more, so in this case a sea temperature of at least 5 °C should kick off the showers. This is why we here in the east like a cold northeasterly (e.g. Dec 2010). A cold northwesterly usually picks up too much moisture (dewpoints too high) on the 1800-2000-km sea track from Greenland, so in most cases it can fall on the wrong side of marginal for snow to sea level, or wet snow can result. Cheap Atlantic muck.

    In the case of non-standard surface pressure the 850 hPa temperatures gets used incorrectly. Every hPa increase (decrease) of surface pressure from standard 1013 hPa raises (lowers) the height of the 850 hPa layer by a little more than 8 metres. So if surface pressure is 1030 hPa, the 850 hPa level will be raised by 17×8=~140 metres. This is 140 metres extra that snow now must survive through, which, at a typical terminal velocity of around 1 m/s, will take about 2-2.5minutes. That's a long time for a snowflake to stave off melting. On the flip side, low surface pressure lowers the 850 level by the same amount and shortens the potential melting time.

    So purely saying "we have -8 uppers" means nothing without an idea of surface pressure or 850 hPa heights to go with it. In the high-pressure case, that temperature is higher up, so at a standard lapse rate (ignore the subsidence inversion for a minute) the temperature on the ground will be about +3 °C. We would therefore need more like -11 °C to give 0 at the surface. Of course, snow is unlikely anyway with pressure that high.

    For the low pressure scenario, the opposite is true and we could get by with only -5 °C uppers.

    Snow can also fall with T850 as high as -1 °C if there is an established deep cold surface layer, preferably over a snowfield. If the air is not above zero (or only a shallow layer above zero) from 850 down to the surface then snow can survive. Again, a sounding here is key.

    Wet-bulb temperature & Dewpoint
    Having said all that, snow can still fall with a surface temperature of up to +4 °C, but only if the air is very dry. It's not dewpoint but wet-bulb temperature that's important to a snowflake. If the wbt is lower than about 0.5 °C then melting is offset and the snow will survive. Wbt lies about midway between the temperature and dewpoint, so for a temperature of +4 °C the dewpoint will need to be -5.9 °C or lower (r.h. 50% or lower), and so on:

    Maximum dewpoint and r.h. needed to give a wbt of 0.5 °C at sea level:

    Temp | Dewpoint | R.H. |
    +4 °C | -4.9 °C | 50% |
    +3 °C | -3.1 °C | 62% |
    +2 °C | -1.6 °C | 76% |
    +1 °C | -0.2 °C | 91% |

    The above values are the marginal figures, so we want them to be lower to be guaranteed. Check the 950 hPa relative humidity charts for an idea of the dryness of the lowest layer and how turbulent mixing will effect surface values.

    Other factors
    Things like windspeed, sunlight, precipitation rate, etc., all have some effect too. For maximum evaporational cooling we need heavy precipitation falling into a dry surface layer with low windspeed. This can cause cold rain to turn to snow, but remember, as evaporation occurs, the wbt is increasing, so it can become marginal unless the air is plenty dry enough.

    Snow falling during the day will melt more quickly than at night as the flakes absorb uv radiation and sublimation increases. As we head into February and March this effect becomes bigger. Also, daylight hours are increasing and the ground will become warmer.

    Low windspeed prevents mixing of warmer air from below, keeping the upper air colder.

    Obviously local effects come into play too. Heavy showers can have strong downdrafts that drag down colder snowy air from above, so an individual shower can give snow when the parameters above say no. Elevation also has an effect, as Mountainyman shows. Temperature falls by about 0.7 degrees per 100 metres, but check the blue wbt curve on the meteociel forecast soundings to see at what height it becomes about zero. That's your snowline. In the example below it's at around 438 metres.

    sondagearpegefr_225.92999267578125_351.3399963378906_66_0_1547902981.png


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,428 ✭✭✭ZX7R


    I think that is one of the best posts I've read on the weather forum in a long time


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 717 ✭✭✭bazlers


    Yes quiet descriptive of what's required. Well done.
    Possibly should put in as a "useful weather link" so it doesn't get lost or whatever works best.
    We will need to access it I'm sure for most of February (He says with wishful wide eyes ; ) )


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,243 ✭✭✭sdanseo


    Brilliant and incredibly useful post. Thanks GL.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,290 ✭✭✭pauldry


    Yes excellent post.

    The other night it snowed the Dew point was -2.8c here but today its 5.1c booooooo!

    Next time ill be monitoring DP is Monday and Tuesday (next snow)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,221 ✭✭✭Gaoth Laidir


    Could a mod please fix that stupid typo in the title? I can't!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,033 ✭✭✭irishrover99


    Could a mod please fix that stupid typo in the title? I can't!

    For a minute I was thinking it was a new type of snow event 😉😉


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,221 ✭✭✭Gaoth Laidir


    'cheap atlantic muck' brings snow to elevated areas of the west and northwest so i wouldnt be so dismissive of it in the context of your east coast bias.

    See my reference to mountainyman, in Sligo. Lots of muck is nice snow in elevated areas. My post was referring only to snow at low levels.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,482 ✭✭✭Gerry


    Probably one of the most informative forum posts I've ever read, should be a stickied and we can refer to it in the next few weeks :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,727 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Could somebody perhaps provide a list of big snowfall events in Ireland? I know of these but it may not be a very complete list:

    Feb 1853

    Jan 1881

    Apr 1917

    Feb 1933

    late Jan-Feb-Mar 1947

    Feb 1963

    Jan 1979? (or was that only in Britain?)

    Jan 1982

    Feb 1991

    Feb 2009

    Nov-Dec 2010

    (Mar 2013 limited)

    Feb-Mar 2018


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 717 ✭✭✭bazlers


    Could somebody perhaps provide a list of big snowfall events in Ireland? I know of these but it may not be a very complete list:

    Feb 1853

    Jan 1881

    Apr 1917

    Feb 1933

    late Jan-Feb-Mar 1947

    Feb 1963

    Jan 1979? (or was that only in Britain?)

    Jan 1982

    Feb 1991

    Feb 2009

    Nov-Dec 2010

    (Mar 2013 limited)

    Feb-Mar 2018

    I know in March 1979 there was a fall of snow close to a foot in the East Offaly, Laois , Kildare area.
    Maybe more places were affected not sure.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,727 ✭✭✭✭sryanbruen


    Could somebody perhaps provide a list of big snowfall events in Ireland? I know of these but it may not be a very complete list:

    Feb 1853

    Jan 1881

    Apr 1917

    Feb 1933

    late Jan-Feb-Mar 1947

    Feb 1963

    Jan 1979? (or was that only in Britain?)

    Jan 1982

    Feb 1991

    Feb 2009

    Nov-Dec 2010

    (Mar 2013 limited)

    Feb-Mar 2018

    Some more:

    February 1855 - Phoenix Park recorded lying snow from the 7th to 23rd. According to some old Met Office data, possibly the coldest month on record in Dublin after December 2010.

    Winter 1878-79 - A very cold and snowy Winter but no known individual events.

    February 1892 - Cork recorded a depth of 46cm in the third week.

    February 1895 - Extremely cold and snowy.

    January 1917 - As part of a very snowy Winter (you mentioned the April 1917 blizzard). Met Éireann say:
    On the 24th January large quantities of rain, sleet and snow accompanied the south easterly gale in the south of Ireland. At Ballinacurra near Cork the measurement (of snow when melted) on the 24th was 52 mm and on the 25th 19 mm. At Seskin the total amount of snow on the 25th and 26th yielded, when melted, 47 mm of water. On the 25th, the wind strengthened to a gale in the south of Ireland, when there were heavy falls of snow covering the ground to 30 cm or more, with drifts of 300 cm or more. Over a large area of Ireland railway traffic was stopped owing to the heavy snow. During the period 28th January to 3rd February, the low maximum temperatures prevented the snow which had fallen during the preceding week from thawing to any considerable extent. Little fresh snow fell during the week.

    February 1955 - Plentiful wintry showers and outbreaks of snow. Snow lying on the ground at Dublin Airport from the 18th to 27th February.

    February 1956 - This would have brought some lake effect snow into eastern counties of Ireland but it is unknown how much. It was a severely cold spell (included Dublin Airport's only February ice days until 28 February 2018). Here's some Irish Times articles on the cold below.

    2nd February 1956;

    WvLySg5.png
    xzkDrPN.png

    3rd February 1956;

    vnRAnOx.png
    jb9uhIw.png

    850hPa temperature reanalysis on 2nd February 1956:

    archives-1956-2-2-0-1.png?

    February 1978 - perhaps the most notable blizzard for southern and southwestern parts of Ireland. 26cm at Cork Airport on 20th February 1978.

    500mb height reanalysis for 19th February 1978:

    archives-1978-2-19-12-0.png?

    January 1985 - a bitter easterly wind mid-month which brought ice days for some and heavy snow showers. Rosslare recorded a depth of 18cm on 18th January 1985.

    850hPa temperature reanalysis for 16th January 1985:

    archives-1985-1-16-0-1.png?

    January 1987 - a very heavy lake effect snow event with ice days even as far south as Cork (Cork's coldest days on record).

    850hPa temperature reanalysis for 13th January 1987:

    archives-1987-1-13-0-1.png

    February 2001 - a northerly/northeasterly brought heavy snow showers to the east of Ireland with depths surpassing 10cm. 75cm of snow was measured in the Mourne Mountains on 27th February 2001.

    850hPa temperature reanalysis for 27th February 2001:

    archives-2001-2-27-12-1.png?

    December 1978/January 1979 was also in Ireland yes. Casement Aerodrome recorded a snow depth of 26cm during this spell. Claremorris and Cork Airport also recorded depths of 16cm and 15cm respectively.

    500mb height reanalysis for 31st December 1978:

    archives-1978-12-31-12-0.png?

    There was the February 1979 easterly too.

    500mb height reanalysis for 14th February 1979:

    archives-1979-2-14-12-0.png?

    There's a good few more mind you in the archive which can be seen in the Snowfall in Ireland document below or the Newspaper Archive (I currently have access to the Irish Times Archive if you want articles).

    Thought you'd might find the second file (The historic record of cold spells in Ireland) interesting if you haven't seen it already.

    Photography site - https://sryanbruenphoto.com/



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,023 ✭✭✭Donegal Storm


    December 1995 and 2000 both had strong northerlies that gave plenty of snow in Donegal, pre-internet days so not sure how the rest of the country was effected but two of the best events I remember after 2010 and last March

    December 1958 (I think) had something like 40cm of snow at Malin Head so I'd imagine it was quite an event further inland

    The met did a report on historic snow events a few years ago, think it was called snowanal or similar but googling that just returns some very nsfw results :D

    Edit: As per Sryan's link, 38cm at Malin Head in January 1958, wasn't too far off!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,727 ✭✭✭✭sryanbruen


    The met did a report on historic snow events a few years ago, think it was called snowanal or similar but googling that just returns some very nsfw results :D

    Attached above ;) .

    I knew I was forgetting one - the December 2000 northerly.

    Photography site - https://sryanbruenphoto.com/



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,221 ✭✭✭Gaoth Laidir


    sryanbruen wrote: »
    Attached above ;) .

    I knew I was forgetting one - the December 2000 northerly.

    I remember flying in that snowy spell. My first time to witness such cold air. The plane took off in a flash and climbed effortlessly. Amazing flying over Meath with the snowy landscape below and not a bump in the calm air. The only downside was trying to clear the rock-hard snowy ice off the wings preflight.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,238 ✭✭✭Oneiric 3


    sryanbruen wrote: »
    Attached above ;) .

    I knew I was forgetting one - the December 2000 northerly.

    ZAG7CwU.png

    New Moon



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,238 ✭✭✭Oneiric 3



    Edit: As per Sryan's link, 38cm at Malin Head in January 1958, wasn't too far off!

    Pressure and 850s for that day:

    ERA_1_1958011912_2.png

    New Moon



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,023 ✭✭✭Donegal Storm


    Nice, as you've been saying yourself recently though they don't make northerlies like that anymore :(


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,221 ✭✭✭Gaoth Laidir


    Max snow depths throughout the country on 28/12/2000, back in the good old days when all the stations were manned (at least part-time).

    http://www.ogimet.com/cgi-bin/gsynres?lang=en&osum=no&state=Irel&fmt=html&ano=2000&mes=12&day=28&hora=18&ord=REV

    Click on individual station for hourly data.

    19 cm: Knock
    9 cm: Clones
    7 cm: Dublin Airport
    6 cm: Belmullet
    5 cm: Birr, Casement, Mullingar
    3 cm: Malin Head
    2 cm: Shannon Airport
    1 cm: Cork Airport


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,198 ✭✭✭Rebelbrowser


    Max snow depths throughout the country on 28/12/2000, back in the good old days when all the stations were manned (at least part-time).

    http://www.ogimet.com/cgi-bin/gsynres?lang=en&osum=no&state=Irel&fmt=html&ano=2000&mes=12&day=28&hora=18&ord=REV

    Click on individual station for hourly data.

    19 cm: Knock
    9 cm: Clones
    7 cm: Dublin Airport
    6 cm: Belmullet
    5 cm: Birr, Casement, Mullingar
    3 cm: Malin Head
    2 cm: Shannon Airport
    1 cm: Cork Airport

    Now I get why I couldn't remember that one!

    In Cork we had a big day of snow on Sunday 10th (I think) Jan 2010 when a front came up from Biscay and stalled at about Mitchelstown. Snowed very lightly but consistently for a good 10 hours. Remember lots of toys thrown out of the pram on here when it became apparent the front was going any further north. Cork airport was closed and everyone had a snow day on the Monday


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,238 ✭✭✭Oneiric 3


    According to the UK Met Office report for January 1958:

    https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/binaries/content/assets/mohippo/pdf/3/f/jan1958.pdf

    27 inches of level snow was recorded at Aldergrove, Belfast on the 20th.

    New Moon



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,221 ✭✭✭Gaoth Laidir




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,727 ✭✭✭✭sryanbruen


    There was a "very severe snow storm" in January 1884 according to the following resource. It lasted a fortnight. The snow was three feet in depth in the fields and on sheltered roads it was from four to five feet in depth. A number of sheep died during the snow for want of food.

    The country people had to cut a path through the snow for foodstuffs.

    https://www.duchas.ie/en/cbes/4427943/4359983/4462712

    As far as I can see from reanalysis, January 1884 was a zonal month with a notable deep depression in the last week. But there was this low at the start of February 1884 which had cold air on its back edge.

    archives-1884-2-2-0-0.png?

    archives-1884-2-2-0-1.png?

    Photography site - https://sryanbruenphoto.com/



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,727 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    That does look like it could produce snow but I wonder if this account is a mistaken memory of January 1881? According to CET data it didn't stay cold very long after that snowfall and the rest of both January and February 1884 were generally mild.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,727 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Worth noting perhaps that in North America the parameters can be different, and this may explain why for example certain weather apps are not that reliable.

    Without warm seas nearby, the critical thickness for the snow-freezing rain delineation is about 530 dm. It can rise as high as 542 dm when a storm causes rapid inflow of cold air under very mild air inland from the Atlantic seaboard. And 850 mb temps that can support snow can be as high as -3 C, although -6 C is probably considered thresh-hold in most cases. We sometimes see weak analogues of this more continental regime for snow when cold air is entrenched over Britain and frontal dynamics are weak in a slider situation.

    However, big North American snowstorms usually have slam-dunk uppers that cause no doubt in the minds of forecasters. The recent blizzard across MN, WI and MI states hit with -15 to -20 temps in the heavy snowfall zone and the thicknesses were falling fast away from 520 dm.

    It's the Atlantic that causes most of the trouble for marginal situations being difficult in Ireland although the North Sea - Irish Sea combination add difficulties. I've found that you can follow these rules in easterlies:

    1. Expect the surface temps to end up within 5 degrees of the Irish Sea temperature even with strong upper dynamics and strong winds. But expect more like a 3 degree differential when the air mass is moving at relatively slow speeds.

    2. Count on zones of mixed streamer precip to be present over the water and to make some limited progress inland even in ideal support situations. The analogue would be lake effect in November in the Great Lakes which often falls in mixed form over the lakes even when it comes sweeping inland as all snow.

    3. The North Sea is wider so its effects are even more notable on eastern England marginal situations. Snow can be prevented in coastal areas at surprisingly low thickness - 850 temp and air mass dp parameters just because the air is forced to warm up to North Sea temperatures by the long passage over water. You almost never see those oil platforms colder than +2 C no matter what readings occur later over northern England.


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