Objective Comments and Analysis - All Science, No Politics
Primary Author Richard James
2010-2013 Author Rick Thoman
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Pattern Change Coming
I'll have a lot to say about the cold January stats, but in the meantime, a big, big change is on the way. Here's the Canadian GEM forecast valid Sunday morning, showing a big ridge aloft from British Columbia northwest in Interior Alaska. This is will a very mild pattern, though strong inversions will sometimes mask the warm airmass in valley bottoms.
Satellite Temperatures
Nice post today from the University of Wisconsin CIMSS blog on satellite derived temperatures over the past couple days in Interior Alaska.
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/blog/archives/9672
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/blog/archives/9672
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Slowwww Warming
More Cold
Updated:
Cooperative observations in the past 12 hours add more definition to the cold:
Low temperatures Saturday include:
Galena: -63F (cooperative observer, new record for date)
Clear Sky Lodge: -60F (on the Parks Highway near Anderson)
North Pole: -57F (cooperative observer)
Woodsmoke: -57F (near North Pole; cooperative observer)
Goldstream Valley Bottom: -55F
Low temperatures Sunday morning include:
Fort Yukon: -65F (cooperative observer)
Kandik River: -64F (cooperative observer)
Manley Hot Springs: -60F
Bettles: -60F (new record for date)
Chicken: -59F
Circle Hot Springs: -58F
Eagle: -57F (cooperative observer)
Goldstream Creek: -55F
Nenana: -54F
Eielson AFB: -52F
Fairbanks Airport: -51F
UAF West Ridge: -48F
Denali Park VC: -52F (RAWS)
Denali Park Airstrip: -49F
Denali Park Headquarters: -37F
Cooperative observations in the past 12 hours add more definition to the cold:
Low temperatures Saturday include:
Galena: -63F (cooperative observer, new record for date)
Clear Sky Lodge: -60F (on the Parks Highway near Anderson)
North Pole: -57F (cooperative observer)
Woodsmoke: -57F (near North Pole; cooperative observer)
Goldstream Valley Bottom: -55F
Low temperatures Sunday morning include:
Fort Yukon: -65F (cooperative observer)
Kandik River: -64F (cooperative observer)
Manley Hot Springs: -60F
Bettles: -60F (new record for date)
Chicken: -59F
Circle Hot Springs: -58F
Eagle: -57F (cooperative observer)
Goldstream Creek: -55F
Nenana: -54F
Eielson AFB: -52F
Fairbanks Airport: -51F
UAF West Ridge: -48F
Denali Park VC: -52F (RAWS)
Denali Park Airstrip: -49F
Denali Park Headquarters: -37F
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Still Warming Aloft
A Cool Yule, and then Some
50 below at Fairbanks
Serious Cold
Okay, now it's getting seriously cold.
Here's at NOAA-19 infrared, this capture from the UAF Swath Viewer. This B & W rendition has slightly higher contrast than the NWS Alaska Region HQ version:
Updated:
Low temperatures through 10am AST Saturday
Goldstream Creek: -54F
Fairbanks Airport: -49F
Eielson AFB: -47F
UAF West Ridge: -46F
Cleary Summit: -30F
CORRECTED
Elsewhere in Interior Alaska:
Fort Yukon: -63F (cooperative observer)
Husila: -63F
Tanana: -61F (not a record for the date: record low is -68F in 1933)
Bettles: -59F (new record low for Jan 28th)
Chicken: -59F
Bolio Lake: -57F (south of Delta Junction)
Kaltag -56F
Nenana: -53F
Here's the low level temperature plot for last three soundings from Fairbanks. Cold, though the airmass is starting to warm aloft:
Here's at NOAA-19 infrared, this capture from the UAF Swath Viewer. This B & W rendition has slightly higher contrast than the NWS Alaska Region HQ version:
Updated:
Low temperatures through 10am AST Saturday
Goldstream Creek: -54F
Fairbanks Airport: -49F
Eielson AFB: -47F
UAF West Ridge: -46F
Cleary Summit: -30F
CORRECTED
Elsewhere in Interior Alaska:
Fort Yukon: -63F (cooperative observer)
Husila: -63F
Tanana: -61F (not a record for the date: record low is -68F in 1933)
Bettles: -59F (new record low for Jan 28th)
Chicken: -59F
Bolio Lake: -57F (south of Delta Junction)
Kaltag -56F
Nenana: -53F
Here's the low level temperature plot for last three soundings from Fairbanks. Cold, though the airmass is starting to warm aloft:
Friday, January 27, 2012
More Cold
Scott Bachmeier sent a link to this false color infrared image from early Friday morning (I've reoriented the original image to be longitudinally centered over Alaska):
The purple colors are radiance derived temperatures -50C (-58F) and lower. Over mainland Alaska any temperatures this cold are surface temperatures. These are a bit lower than the surface observations. The difference comes from several different sources, the most of significant of which are satellite calibration and the fact that "surface observations", i.e. METARS, cooperative obs, etc are from thermometers exposed above the surface. Nominal exposure 1.5 to 2 meters above the ground, though some are routinely higher (SNOTEL, RWIS). The presence of the mid-winter snowpack makes the actual thermometer exposure something like 0.5 meters lower in most places north of the Alaska Range.
Skies cleared by mid-morning over Fairbanks. By Noon temperatures have been down to 41 below at the Airport and 42 below at Fort Wainwright and Goldstream Valley.
Now it's Getting Cold
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Really Cold on the North Slope
Near Record Cold January in the Works
Here's an updated plot of daily mean temperatures thus far this winter (through January 23rd). The winds and clouds the past few days have kept temperatures up near normal. Through Monday (the 23rd), the mean January temperature at the Fairbanks Airport is -25.0F. The rest of the month looks to average at least this cold, and probably colder. This will be one of the coldest Januarys of record.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Colder Air Moves in, Temperature Warms 30 Degrees
Here's a plot of the low level temperatures from Friday morning and Sunday morning. The airmass overall has cooled a bit, but the wind has mixed down to the valley floor in many area. The miracle of mixing. Here are the 8am Temperatures from Friday and Sunday:
Fairbanks Airport -33F -4F
Keystone Ridge +2F -10F
The Way Inversions Die
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Mid-Day Image
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Inversion's Growing
Here's the 3pm sounding from Fairbanks. The inversion is growing. Temperatures above 2300' MSL have approached 0F today, and I expect overnight there will be 40 degrees or more between rural valley bottoms and higher elevations. High today at Fairbanks Airport has been -35F; Clearly Summit -3F. Here at Keystone Ridge the temperature has risen from -18F at 3pm to -10pm at 5pm, all without any evident breeze.
How Cold has January Been?
Through the first 16 days of January, the average temperature at the Fairbanks Airport was -25.8F, almost 18 degrees below normal. Temperatures over the next week look to continue to be cold, though nowhere near records for any given day. A reasonable guess would be that by January 24th the average temp for the month will be similar to the current value. What happens thereafter is yet unknown, but temperatures this month will almost certainly finish up being far below normal. So how unusual is this?
Well, in recent years, reasonably unusual. Since 1976, there have been five calender months with an average temperature lower than 20 below: January 2006 (-22.0F), February 1990 (-21.7F), January 1989 (-21.3F), December 1980 (-24.0F) and February 1979 (-25.3F)
So, while the current cold spell is unusual, it is in no sense "unprecedented", even in the context of post-pipeline era Fairbanks, when there is an undeniable urban effect on Fairbanks temperatures, at least in ice fog situations. If anything is unusual, it's the lack of extremely low temperatures, not just in Fairbanks (low so far a paltry -48F) but anywhere in the Interior. Even the 58 below at Chicken is not excessive by their standards. There has only been one or two daily record low temperatures set (at Galena); most places have not even been close. With a comparatively moderate airmass aloft, that situation does not look to change the before the weekend at the earliest.
Well, in recent years, reasonably unusual. Since 1976, there have been five calender months with an average temperature lower than 20 below: January 2006 (-22.0F), February 1990 (-21.7F), January 1989 (-21.3F), December 1980 (-24.0F) and February 1979 (-25.3F)
So, while the current cold spell is unusual, it is in no sense "unprecedented", even in the context of post-pipeline era Fairbanks, when there is an undeniable urban effect on Fairbanks temperatures, at least in ice fog situations. If anything is unusual, it's the lack of extremely low temperatures, not just in Fairbanks (low so far a paltry -48F) but anywhere in the Interior. Even the 58 below at Chicken is not excessive by their standards. There has only been one or two daily record low temperatures set (at Galena); most places have not even been close. With a comparatively moderate airmass aloft, that situation does not look to change the before the weekend at the earliest.
Monday, January 16, 2012
Not Much Change
Here's the 9am AST Monday surface analysis from NWS Anchorage, showing a big high covering much of mainland Alaska. The coldest weather this afternoon is in the eastern Interior, where afternoon temperatures barely cracked 40 below. Sunday morning the cooperative station at Chicken reported the lowest official temperature thus far this event, 58 below.
The soundings from Fairbanks shows very little change in near surface temperatures between 3am and 3pm AST Monday. Temperatures at the higher elevation stations have approached 10 below today, while valleys have been stuck near 30 below.
The soundings from Fairbanks shows very little change in near surface temperatures between 3am and 3pm AST Monday. Temperatures at the higher elevation stations have approached 10 below today, while valleys have been stuck near 30 below.
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Cold with Growing Inversion
Here's the lowest kilometer of the morning sounding at Fairbanks: the inversion is growing. Notice that right off the surface the inversion is not super sharp, showing the effects of the ice fog. The nearly constant temperature between 300 and 600 meters is interesting. There is not much wind in this layer, but above that, where temperature warm to almost 0F, there are west winds around 20 mph.
Overnight lows include:
Goldstream Creek: -51F
Woodsmoke PWS -49F (near North Pole)
Fairbanks Airport: -48F (both Saturday evening and since midnight, the lowest temperature since February 2008)
UAF West Ridge: -42F
Lows from cooperative observations reported Saturday evening included 54 below at North Pole and 48 below at Goldstream Valley Bottom.
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Updates on the Cold
Here are a couple of updates from the past couple days. Temperatures are about as stable as can be with clear skies and light winds here on Keystone Ridge. The low of 33 below is the lowest temperature here since Jan 2, 2009 when the low was also -33F.
The afternoon sounding from Fairbanks shows the warming compared to Friday afternoon is underway above 450 meters AGL and will be progressing down in the next day (note that there may be an encoding error in the surface temperature on the 3pm Saturday sounding). This will result in an increasingly strong valley based inversion. The high this afternoon at the Fairbanks Airport was 39 below.
Coldest Morning of the Winter
Updated, as of 11am AST,
Overnight low temperatures:
Fairbanks area:
Goldstream Creek: -45F
Fairbanks Airport: -47F (For reference, the record low today in Fairbanks is 66 below set in 1934, the all-time record low).
Eielson AFB: -47F
Woodsmoke PWS: -48F (near North Pole)
UAF West Ridge: -39F
Keystone Ridge: -33F
Goldstream Toboggan: -32F
Moose Mountain PWS: -29F
Elsewhere in the Interior:
Nenana: -45F
Circle Hot Springs: -48F
Manley Hot Springs: -49F
McGrath: -51F
Arctic Village: -53F
Tanana: -53F
Bettles: -54F
Unofficial but reasonable:
Livengood RAWS: -55F
Coldfoot SNOTEL: -58F
Coldfoot PWS: -63F
Jim River PWS: -63F
Here's the big scale 3AM AST surface analysis from the Alaska Aviation Weather Unit showing the now big high over the Interior:
Here's the 537am AST NOAA-19 Polar Orbiter infrared image at 1.1km resolution:
Overnight low temperatures:
Fairbanks area:
Goldstream Creek: -45F
Fairbanks Airport: -47F (For reference, the record low today in Fairbanks is 66 below set in 1934, the all-time record low).
Eielson AFB: -47F
Woodsmoke PWS: -48F (near North Pole)
UAF West Ridge: -39F
Keystone Ridge: -33F
Goldstream Toboggan: -32F
Moose Mountain PWS: -29F
Elsewhere in the Interior:
Nenana: -45F
Circle Hot Springs: -48F
Manley Hot Springs: -49F
McGrath: -51F
Arctic Village: -53F
Tanana: -53F
Bettles: -54F
Unofficial but reasonable:
Livengood RAWS: -55F
Coldfoot SNOTEL: -58F
Coldfoot PWS: -63F
Jim River PWS: -63F
Here's the big scale 3AM AST surface analysis from the Alaska Aviation Weather Unit showing the now big high over the Interior:
Here's the 537am AST NOAA-19 Polar Orbiter infrared image at 1.1km resolution:
Friday, January 13, 2012
Have a Cold One
The 4pm AST NOAA_15 infrared image shows skies clear or clearing over most of Interior Alaska as big high pressure…surface and aloft…builds, current about 1046mb centered near Galena.
The airmass is still cold. The afternoon high temperature at Bettles was 48 below, and temperatures throughout the Interior are now falling sharply in the valleys. Fairbanks Airport fell to 37 below at 4pm, an 11 degree drop since noon. In the Fairbanks area hills temperatures have continued to creep down during the day, with 4pm temperatures of 29 below on Cleary Summit. Here on Keystone Ridge, the 4pm temperature of 32 below is the lowest temperature in more than three years. The afternoon sounding from Fairbanks shows very little temperature change in the lowest 1000 meters of the atmosphere:
That will change over the weekend as the airmass starts to warm from above. But for now, we've got a cold one.
The airmass is still cold. The afternoon high temperature at Bettles was 48 below, and temperatures throughout the Interior are now falling sharply in the valleys. Fairbanks Airport fell to 37 below at 4pm, an 11 degree drop since noon. In the Fairbanks area hills temperatures have continued to creep down during the day, with 4pm temperatures of 29 below on Cleary Summit. Here on Keystone Ridge, the 4pm temperature of 32 below is the lowest temperature in more than three years. The afternoon sounding from Fairbanks shows very little temperature change in the lowest 1000 meters of the atmosphere:
That will change over the weekend as the airmass starts to warm from above. But for now, we've got a cold one.
The Slow Decline
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Briter in Barrow
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Fairbanks above Zero
The temperature at the Fairbanks Airport at 11am AST Tuesday was +5F. This is the first time temperature has been above zero at the airport since 9pm AST December 23. Through 3pm AST it's been up to +15F.
If you're keeping score at home, that's 17 days and 14 hours continuously below zero. That's the longest such streak since Jan 13-Feb 4, 2006.
Here's the 330pm NOAA-15 GOES image showing the storm responsible for the break in the cold weather.
Monday, January 9, 2012
Warming Up
Warming up aloft at least, with a pretty good inversion developing up Monday evening. The 8pm AST GOES-15 infrared image shows the leading edge of the cirrus associated with the complex low in the North Pacific approaching Fairbanks, though the deep cloud layer is only to the Kenai peninsula.
At 8pm AST Monday,
Fairbanks Aiport -35F
Goldstream Creek: -35F
Clearly Summit: -6F
Keystone Ridge -10F
Another 40 below Day at Fairbanks
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Just Like Winter
Here's a plot of temperatures and wind speeds today from the Eagle Summit Snotel, at 3700' MSL on the Steese Highway. At 11pm, 31 below with 30 mph hourly average wind speed. That's just like winter. Only colder.
Update:
The wind chill at Eagle Summit bottomed out at -69F at midnight: -32F with sustained 29 mph winds.
Temperature Update
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Tok Snowfall
There are two cooperative stations right in Tok.
One has reported about 27 inches of snow thus far this season, with 23 inches on the ground on January 6th. The other has reported 46 inches for season with 20 inches on the ground.
At Tok, an area that does not get too much wind, a 23 inch snow depth with 27 inches for the season by early January is not physically realistic.
A total of 46 inches is much more realistic for a 20 inch snow depth. Snowfall is indeed significantly above normal thus far this season in Tok.
Updated:
Here's a plot of the Feb 01 (more or less) snow depth at Tok since 1960 at the NRCS snow course.
Alaska Grab Bag
Some miscellaneous tidbits from around Alaska in this active winter weather:
It's another cold one Saturday morning in the western Interior. Lows through 10am include 54 below in Huslia and Tanana and 53 below at Galena and Kaltag. Here's an icy foggy webcam shot (courtesy of the FAA) from Ambler late Saturday morning, where it was 40 below at the airport, up on the ridge above town.
On Thursday, Nome dipped to 40 below for the first time since 1999, and Friday was the 10th straight day with a low of 30 below or lower. This is now the most severe cold snap in the Gold Rush City since January 1989, the big kahuna of western Alaska cold snaps.
Valdez received 38.5 inches of snow Thursday and Friday, with 272.1 inches of snow for the season and a snow depth of 76 inches. The record winter snowfall in Valdez is 560.7 inches in 1989-90.
The Beat Goes on, Still
Here's an updated plot of the standardized temperature departures thus far this winter. The correlation between the valley (Fairbanks Airport) and hills (Keystone Ridge) is 0.85, good but nowhere near perfect given that the two sites are only 14 miles apart.
After the 1-2 inches of snow Friday, skies cleared quickly around sunset and valley temperatures dipped to around 40 below late Friday evening, with overnight lows of 42 below at the airport and 41 below at Goldstream Creek. Here on the hill the temperature hit 27 below about 9pm.
Friday, January 6, 2012
Like a Yoyo
Thursday, January 5, 2012
That’s a Lot of Warming
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Deep Cold Air
This morning's upper air sounding is a fairly typical one for a deep cold airmass in Interior Alaska. There is a shallow layer near the surface with temperatures nearly constant, a transition layer where the temperature increases fairly smartly with height, and then the "warmest" air is above that. On this morning's sounding, between 3000 and 10000 feet above the ground, the temperature only varies by a few degrees, and the warmest temperature (+1F) was at nearly 7000' AGL.
This illustrates nicely that super strong inversions are NOT a feature of deep cold; the strongest inversions occur when skies are clear and it is warming aloft.
Low temperatures in the valley this morning were a couple hours either side of midnight, with the Airport bottoming out at 39 below. Clouds have since come in broken the small inversion that formed late last evening. At hill elevations that are still in the coldest layer, temperatures have been close to 30 below since yesterday. The very highest weather stations in Fairbanks-land, those above 2300' MSL, are the only sites reporting temperatures warmer than 10 below this morning. At the Caribou Peak RAWS, at 2500' MSL north of Poker Flats, temperatures in the past 24 hours have held between zero and 9 below.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Normalcy Departs
Steep inversions are the rule this time of year in Interior Alaska, but this is not one of those times. The afternoon sounding reveals a more than 20C inversion, but it's quite gradual by Interior standards. Temperatures at typical residential hillside elevations are back down to around -30F this evening; it's only above about 2000' MSL that temperatures are near -10F.
One interesting feature of this sounding is in the lowest 100 meters, where the temperature is constant (jargon=isothermal). This is typical in ice fog.
Normalcy Returns
All is right with the world, or at least as it concerns Interior Alaska inversions. With clear skies, temperatures in the valleys have been falling for more than 12 hours now, while temperatures have been slowly rising at elevation. The inversion is not yet especially steep, so elevations where appreciable numbers of people live are still chilly, but mostly warmer than it was Monday afternoon:
Low elevation min temperatures through 9am include:
Fairbanks Airport: -44F
Fort Wainwright: -44F
Eielson AFB: -42F
Goldstream Creek: -42F
UAF West Ridge: -38F
High elevation temperatures around 9am:
Munson Ridge: -7F
Clearly Summit: -8F
Keystone Ridge: -15F
Goldstream Toboggan: -27F
Monday, January 2, 2012
Still Cold
Here's an updated plot of the soundings from Monday: free air temperatures are a little bit warmer at low levels and a little cooler above 400 meters AGL.
Temperatures here one Keystone Ridge have been between 27 and 31 below all day: the low of -31F occurred most recently at 257pm, one minute before sunset.
Temperatures here one Keystone Ridge have been between 27 and 31 below all day: the low of -31F occurred most recently at 257pm, one minute before sunset.
How Much Solar Heating is there in Interior Alaska
Solar heating, or lack thereof, is a major driver in Interior Alaska. But why is it anymore (or less) important than anywhere else? Reader Trung has commented repeatedly about this. So, rather that spout some hand-wavy blather, let's deploy some actual physical modeling.
Here are some results using the Bird Clear Sky Model that produces quantitative estimates of solar radiation at the erath's surface using a variety of estimates of relevant variables (but with, not surprisingly, CLEAR skies). For this example I've left everything constant (e.g. albedo, water vapor). Using the spreadsheet from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, I've summed the hourly values of global horizontal radiation, and then plotted the daily sums. The plots shows the huge annual variation at 65 (latitude of Fairbanks), from more than 8200 W/m² at summer Solstice to 12 W/m² at Winter Solstice (because these are the sums of the hourly values, these do not represent the total daily global horizontal radiation, but are computationally easier).
If we do exactly the same calculations, leaving all the variables the same except for latitude, at 40N we get 8700 W/m² at Summer Solstice to 2500 W/m² at Winter Solstice. So in the Summer Solstice, Fairbanks gets 94% of the solar heating as received at 40N, but at Winter Solstice Fairbanks 0.5% of what is received that day at 40N.
Put another way, at 40N, Winter Solstice receives about 29% of the heating received at Summer Solstice. In Fairbanks, Winter Solstice receives about 0.1% of the heating received at Summer Solstice.
So, I go on about solar heating (or lack thereof) because it varies so darn much over the year, far more than at mid-latitudes.
Here are some results using the Bird Clear Sky Model that produces quantitative estimates of solar radiation at the erath's surface using a variety of estimates of relevant variables (but with, not surprisingly, CLEAR skies). For this example I've left everything constant (e.g. albedo, water vapor). Using the spreadsheet from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, I've summed the hourly values of global horizontal radiation, and then plotted the daily sums. The plots shows the huge annual variation at 65 (latitude of Fairbanks), from more than 8200 W/m² at summer Solstice to 12 W/m² at Winter Solstice (because these are the sums of the hourly values, these do not represent the total daily global horizontal radiation, but are computationally easier).
If we do exactly the same calculations, leaving all the variables the same except for latitude, at 40N we get 8700 W/m² at Summer Solstice to 2500 W/m² at Winter Solstice. So in the Summer Solstice, Fairbanks gets 94% of the solar heating as received at 40N, but at Winter Solstice Fairbanks 0.5% of what is received that day at 40N.
Put another way, at 40N, Winter Solstice receives about 29% of the heating received at Summer Solstice. In Fairbanks, Winter Solstice receives about 0.1% of the heating received at Summer Solstice.
So, I go on about solar heating (or lack thereof) because it varies so darn much over the year, far more than at mid-latitudes.
Cold Snow
About half an inch of snow and 28 below at 8am on Keystone Ridge. Here's how it snows at these cold temperatures. The morning sounding shows the deep cold air (-30C and colder) is about 400 meters thick. The snow producing clouds have a temperature around -20C to -23C. This is reflected in the sand-like consistency of the snow this morning.
Sunday, January 1, 2012
Denali Sunrise
December 2011 and Annual Summary
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FAIRBANKS AK
1220 PM AKST SUN JAN 1 2012
...DECEMBER WEATHER SUMMARY FOR FAIRBANKS ALASKA...
...2011 WEATHER IN REVIEW...
THE FIRST THREE WEEKS OF DECEMBER WERE AMONG THE WARMEST EVER
RECORDED IN FAIRBANKS. THERE WERE EIGHT DAYS WHEN THE DAILY AVERAGE
TEMPERATURE WAS 20 OR MORE DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL. HOWEVER...THE
WEATHER TURNED SHARPLY COLDER RIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS AND THIS
CONTINUED THROUGH NEW YEARS EVE. THE LAST TWO DAYS OF THE MONTH
WERE MORE THAN 20 DEGREES COLDER THAN NORMAL.
OVERALL...THE AVERAGE HIGH TEMPERATURE AT THE AIRPORT WAS 14 ABOVE
AND THE AVERAGE LOW TEMPERATURE WAS 6 BELOW. THE MONTHLY AVERAGE
TEMPERATURE OF 4.0 ABOVE WAS MORE THAN 8 DEGREES WARMER THAN NORMAL
AND TIES WITH 1963 AS THE 10TH WARMEST DECEMBER IN 107 YEARS OF
OBSERVATIONS. IN THE PAST 20 YEARS ONLY DECEMBER 2002 WAS WARMER.
THE HIGHEST TEMPERATURE AT THE AIRPORT WAS 47 DEGREES ON THE 4TH.
THIS IS THE WARMEST TEMPERATURE EVER RECORDED IN FAIRBANKS DURING
DECEMBER EXCEPT FOR FIVE STRAIGHT DAYS IN DECEMBER 1934 WHEN HIGH
TEMPERATURES WERE IN THE 50S. THE LOW OF 36 BELOW OCCURRED ON THE
LAST TWO DAYS OF THE MONTH.
PRECIPITATION WAS WELL ABOVE NORMAL IN DECEMBER. A TOTAL OF 0.95
INCHES WAS MEASURED AT THE AIRPORT...WHICH IS ABOUT A THIRD OF AN
INCH ABOVE NORMAL...AND MAKES THIS THE WETTEST DECEMBER SINCE
1992. SNOWFALL TOTALED 12.2 INCHES...WHICH IS ALMOST EXACTLY
NORMAL. SNOW DEPTHS AT THE AIRPORT INCREASED FROM 7 INCHES ON THE
FIRST TO 14 INCHES ON THE 31ST. SNOWFALL WAS SUBSTANTIALLY HIGHER
TO THE NORTHWEST OF TOWN. THE GOLDSTREAM VALLEY BOTTOM COOPERATIVE
STATION MEASURED 16.9 INCHES OF SNOW...AND THE KEYSTONE RIDGE
STATION...NEAR MURPHY DOME...REPORTED 26.4 INCHES FOR THE MONTH.
DURING THE FIRST THREE WEEKS OF DECEMBER...IT WAS MUCH BREEZIER THAN
IS NORMAL IN FAIRBANKS IN MID-WINTER...TOPPED OFF BY STRONG WINDS
ON THE 4TH AND 5TH WHICH PEAKED AT 51 MPH...THE HIGHEST WIND GUST
OF RECORD IN DECEMBER IN FAIRBANKS. DURING THE COLD WEATHER LATE
IN THE MONTH...WINDS WERE NEARLY CALM.
LOOKING AHEAD TO JANUARY...THIS IS TYPICALLY THE COLDEST MONTH OF
THE YEAR IN FAIRBANKS. THE AVERAGE HIGH TEMPERATURE IS 1 ABOVE AND
THE AVERAGE LOW IS 17 BELOW. OVER THE PAST 108 YEARS...JANUARY
TEMPERATURES HAVE RANGED FROM A HIGH OF 52 ABOVE IN 2009 TO A LOW
OF 66 BELOW IN 1934. POSSIBLE SUNSHINE INCREASES FROM 4 HOURS ON
THE FIRST TO JUST UNDER 7 HOURS ON THE 31ST.
THE CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER FORECAST FOR JANUARY IS FOR AN
INCREASED CHANCE FOR SIGNIFICANTLY BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES IN
FAIRBANKS.
OBSERVED LAST MONTH...12/2011
OBSERVED RANK
AVG MAX TEMP (F) 14.4 7TH WARMEST OF 107 YEARS
AVG MIN TEMP (F) -6.4 14TH WARMEST OF 108 YEARS
AVG TEMP (F) 4.0 10TH WARMEST OF 107 YEARS
TOTAL PRECIP (IN) 0.95 19TH WETTEST OF 97 YEARS
...WEATHER SUMMARY FOR 2011...
2011 WAS A MEMORABLE YEAR WEATHER-WISE IN FAIRBANKS. LATE FEBRUARY
BROUGHT TWO MAJOR STORMS THAT WERE...MOST UNUSUALLY...ACCOMPANIED
BY STRONG WINDS AND EVEN SOME BLOWING SNOW. THE STORM ON FEBRUARY
20 AND 21ST BROUGHT A WHOPPING 17.1 INCHES OF SNOW IN 24 HOURS...
THE SECOND HIGHEST 24 HOUR SNOWFALL EVER MEASURED IN FAIRBANKS.
THE SPRING WAS EXTREMELY DRY...AND SOME OF THE WARMEST WEATHER
EVER RECORDED IN MAY OCCURRED LATE THAT MONTH. THE WARM AND DRY
CONDITIONS CONTRIBUTED TO THE MOOSE MOUNTAIN AND HASTING FIRES
THAT STARTED IN LATE MAY. THE REST OF THE SUMMER BROUGHT A
GENERALLY QUIET FIRE SEASON. THE AUTUMN WAS PERSISTENTLY MILD
UNTIL MID- NOVEMBER...WHEN THE COLDEST SUSTAINED WEATHER OF RECORD
BEFORE THANKSGIVING GRIPPED THE AREA...ONLY TO BE FOLLOWED BY THE
EXTREME WARMTH OF THE FIRST THREE WEEKS OF DECEMBER. OVERALL...THE
AVERAGE TEMPERATURE FOR THE YEAR OF 27.9 DEGREES WAS ALMOST
EXACTLY NORMAL. THE HIGH FOR THE YEAR WAS 88 DEGREES ON JUNE 25TH.
THE LOW WAS 44 BELOW ON FEBRUARY 15TH. THE TOTAL PRECIPITATION OF
9.54 INCHES WAS ABOUT 12 PERCENT BELOW NORMAL.
$$
RT/JM JAN 12
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FAIRBANKS AK
1220 PM AKST SUN JAN 1 2012
...DECEMBER WEATHER SUMMARY FOR FAIRBANKS ALASKA...
...2011 WEATHER IN REVIEW...
THE FIRST THREE WEEKS OF DECEMBER WERE AMONG THE WARMEST EVER
RECORDED IN FAIRBANKS. THERE WERE EIGHT DAYS WHEN THE DAILY AVERAGE
TEMPERATURE WAS 20 OR MORE DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL. HOWEVER...THE
WEATHER TURNED SHARPLY COLDER RIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS AND THIS
CONTINUED THROUGH NEW YEARS EVE. THE LAST TWO DAYS OF THE MONTH
WERE MORE THAN 20 DEGREES COLDER THAN NORMAL.
OVERALL...THE AVERAGE HIGH TEMPERATURE AT THE AIRPORT WAS 14 ABOVE
AND THE AVERAGE LOW TEMPERATURE WAS 6 BELOW. THE MONTHLY AVERAGE
TEMPERATURE OF 4.0 ABOVE WAS MORE THAN 8 DEGREES WARMER THAN NORMAL
AND TIES WITH 1963 AS THE 10TH WARMEST DECEMBER IN 107 YEARS OF
OBSERVATIONS. IN THE PAST 20 YEARS ONLY DECEMBER 2002 WAS WARMER.
THE HIGHEST TEMPERATURE AT THE AIRPORT WAS 47 DEGREES ON THE 4TH.
THIS IS THE WARMEST TEMPERATURE EVER RECORDED IN FAIRBANKS DURING
DECEMBER EXCEPT FOR FIVE STRAIGHT DAYS IN DECEMBER 1934 WHEN HIGH
TEMPERATURES WERE IN THE 50S. THE LOW OF 36 BELOW OCCURRED ON THE
LAST TWO DAYS OF THE MONTH.
PRECIPITATION WAS WELL ABOVE NORMAL IN DECEMBER. A TOTAL OF 0.95
INCHES WAS MEASURED AT THE AIRPORT...WHICH IS ABOUT A THIRD OF AN
INCH ABOVE NORMAL...AND MAKES THIS THE WETTEST DECEMBER SINCE
1992. SNOWFALL TOTALED 12.2 INCHES...WHICH IS ALMOST EXACTLY
NORMAL. SNOW DEPTHS AT THE AIRPORT INCREASED FROM 7 INCHES ON THE
FIRST TO 14 INCHES ON THE 31ST. SNOWFALL WAS SUBSTANTIALLY HIGHER
TO THE NORTHWEST OF TOWN. THE GOLDSTREAM VALLEY BOTTOM COOPERATIVE
STATION MEASURED 16.9 INCHES OF SNOW...AND THE KEYSTONE RIDGE
STATION...NEAR MURPHY DOME...REPORTED 26.4 INCHES FOR THE MONTH.
DURING THE FIRST THREE WEEKS OF DECEMBER...IT WAS MUCH BREEZIER THAN
IS NORMAL IN FAIRBANKS IN MID-WINTER...TOPPED OFF BY STRONG WINDS
ON THE 4TH AND 5TH WHICH PEAKED AT 51 MPH...THE HIGHEST WIND GUST
OF RECORD IN DECEMBER IN FAIRBANKS. DURING THE COLD WEATHER LATE
IN THE MONTH...WINDS WERE NEARLY CALM.
LOOKING AHEAD TO JANUARY...THIS IS TYPICALLY THE COLDEST MONTH OF
THE YEAR IN FAIRBANKS. THE AVERAGE HIGH TEMPERATURE IS 1 ABOVE AND
THE AVERAGE LOW IS 17 BELOW. OVER THE PAST 108 YEARS...JANUARY
TEMPERATURES HAVE RANGED FROM A HIGH OF 52 ABOVE IN 2009 TO A LOW
OF 66 BELOW IN 1934. POSSIBLE SUNSHINE INCREASES FROM 4 HOURS ON
THE FIRST TO JUST UNDER 7 HOURS ON THE 31ST.
THE CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER FORECAST FOR JANUARY IS FOR AN
INCREASED CHANCE FOR SIGNIFICANTLY BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES IN
FAIRBANKS.
OBSERVED LAST MONTH...12/2011
OBSERVED RANK
AVG MAX TEMP (F) 14.4 7TH WARMEST OF 107 YEARS
AVG MIN TEMP (F) -6.4 14TH WARMEST OF 108 YEARS
AVG TEMP (F) 4.0 10TH WARMEST OF 107 YEARS
TOTAL PRECIP (IN) 0.95 19TH WETTEST OF 97 YEARS
...WEATHER SUMMARY FOR 2011...
2011 WAS A MEMORABLE YEAR WEATHER-WISE IN FAIRBANKS. LATE FEBRUARY
BROUGHT TWO MAJOR STORMS THAT WERE...MOST UNUSUALLY...ACCOMPANIED
BY STRONG WINDS AND EVEN SOME BLOWING SNOW. THE STORM ON FEBRUARY
20 AND 21ST BROUGHT A WHOPPING 17.1 INCHES OF SNOW IN 24 HOURS...
THE SECOND HIGHEST 24 HOUR SNOWFALL EVER MEASURED IN FAIRBANKS.
THE SPRING WAS EXTREMELY DRY...AND SOME OF THE WARMEST WEATHER
EVER RECORDED IN MAY OCCURRED LATE THAT MONTH. THE WARM AND DRY
CONDITIONS CONTRIBUTED TO THE MOOSE MOUNTAIN AND HASTING FIRES
THAT STARTED IN LATE MAY. THE REST OF THE SUMMER BROUGHT A
GENERALLY QUIET FIRE SEASON. THE AUTUMN WAS PERSISTENTLY MILD
UNTIL MID- NOVEMBER...WHEN THE COLDEST SUSTAINED WEATHER OF RECORD
BEFORE THANKSGIVING GRIPPED THE AREA...ONLY TO BE FOLLOWED BY THE
EXTREME WARMTH OF THE FIRST THREE WEEKS OF DECEMBER. OVERALL...THE
AVERAGE TEMPERATURE FOR THE YEAR OF 27.9 DEGREES WAS ALMOST
EXACTLY NORMAL. THE HIGH FOR THE YEAR WAS 88 DEGREES ON JUNE 25TH.
THE LOW WAS 44 BELOW ON FEBRUARY 15TH. THE TOTAL PRECIPITATION OF
9.54 INCHES WAS ABOUT 12 PERCENT BELOW NORMAL.
$$
RT/JM JAN 12
First 40 below of the Cold Snap
Through 11am AST the low temperature at the Fairbanks airport has been 43 below. This is the first 40 below of this cold snap at the Airport. Eielson AFB has been down to 45 below.
Updated:
53 below at McGrath, Galena, Huslia, Nikolai, Kaltag, Tanana and Manley Hot Springs
Updated:
53 below at McGrath, Galena, Huslia, Nikolai, Kaltag, Tanana and Manley Hot Springs