Map shows two atmospheric rivers headed for the US - You WILL get wet. You MAY get soaked.

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Original Article

Map shows two atmospheric rivers headed for the US​

Story by Anna Skinner
• 9h•
2 min read

Newsweek

‘Bomb Cyclone’ Set To Explode Off US West Coast

National Weather Service (NWS) meteorologists are warning of a “series of atmospheric rivers” that will soak the Pacific Northwest beginning on Friday.

Atmospheric rivers are a “long, narrow region in the atmosphere—like rivers in the sky—that transport most of the water vapor outside of the tropics,” according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.


The storms brought by atmospheric rivers are known for their heavy snow, heavy rain and strong winds. They more commonly affect the West Coast, particularly during the winter months. Although the storms can bring beneficial snow that helps supplement reservoirs throughout the summer dry season, they can also trigger deadly flooding, mudslides and widespread power outages.

NWS science and operations officer Kirby Cook told Newsweek that the biggest concerns with the new storms will be the significant rainfall.

“We are expecting some impacts to rivers as well as landslide impacts,” Cook said. “Right now, we have quite a few rivers that are expected to get well above minor flood stage, depending on the location.”

Cook said the second storm will be the most significant, and its impacts will hit on Monday and Tuesday.

The first storm will saturate Washington and Oregon beginning on Friday. In higher elevations, snow is expected.

On Thursday afternoon, the NWS office in Seattle issued a hydrologic outlook warning of the incoming storms.

“A series of atmospheric rivers will provide rounds of increasingly impactful rainfall starting on Friday and continuing through early next week,” the outlook said. “Snow levels will remain around 5000 to 6000 feet. Expect rising rivers with potential for flooding especially for rivers flowing off the Olympics and Cascades. Urban flooding and landslides are also possible throughout this period as the soil conditions remain wet.”

A gale warning, coastal flood advisory, and a winter weather advisory had also been issued across the area ahead of the storm.

Some of the most widespread impacts from the incoming storms will be heavy rainfall, the NWS said in a Thursday forecast, which will begin “across Washington and Oregon before reaching Idaho, western Montana and Wyoming as snow in the mountains and rain for the lower elevations.”

“By Saturday, the snow is expected to expand into the central Rockies,” the forecast said. “More than a foot of new snow can be expected on Saturday near and around the higher elevations of the northern Rockies.”

Looking further out, more precipitation is expected. According to both the six-to-10-day and eight-to-14-day precipitation outlooks from the NWS Climate Prediction Center, the Pacific Northwest has high chances of above-average precipitation between December 10 and December 18.
 
Atmospheric river
I hate NOAA.

These are rain bands, probably a low pressure front being stretched between high pressure bands. I can't remember whether el niño or la niña is wet, but they can't use terminology people recognize because it's heckin racist now.

I believe both fronts originate off S America, hence the name, but I'm not a meteorologist.
 
Every region has names for local weather patterns, and where they form(macro), but the storm is just differences in barometric pressure (micro). They don't even measure barometric pressure at US weather stations anymore, they've switched to satellite for almost everything.
And you seem to know a lot about the weather....
 
These are rain bands, probably a low pressure front being stretched between high pressure bands. I can't remember whether el niño or la niña is wet, but they can't use terminology people recognize because it's heckin racist now.
An atmospheric river isn't a rain band. It's a long, relatively narrow flow of water vapour over thousands of miles, that transports masses of water from one end of the pacific to the other. They're a well understood phenomenon, but not well-known by the public, so the media uses them as a scare story.
 
rain band
I mean yes they are, the term is only 30 years old and isn't exclusive to the Pacific since it's been adopted.

Decades earlier, subsets of atmospheric rivers were known by names such as the Pineapple Express or Rum Runner Express, based on their origin: Hawaii and Caribbean, respectively.

There's a term for a couple that originate from the Arctic too that I'm not going to look up right now. These are large low pressure fronts pushed to high density by high pressure bands. Call it whatever you want, the science is older than the term.
 
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