(Image credit: U.S. Air Force)
"Nationwide study measures short-term spike in particulate matter due to Independence Day fireworks"
Here's an interesting study from NOAA that shows a particularly high spike in air pollution due to fireworks!
"The
new research shows that hourly concentrations of fine particulate
matter typically reach their highest levels, when compared to the days
before and after July 4, on the evening of July 4. Levels drop back down
by noon on July 5, according to the research. On average, the increases
are largest from 9-10 p.m. on the holiday. Average concentrations over
the 24-hour period starting at 8 p.m. on July 4 are 42 percent greater
than on the days preceding and following the holiday."
See more from NOAA HERE:
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Happy 4th of July
By Todd Nelson
Somehow,
the stars have aligned for what looks like a pretty spectacular 4th of
July weekend! Don't be surprised if you find yourself 'sighing' with a
meek smile at points Saturday or Sunday; it's OK, you deserve it!
Keep
in mind that we're only 2 weeks removed from the Summer Solstice, so
the sun is still very intense and UV index will be very high, meaning it
will only take 15 minutes or less to get a burn.
Smoky sunrises
and sunsets should be pretty neat this weekend too as several large
wildfires continue across Canada, Northwest Territories and Alaska.
Smoke plumes will drift south into the Upper Midwest with the heaviest
concentration of smoke over Minnesota and Wisconsin Saturday and early
Sunday.
It'll be a warm weekend, but it gets a little more humid
on Sunday as a storm system approaches from Canada. Much of the region
will start the day dry on Sunday, but the holiday weekend could conclude
with some heavy downpours and strong thunderstorms, especially
overnight.
Interestingly, a recent study from NOAA suggests a
short-term spike in air pollution due to 4th of July fireworks; check
the blog for more details.
Happy 4th!!
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FRIDAY NIGHT: Isolated rumbles ending early, otherwise partly cloudy. Low: 63. Winds: W 5
4TH OF JULY: Warm sunshine, dry. High: 84. Winds: S 10.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Warm and sticky - still dry. Low: 67
SUNDAY: Breezy. Sticky sun, T-storms at night. High: 86. Winds: S/SW 10-20.
MONDAY: AM T-showers, slow PM clearing. Wake-up: 67. High: 78
TUESDAY: Sunny, just about perfect with lower humidity. Wake-up: 60. High: 77
WEDNESDAY: Dry start, late day rumble. Wake-up: 62. High: 79
THURSDAY: Unsettled. Pockets of heavy rain. Wake-up: 63. High: 81.
FRIDAY: Feels like summer. Wake up: 65. High: 83.
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This Day in Weather History
July 4th
1999: Windstorm knocked down millions of trees in the BWCA, 19 people were injured.
1977:
An intense squall line, or derecho, brought 115 mph winds to northern
Wisconsin as the storms traveled from Minnesota to Lake Erie. A
tremendous amount of forest was destroyed during the blowdown.
1962: Downpour at Jackson, where 7.5 inches of rain fell in two hours.
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Average High/Low for Minneapolis
July 4th
Average High: 83F (Record: 101F set in 2012)
Average Low: 64F (Record: 43F set in 1972)
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Sunrise/Sunset Times for Minneapolis
July 4th
Sunrise: 5:32am
Sunset: 9:02pm
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Moon Phase for July 4th at Midnight
3.6 Days Before Last Quarter
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Minneapolis Temperature Trend
It
really has been an incredible stretch of weather as of late. While
temperatures for the first few days of July have been running cooler
than average, it hasn't been anything to complain about. Temperatures
for the month of June ended up only 0.8F above average and we've only
seen one +90F temperature reading so far this year (92F on June 9th).
Looking at the temperatures ahead, I still don't see any major heat
waves brewing close to home. In fact, the forecast keeps us pretty
seasonal through much of next week!
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Saturday: 4th of July Weather Outlook
Saturday,
July 4th will likely end up being one of warmest days for the first
half of July. Temperatures across the state should warm into the 80s
with cooler readings expected along the North Shore. I expect lots of
boat traffic and picnics on Saturday with the weather being as nice as
it's going to be! Enjoy
Saturday: 4th of July Weather Outlook
There
may be a (spotty) afternoon rumble of thunder across parts of Wisconsin
and far southeastern MN, but don't cancel any plans; It should only be
brief if any develops. Sun
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SUNDAY Severe Threat
The
Storm Prediction Center has issued a SLIGHT RISK of severe weather
across parts of the Midwest for late Sunday. A cool front will slide out
of Canada late weekend and bring some late day showers and storms
across the region. The end of your holiday weekend could end with a
bang, stay tuned for further updates!
Rainfall Potential
As
the front slides out of Canada late this weekend, showers and storms
will develop and slide into the Upper Midwest. Rainfall tallies could be
heavy in pockets with as much as 1" to nearly 2" possible in spots through PM Monday.
__________________________________________
National Weather Outlook
As
we head through the holiday weekend, scattered showers and storms look
to impact 4th of July celebrations across the the Gulf Coast States and
perhaps across parts of the Four Corners and High Plains. Other than
that, it looks like a pretty tame weekend ahead for most!
5 Day Precipitation Outlook
According
to NOAA's HPC, the 5 day rainfall forecast suggests several pocket of
heavy rain along and east of the Rockies through midweek next week. The
heaviest looks possible over parts of the Plains with as much as 4" or
more!
Severe Threat Saturday
...SUMMARY...
SCATTERED STRONG STORMS WILL POSE A RISK FOR SEVERE WIND GUSTS AND HAIL
ON SATURDAY...THE 4TH OF JULY...MAINLY DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING
HOURS ACROSS PARTS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...THE NORTHERN AND
CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...AND THE GREAT BASIN. ...SYNOPSIS... SPLIT
UPPER-LEVEL FLOW WILL PREVAIL OVER THE CONUS ON SATURDAY JULY 4TH. IN
THE SOUTHERN STREAM...A MODERATE BELT OF WESTERLIES WILL ACCOMPANY A
SLOW-EASTWARD-MOVING UPPER LOW OVER THE LOWER MS RIVER VALLEY/SOUTHEAST
STATES...WHILE THE UPPER RIDGE ABATES OVER THE GREAT BASIN. A STRONGER
NORTHERN STREAM WILL BE HIGHLIGHTED BY AN AMPLIFYING UPPER TROUGH OVER
THE CANADIAN ROCKIES/PRAIRIES...WHICH WILL RELATE TO A
SOUTHEASTWARD-MOVING FRONT INTO PORTIONS OF MT/DAKOTAS SATURDAY NIGHT.
...CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... THE TIMING OF WEAK MID-LEVEL
PERTURBATIONS ON THE PERIPHERY OF THE CENTRAL/SOUTHERN ROCKIES UPPER
RIDGE STILL REMAINS UNCLEAR. HOWEVER...CURRENT THINKING IS THAT AT LEAST
ISOLATED/WIDELY SCATTERED STRONGER THUNDERSTORMS SHOULD DEVELOP
SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EARLY EVENING MAINLY IN VICINITY A NORTH-SOUTH
SURFACE TROUGH. ALTHOUGH LOW/MID-TROPOSPHERIC WINDS WILL GENERALLY BE
WEAK...AMPLE VEERING WITH HEIGHT AND STRONG HIGH-LEVEL NORTHWESTERLY
WINDS WILL SUPPORT SOME SUPERCELLS SATURDAY LATE AFTERNOON/EVENING IN
THE PRESENCE OF MODERATE /2000+ J PER KG/ MLCAPE. IT IS CONCEIVABLE THAT
ONE OR MORE SOUTH-SOUTHEASTWARD-MOVING MCS/S COULD EVOLVE SATURDAY
EVENING WITH AID OF A NOCTURNALLY STRENGTHENING LOW-LEVEL JET.
ADDITIONAL PORTIONS OF THE REGION...POTENTIALLY INCLUDING MORE OF
WESTERN KS AND PARTS OF THE TX PANHANDLE/WESTERN OK...COULD WARRANT A
SLIGHT RISK UPGRADE IN THE DAY 1 TIME FRAME PENDING A GREATER CONFIDENCE
IN STORM COVERAGE/SUSTENANCE IN AN ENVIRONMENT OTHERWISE RELATIVELY
FAVORABLE FOR ORGANIZED STORM MODES. ...MT/ND... RELATED TO THE
SYNOPSIS-DESCRIBED TROUGH AMPLIFICATION...UPPER HEIGHT FALLS WILL BEGIN
TO SPREAD SOUTH OF THE INTERNATIONAL BORDER BY SATURDAY NIGHT. A SURFACE
TRIPLE POINT WILL BECOME INCREASINGLY ESTABLISHED ACROSS THE NORTHERN
HIGH PLAINS SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING VIA AN EASTWARD-MOVING FRONTAL
WAVE...SHARPENING PRE-FRONTAL TROUGH...AND SOUTHEASTWARD-MOVING FRONT
ACROSS MT/WESTERN ND. AT LEAST ISOLATED STRONG/SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS
COULD DEVELOP/MOVE SOUTHEASTWARD INTO THE REGION SATURDAY
AFTERNOON/EVENING...WITH SEVERE HAIL/LOCALLY DAMAGING WINDS A
POSSIBILITY. PARTS OF NORTHEAST MT INTO ND COULD WARRANT AN UPGRADE TO
SLIGHT RISK IN THE DAY 1 PERIOD. ...LOWER MS RIVER VALLEY/SOUTHEAST
STATES... WEAK HEIGHT FALLS AND A BELT OF MODERATELY STRONG/SEMI-COOL
CYCLONIC FLOW ALOFT WILL LARGELY COINCIDE WITH AN EFFECTIVE FRONTAL ZONE
REGULATED BY PRIOR CONVECTIVE OUTFLOWS/DIFFERENTIAL HEATING. A GRADUAL
INCREASE/INTENSIFICATION OF EAST-SOUTHEASTWARD-MOVING THUNDERSTORMS
SEEMS PROBABLE BY MIDDAY/EARLY AFTERNOON SATURDAY. SOME SEMI-ORGANIZED
CLUSTERS MAY EVOLVE...WITH LOCALLY DAMAGING WINDS BEING THE PRIMARY
CONCERN SATURDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH EARLY/MID-EVENING. ...GREAT BASIN... A
BELT OF MODESTLY STRONGER SOUTHERLY MID/HIGH-LEVEL WINDS WILL
OVERSPREAD THE REGION IN CONJUNCTION WITH A WEAKENING UPPER RIDGE. A
DIURNALLY HEATED/WELL-MIXED BOUNDARY LAYER WILL CONTRIBUTE TO THE
DEVELOPMENT/INTENSIFICATION OF THUNDERSTORMS SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EARLY
EVENING MOSTLY ACROSS NV. DOWNBURSTS AND POSSIBLY SOME HAIL /MOSTLY
SUB-SEVERE/ CAN BE EXPECTED WITH THE STRONGER STORMS.
Severe Threat Sunday
...SUMMARY...
THUNDERSTORMS CAPABLE OF PRODUCING SEVERE WIND AND HAIL ARE EXPECTED
SUNDAY ACROSS PARTS OF NEBRASKA...SOUTH DAKOTA AND ADJACENT PORTIONS OF
SOUTHWESTERN MINNESOTA. ...SYNOPSIS... LITTLE CHANGE TO THE GENERAL
UPPER FLOW PATTERN APPEARS LIKELY FROM SATURDAY INTO SUNDAY. SUBTROPICAL
RIDGING APPEARS LIKELY TO REMAIN SOMEWHAT SUPPRESSED...BUT THE STRONGER
MID-LATITUDE WESTERLIES ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN CONFINED TO THE NORTHERN
TIER OF THE U.S...NORTHWARD. WITHIN THIS REGIME A POSITIVELY TILTED
TROUGH IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE PROGRESSING EASTWARD ACROSS THE CENTRAL
CANADIAN PROVINCES. ON ITS TRAILING SOUTHWESTERN FLANK...A SMALLER SCALE
PERTURBATION MAY DIG ACROSS THE INTERNATIONAL BORDER INTO THE NORTHERN
PLAINS BY THE END OF THE PERIOD. AN ASSOCIATED COLD FRONT LIKELY WILL
ADVANCE SOUTHWARD TO THE LEE OF THE NORTHERN AND CENTRAL ROCKIES...AND
EASTWARD ACROSS THE NORTHERN PLAINS...INTO PORTIONS OF THE UPPER
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND MID MISSOURI VALLEY BY 12Z MONDAY. A CORRIDOR OF
STRONG DESTABILIZATION AHEAD OF THIS FRONT IS EXPECTED TO PROVIDE THE
FOCUS FOR THE PRIMARY CONVECTIVE POTENTIAL SUNDAY AFTERNOON INTO SUNDAY
EVENING. THIS INCLUDES THE RISK FOR SEVERE STORMS CAPABLE OF PRODUCING
LARGE HAIL AND POTENTIALLY DAMAGING WIND GUSTS. ...NORTH CENTRAL PLAINS
INTO UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... DUE TO THE ORIENTATION OF THE UPPER
TROUGH...MODELS ARE SUGGESTIVE THAT PRE-FRONTAL MID/UPPER FLOW AND DEEP
LAYER SHEAR MAY NOT BECOME PARTICULARLY STRONG. HOWEVER...STEEPENING
MID-LEVEL LAPSE RATES ASSOCIATED WITH THE NORTHEASTWARD ADVECTION OF
VERY WARM ELEVATED MIXED LAYER AIR...COUPLED WITH PRE-FRONTAL BOUNDARY
LAYER MOISTENING...ARE EXPECTED TO CONTRIBUTE TO STRONG DESTABILIZATION
WITH DAYTIME HEATING. BY LATE AFTERNOON...MIXED LAYER CAPE OF 2000-3000+
J/KG APPEARS LIKELY...PARTICULARLY ACROSS CENTRAL AND NORTHERN
NEBRASKA...AND SOUTHERN/EASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA INTO ADJACENT AREAS OF
MINNESOTA. WITH THE ONSET OF MID-LEVEL HEIGHT FALLS AND
COOLING...INHIBITION IS EXPECTED TO WEAKEN SUFFICIENTLY TO SUPPORT THE
INITIATION OF VIGOROUS STORM DEVELOPMENT ACROSS PARTS OF THE NORTHERN
NEBRASKA PANHANDLE INTO SOUTHWEST AND CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA.
THERMODYNAMIC PROFILES ARE EXPECTED TO BE CONDUCIVE TO SEVERE WIND GUSTS
AND HAIL IN STRONGER ACTIVITY AS IT SPREADS EASTWARD. STORMS MAY ALSO
DEVELOP NORTHEASTWARD ALONG/AHEAD OF THE FRONT INTO WEST
CENTRAL...PERHAPS NORTHERN...MINNESOTA...BY EARLY EVENING.
HOWEVER...STRONGER LOW-LEVEL WARM ADVECTION MAY SUPPORT MORE PROMINENT
CONVECTIVE DEVELOPMENT ACROSS THE REMAINDER OF SOUTHERN SOUTH DAKOTA AND
NORTHERN NEBRASKA...WHERE A CONSOLIDATING/STRENGTHENING SURFACE COLD
POOL MAY EMERGE WITH AN EVOLVING CLUSTER OF STORMS.
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Smoky Sun
Thanks
to Jackie Koch for the picture below taken in northern Minnesota
Thursday evening. Thanks to several Canadian wildfires, smoke continues
to spill south into the Upper Midwest. This may make for some
spectacular sunrises/sunsets through the weekend!
Smoke Analysis: 7am SATURDAY
The
image below from NOAA suggests the smoke analysis for 7AM Saturday.
Note how widespread the smoke appears to be across the Upper Midwest.
Saturday's sunrise and sunset will appear a little more 'smoky' than
what Sunday's sunrise/sunset will be.
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Canadian Fires and Smoke Analysis
Here's
an interesting view of how widespread the wildfires (red dots) are
across Canada and Alaska. The grey plumes are areas of smoke, which
stretch all the way to the Northeast!
Visible Satellite of Smoke
Here's a visible satellite image of smoke across the Northwest Territories and Canada.
Canada
is reeling from an early fire season this year as dozens of fires
ravage at least three provinces of the country. This natural-color
satellite image was collected by the Moderate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer (MODIS) aboard the Terra satellite on July 1, 2015.
Actively burning areas, detected by MODIS’s thermal bands, are outlined
in red. NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team.
Caption: NASA/Goddard, Lynn Jenner
See the full report from NASA HERE:
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Anchorage, AK Lowest Seasonal Snowfall on Record
Part
of the reason for all the wildfires in Alaska is because of the lack of
snow this season. Take a look at the new record in Anchorage, AK.
It's
official! The 2014-2015 snow season came to a conclusion. Anchorage
officially set a record for its lowest seasonal snowfall on record with
25.1" of snow, breaking the previous record of 30.4" in 1957-58.
See more from the National Weather Service HERE:
Thanks for checking in and have a great weekend! Don't forget to follow me on Twitter @TNelsonWX
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