can someone meteorologically explain why snow is adverse to pittsburgh or does mother nature just not want to see us pgh skiers happy?
Submitted by d071399 t3_10kwk9t in pittsburgh
Hi, since everyone else's comments are conjecture...
We are in a dry slot. Low pressure systems are often pulling in warm, moist air from the south and cool, dry air from the north as they develop and rotate. Pittsburgh is in a bad spot because often times the mountain ridges to our east will help facilitate pockets of air that is either too dry or too warm for snow.
I can't attach a picture, so here's a link with a nice illustration of a dry slot
Here's my risky click of the day, wish me luck 🤞
lmfao on any other day I wouldn't trust me, but when it comes to the weather I'm too big of a nerd to be anything but a straight shooter lol
the slot, how’s the slot?
Shut up Lenny Dykstra.
There any bushes outside probly or….???
You'll do it when you get up here.
Hello, fellow Howard Stern fan
If the slot's dry, you're doing something wrong.
It was pretty dry
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Dry slot you say?
Hey!!!! let's not bring Ben Shapiros wife into this
ballsonthewall telling us about the dry slot?
The other part, as illuminated for me today, is that part of this is a radar artifact. The center of the "hole" is actually the radar site out in Moon, and as the precipitation dropped closer to the ground, the hole more or less closed around Moon (with lots of variations based on elevation).
This is because the radar shoots up at an angle, so the further from the site you are, the higher in the atmosphere the returns are happening.
Joe is no longer around to say it would. He lived in Moon Twp BTW.
This is in addition to what u/ballsonthewall said: It probably also has some to do with the urban heat island effect, which is more severe is summer, but still impacts weather in the winter. Basically, we have a city of concrete buildings that, during the winter, are being heated and emitting some heat out into the environment which creates an overall warmer local atmosphere than the surrounding area.
urban heat island wouldn't really have much impact until the snow is below radar levels anyways. snow might stick less downtown or vary slightly with elevation, but most of the dynamic weather is happening far enough up in the atmosphere to render small changes in what precip looks like at the surface moot.
So is some of that southern moist air is smashing into the ridges in central PA? Is this why I have to prepare like I'm going on a trek to Siberia to make the 2-hr drive over the mountains to Penn State in the winter?
Pretty much, yeah!
Interesting, I thought a dry slot was more in the southwest and legit meant dry. Where you'd have rain come from the Pacific and then just not hit a city/town for whatever reason. I've lived in a couple of places where that's happened but Pittsburgh gets rain. I'm no expert, just what I thought
winter storms are insanely intricate and complicated, this thing dropped a foot of snow in Oklahoma and tornadoes in Texas at the same time yesterday. It's really cool to learn about them, but once you start, it's easy to understand why they're so hard to forecast... particularly here.
Somerset mountain be huge though! Pretty much goes along with this too, it's insane when I travel to da Burgh and the big weather difference on each side of that tunnel, I come from Bedford on a half decent regularity to visit friends and the night life! But it always amazes me, I remember the one Halloween it was in the 60s here but in the 40s there thankfully for me because I was in a full care bear suit... it helped keep me cool
Do the rivers converging have anything to do with this as well?
not really. what most people don't think of is that weather is 3D, rather than a plot of rain and snow on a 2D map. layers of warmer and colder air in the upper atmosphere are far more pertinent to what precip you see at ground level than anything happening on the surface. that's not to say small variations caused by local microclimates don't make a difference in observable weather, rather that they aren't going to change the whole metro area's weather like this dry slot did.
That makes sense. Like you put it I never really gave the 3d model a thought, especially with the different layers of air currents and hot and cold zones.
Balls On The Wall said “Dry Slot” lol
snow mvp striking again
This is true, also part of it is we're just at a much lower elevation than many of our surrounding areas. I've driven from a foot of snow in the hills around Somerset back to no snow here before.
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