The animation above is for 12 hours hence the arriving and departing light effect. As always the engine behind this is the Indian Monsoon which you can see here this morning gathering strength.
A close up from the end of today shows how the big storms over #SaudiArabia are generating new atmospheric rivers of moisture, or plumes, over the Sahara, you can see these top right.
[Note: Atmospheric rivers are often invisible, this one becomes visible as night falls.]
This is my favourite way to visualise this, PWAT anomaly, as it draws the eye to the unusual water activity in the image. In the case in the Middle East and the Sahara. This is a five day simulation and at this point the unusually wet air hasn't yet reached the Sahara.
Finally in this intro section we have an animation over a large area, the monsoon water entering the #MiddleEast is splitting on its leading edge with some heading north east over over Iran into Central Asia.
Today's big picture captures all this and more, a big storm over the Sahel and the ongoing European storms which today have been focussed on Italy and the Balkans.
Today's 10-Day Rainfall forecasts for North Africa from July 17th through July 28th. The #ArabianMonsoonBurst can be seen very clearly on the far right of the four accumulated rainfall forecasts.
48-hour rainfall forecasts (today and tomorrow from our standard four models: the European @ECMWF, @NOAA's GFS, Canada's CMC and the Korean KMA models. The last, skinniest, one is the ECMWF.
Finally for #NorthAfrica we have the long-range 16-day (GFS) and 12-day (KMA) forecasts - which (as always) remain remarkably well aligned inspite of the 4 days difference.
[NOTE: We will have a better view of forecasts of the #ArabianMonsoonBurst later in the bulletin.]
This is today GFS PWAT simulation - 384 hours (from which the anomaly data shown early is calculated). While it still shows the main burst of moisture pulling back you can see that it continues to pulsate over the 16 day period.
Here we see another view of this, the corresponding 16 day India Monsoon PWAT plot. In this you can see in the later part how a low system over the Bay of Bengal drags moisture up over Bangladesh and how that travels East along the Himalayas into Pakistan.
This picture of a terrible dust storm being produced by the storms is from Al-Kharj #SaudiArabia, the city in which the King's palace is located near the capital Riyadh.
And finally we have today's long-range #MiddleEast July 17th rainfall forecasts.
The16-day GFS & GEFS models, the 12 day KMA and the 15 day EPS (Euro ensemble) model forecasts.
الله أعلم
Here is an accumulating rainfall forecast 10-days from the Canadian CMC model. Of the models the CMC and KMA models have for some time the most ambitious about forecasting rain for the peninsula.
And here we see the KMA's version of how this may play out.
We now move to a big picture view. North Western Hemisphere zero hour simulation data (i.e. now).
This is the Eurasia GFS 16-day PWAT forecast. Two things stand out for me.
1. a potentially large rain system moving through the Kazakhstan desert. 2. The unusual path of what will likely soon by Typhoon Fabian after it makes landfall in China.
Here we see a view of the depression which is expected to turn into cyclone Fabian. Cyclone genesis is a remarkably beautiful and awe inspiring process.
This animation shows a simulation over the same 16-day period of actual rainfall. Purple areas indicate over 12 and up to 25 inches of rain. There is some rain shown in the Kazakhstan desert but not a great deal.
Hopefully the rain in Siberia will dampen the forest fires.
The other large scale map we have covers most of the other inhabited parts of the Northern Hemisphere (absent islands and the US pacific coast). We have three long range PWAT forecasts now for this area to look at GFS (16 days) & CMC and ACG (10 days).
Here's the ACG version.
I get the impression that the ACG (Australian) and CMC (Canadian) models are leaning a bit on the GFS as the large scale features of all three are both very similar to each other, and all three are very good.
Here's the mother ship's version.
I find this presentation, a 16-day early warning system WRT weather (for the part of the world I now live in) endlessly fascinating.
But it is pretty clear now that these incredible long range models are now an absolutely vital piece of resilience infrastructure for humanity.
While we can't influence the weather, knowing what is going to happen (or might happen) with up to 16-days warning provides time to prepare. But for this to work effectively: 1. We need to be paying attention. 2. And we need to be willing to tolerate false alarms.
These models are also an amazing communication tool. As are services like @zoom_earth and @meteoblue which also provide a means to visualise and begin to understand our changing weather systems.
This animation e.g. shows today's significant storm activity in Europe.
We are used to thinking about weather as if it is a local phenomena, we know the sort of weather we get, and we are not that interested in weather that happens to other people.
My current expectation is that with what we are seeing this year, this is about to change.
Congratulations to Ethiopia and Ethiopians everywhere on today's completion of the 2nd filling of the #GERD. It has been a great honour to follow along during this moment.
In honour of the #GERD we will change up the order of today's bulletin and get right to the most important issue, rain over the #Abbay basin, which due to its great quantity and consistency made this possible over such a short time period.
But first a brief explanation, as when it comes to the GERD not all rainfall counts. The first image here shows the path of the #BlueNile / #Abbay from Lake Tana to Khartoum where it meets the White Nile and becomes "The Nile".
Here's a view of the two storms, #FabianPH / #INFA whose interaction is forecast to produce a 3rd storm in 4 days time which was forecast yesterday to arrive in Tokyo two days after the Olympics opening.
In the latest GFS 1hourly simulation model the solution remains the same as of today. A large typhoon like low (in terms of water content) will make landfall in Japan and stay over the country for some time bringing torrential rains during #Olympics2021
This attached thread from this morn looks at Typhoon #INFA ("In-fa" TS09W) which is poised to be extraordinarily disruptive to the 2021 Olympics in Japan.
It has since come clearer what we can expect from a dangerous and unusual weather system developing over the West Pacific.
And here it is today. It still has a clearly defined circulation over the Adriatic Sea.
This shows the jet stream forecast for today which pretty perfectly matches what we are seeing here from the satellite imagery.
But while the circulation is gone the jet remains. This jet looks like it is going to move into the business of delivering moisture to the Middle East.
The presentation of the #ArabianMonsoonBurst has changed dramatically today with the consolidation of activity over the Arabian Peninsula into a single huge storm which is currently moving into the Red Sea over Makkah and Jeddah.
Today's rainfall forecasts follow.
The scale of the storm over Islam's holiest city is huge, larger than France. Two more huge storms loom over the greater region tonight. One on the Iranian Gulf coast and another supercell thunderstorm complex over New Delhi/Rajastan, India, the size of the United Kingdom.
The last six hours in three animations, first India which is experiencing a massive monsoon day today in the north.
[Here the initial frames show a blank SEA as their was a satellite data outage.]
This thread provides a tour of the global biosphere in pictorial form.
The animations were acquired from @zoom_earth on July 14th, and take us on a journey beginning in the North East Pacific over the course of a single day.