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598 FXUS65 KBOU 200219 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 719 PM MST Sun Jan 19 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Bitter cold through Tuesday morning. - For the plains, wind chills of -15F to -25F late tonight through Tuesday morning. - For the mountains and mountain valleys, the coldest conditions are expected Monday night and Tuesday morning with temperatures and wind chills falling into the -30F to -45F range. - Another wave of light snow tonight and into Monday morning. - Temperatures moderating somewhat through the rest of the week. && .UPDATE... Issued at 705 PM MST Sun Jan 19 2025 Snow continues to slowly develop and drift southward this evening, with the leading edge fo the snow roughly from FNL-GXY-FMM. We should see snow spread into the Denver metro over the next few hours, with the peak snow rates likely coming close to midnight tonight. The previous QPF/SnowAmt grids still look good, but we did add a little refinement to the PoPs to capture the timing offered by most hi-res guidance. Temperatures remain a question mark tonight. Colder (yes, colder) air should filter in through the overnight hours, but low temperatures will be limited somewhat by widespread cloud cover. Have a feeling this will keep temperatures from completely bottoming out over the mountain valleys, but overnight lows should still end up well below zero. Did make a few adjustments across the area, but not anything significant. && .SHORT TERM /Through Monday/... Issued at 336 PM MST Sun Jan 19 2025 Snow has spread into the mountains over the past couple of hours. Initially it`s light, driven by warm advection, but then the instability showers will come behind it. We`ve sped up the timing of the onset by an hour or two this evening, for Denver probably between 7 and 10 PM. The best chance for a period of more substantial snow should be in the late evening to early morning hours as the more unstable air behind the shortwave arrives. By morning, the QG lift will be departing, but there will still be some instability driven by the very cold air aloft. Forcing, moisture amount and depth are all fairly weak, but will occur in favorable temperatures for dendritic growth this evening. Later as we get colder, the instability will help with that but then it will get cool and we`ll likely switch over to colder snowflake types. With expected QPF around a tenth of an inch, this should render a fairly widespread 1 to 2 inch snow with 3 inches in a few places, most likely in the upslope areas west of Denver and mountain ridges. Monday will see decreasing showers in an unstable boundary layer whose depth will be shrinking as warm advection aloft sets in by afternoon. It may wind up much like Saturday, with fairly widespread light showers but not much accumulation and gradually improving roads. Forecast temperatures for Monday are tricky with the timing of clearing in doubt, but there`s fairly good consistency in the models and it looks like we should be triggering that shallow convection at around 5 degrees, so staying below 10 is looking likely. We`ve left the forecast temperatures alone. There will likely be a puff of wind (probably 10-20 mph) behind the front overnight, then lighter winds on Monday, so the wind chills won`t be a lot lower than the temperatures. The current advisory seems to cover things well. && .LONG TERM /Monday night through Sunday/... Issued at 245 PM MST Sun Jan 19 2025 Strong northerly flow aloft is progged over the CWA Monday night into Tuesday morning, with short wave upper ridging to be in place much of Tuesday along with strong northwesterly flow aloft. By late Tuesday night into Wednesday evening, upper troughing is back over the CWA with a very strong north-northwesterly jet maximum across central Colorado, north-to-south by 12Z Thursday morning. The QG Omega fields have downward synoptic scale energy for the forecast area Monday night and Tuesday. Weak upward motion is progged Tuesday night through Wednesday night. For the lower levels, models show lee troughing Monday night through Tuesday night, then a weak pressure gradient is in place through Wednesday night. The low level winds are dominated by downsloping through the periods, with some weak drainage possible at night. Cross sections do show a mountain wave set-up Tuesday, but winds right along and just east of the divide should stay below high wind criteria. For moisture, there is some in the mid and upper levels from time to time through the five periods. There is some low level alpine moisture progged Tuesday overnight into Wednesday. There should be some orographic enhancement then too, so with go with 20-40% pops. No pops on the plains. For temperatures, thickness fields show decent warm air advection kicking in Monday night into Tuesday. Not too sure if it will be enough to overcome the arctic air in place and most likely not in the high mountains and high mountain valleys. Will hit the lows pretty hard still for Monday overnight/Tuesday morning, with the coldest spots in the Parks perhaps getting below -30 F. Lows out on the plains could drop into the minus teens F in many spots. Tuesday`s highs will be in the 30s and lower 40s over the plains, significantly warmer than Monday`s readings. Wednesday`s readings cool back down with more upper troughing. For the later days, Thursday through Sunday, upper troughing and strong north and northwesterly flow aloft will dominate through Friday. Zonal flow is progged Saturday, then more upper troughing on Sunday. Moisture increases Saturday and Sunday, along with colder air and upslope flow for the plains. Pops will be sparse Thursday and Friday, then they will increase for the weekend. The only "warm" day will be Friday, where readings could be near normal seasonal values. It may actually be in the mid to upper 40s for the plains that day. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS through 00Z Tuesday/... Issued at 442 PM MST Sun Jan 19 2025 VFR expected in the near term, but that won`t last for more than another couple of hours before we once again drop down to MVFR/IFR conditions tonight through most of Monday. Upstream radar/satellite show lower cigs/visby with some light snow closer to the Wyoming border. We should see snow increase in coverage after 03z with some potential for LIFR visby overnight at BJC. Snow accumulation will generally be light with fairly consistent north/northeast winds. Light snow is expected to stick around through the first half of Monday, with continued MVFR cigs and visby. A gradual clearing trend is expected into Monday evening with VFR likely returning as we approach 00z. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Extreme Cold Watch from Monday evening through Tuesday morning for COZ030>034-037. Cold Weather Advisory until 9 AM MST Tuesday for COZ038>051. && $$ UPDATE...Hiris SHORT TERM...Gimmestad LONG TERM....RJK AVIATION...Hiris