Medium Range Air Quality Outlook
Mid-Atlantic Region
Issued: Friday, June 6, 2014
Valid: June 7 – June 11, 2014 (Saturday-Wednesday)
Summary:
High pressure will be overhead Saturday and slowly move off the coast by Sunday night. Sunshine, clean and dry northerly flow, and the retreat of cool air aloft Saturday will bring scattered regions ozone into the low Moderate range and keep levels of PM2.5 in the high Good/low Moderate range. Sunday will be hot and humid with limited vertical mixing moving both ozone and PM2.5 to the Moderate range. A low pressure system from the west will approach Sunday night bringing scattered rain and thunderstorms throughout the rest of the week. Clouds and precipitation will decrease both air pollutants to the Good range. Warm air advection from the south will move in Tuesday and Wednesday with partly sunny skies. Ozone and PM2.5 should move back into the low Moderate for both days.
Discussion:
The weather forecast models are in good agreement this week with the exception of the timing of the onset of precipitation on Monday. The NAM and the ECMWF show precipitation starting near the I-95 Corridor as early as 1200 UTC Monday while the GFS still lags about 12 hours behind. We will rely on the NAM and the ECMWF for the timing of the onset of precipitation. The forecast models come back into agreement Monday afternoon and for the rest of the forecast period. Specifically, the models all agree on the development of an upper level disturbance in the southern Plains, which will affect our weather later next week. For air quality concerns, there is good confidence in the weather forecast models with the exception of Monday. That being said, the precipitation expected Tuesday and Wednesday will be convective and of the hit-or-miss variety so that local pollutant concentrations may be highly variable.
High pressure will move overhead Saturday, bringing a warm and sunny day. Transport aloft will continue to arrive from Canada, bringing in cleaner and drier air, but near surface winds will diminish by afternoon leading to sea/bay breeze recirculation and rising late day pollutant levels. Although the lingering dry air in the area will keep the PM2.5 down to the Good range, there is a chance for very low Moderate range PM2.5. Sunny skies and sea breeze recirculation will allow ozone to reach the low Moderate range.
Sunday will see an even greater rise in temperatures and dew points. High pressure will drift slowly eastward and significant stagnation is expected through the morning hours. A complex mish-mash of air mass boundaries (see the WPC forecast surface analyses) will move northward into the region late Sunday night, bringing a chance of cloud cover late in the afternoon and late night showers. Overall, Sunday will have stable and humid conditions, decreased mixing, bringing ozone and PM2.5 well into the Moderate range.
Following the ECMWF we expect showers beginning late Sunday at the earliest and continuing on and off until the end of the period. Monday should see a decrease in both PM2.5 and ozone concentrations to the Good range. Two major sources of uncertainty Monday will be the timing, strength and location of showers as well as the timing of the onset of sustained SSE low level winds.
South-southeasterly flow will bring warm air aloft, and maritime air near the surface starting Tuesday morning through the rest of the period. There will be scattered showers and thunderstorms throughout the day with sunshine in-between. Temperatures and dew points will rise to above normal. Both PM2.5 and ozone will rise to the Moderate range in locations where showers are not sustained in duration. Wednesday will have the same conditions as Tuesday with a chance of scattered showers and thunderstorms with partly sunny skies. The air quality will remain in the Moderate range.
-Catena/Ryan