March 13, 2018

Extreme Morning Heat Wave Hits the Puget Sound Region

Major, long-term, temperature records are being broken this morning, with amazingly high temperatures around Puget Sound.  Stunning records.

I knew something was up when I walked my dog this morning around 6:15 AM.... it felt amazingly warm.   Then I checked and was floored.

Temperatures at 6 AM were in the mid-60s from Seattle to Tacoma (see graphic, click to expand).  50s over north Seattle.  Normal lows this time of the year are around 38-39F.


Sea-Tac Airport was 63F at 6 AM, with an overnight minimum of 62F.    The previous minimum temperature temperature record for the date was 50F--but temperatures will fall today....so we will have to see if we beat it.

We are talking about a stunning record low temperature.  The plot of temperature at Seattle illustrates this (normal highs and low temps plotted with purple and cyan color lines).  The low this morning was roughly 10F higher than our normal high temperatures.
According to my colleagues at the National Weather Service, the 5 AM PDT temperature at Renton, Washington (at 66 F) was the 2nd warmest spot in the lower 48 states....just behind Palm Springs, California (69 F). 
So what is going on?   A very strong easterly wind event with powerful downslope winds.   In fact, there is windstorm going on right now in the Cascades foothills, particularly around Enumclaw.   And strong downslope winds cause powerful compressional heating of the air, like in your bicycle pump.  Thus, the extreme temperatures.

Here are the temperatures and winds around Puget Sound.  Look closely (click on image to expand) and you will see that the warmest places have easterly winds.


The pressure gradient across the Cascades is very large now (7.5 hPa across the mountains, higher to the east) and the winds above Sea-Tac Airport (see below) shows a deep layer of easterly flow...and easterly flow that is very strong at low levels. ( the figure shows temperatures in red and wind barbs, time is on the x-axis and height in pressure on the y-axis, 850 is roughly 5000 ft).

The turbulent easterly flow is mixing down to the surface, working against any nighttime cooling by the emission of infrared radiation to space.  The strong easterly winds have gusted to 52 mph in Enumclaw and 30-40 mph as far west as the Sound and as far north as Issaquah.


Why are there strong winds and warmth between Seattle and Tacoma?  Because of a "weakness" in the Cascades to the east....what meteorologists call "Stampede Gap"---- see the terrain map below.


The winds and high temperatures will fade today....but those of you living between Seattle and Tacoma are experiencing an unusual event today.

8 comments:

  1. Funny the mention of Palm Springs as we just flew home from there last night.
    It was unusually balmy at the Vancouver Airport (YVR) around 7:30 pm.
    On Saturday in PS it rained all day.
    A little scary since we were riding motorcycles at the 17 turn Chuckwalla Raceway in Desert Center.

    ReplyDelete
  2. One thing that confuses me is when I look at the earlier graphs here indicating large amounts of precipitation for much of CA and also parts of OR, I look at the other weather predictions and they give OR little or no precipitation for the same period.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes! Which is it? I'm trying to decide whether or not to go to Smith Rock this weekend

      Delete
  3. I suspect the high clouds that rolled in between 4pm and 5pm yesterday had an impact, too. They put a blanket on it, so to say.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Just for comparison, I'm at Kaanapali in Maui and it's 69°f at 7:20 AM.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Remember,the climatological day extends until 1 AM tomorrow ( midnight PST),so it's unlikely the record minimum will hold.The temp at Sea-Tac will probably be in the 40's by then.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I found a very interesting web site at www.windy.com that shows wind directions and speed at all levels, surface to upper. It is quite interesting (and well done). By moving the 'altitude' slider on the right side of the screen, you can see how the winds are affected by topography, and what the winds are doing in upper atmosphere.

    It also shows forecast winds, using various weather models, I think. The site is free, but if you register, it remembers your preferences (like location). Lots of interesting features (temps, radar, etc) that you can select.

    You probably already know about the site, but others might be interested.

    ReplyDelete

  7. It also shows forecast winds, using various weather models, I think.

    ReplyDelete

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

The Seattle Times Says Washington State is in a Serious Drought. Is this True?

It is more than a little disturbing when a major regional newspaper (the Seattle Times) provides demonstrably inaccurate and deceptive weath...