|
Post by Ratty on Dec 20, 2019 21:58:45 GMT
|
|
|
Post by nonentropic on Dec 20, 2019 22:03:54 GMT
chop the first bit off
|
|
|
Post by Ratty on Dec 20, 2019 22:59:47 GMT
They did in the top example.
|
|
|
Post by nautonnier on Dec 20, 2019 23:32:02 GMT
Thanks Acid very useful
|
|
|
Post by nautonnier on Dec 23, 2019 18:58:06 GMT
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Dec 23, 2019 21:43:55 GMT
|
|
|
Post by acidohm on Dec 23, 2019 22:51:03 GMT
Your cold events and the warm pool of PNW fire the jet over the atlantic. Its a touch further south then normal hence UK's below average CET's october/november, but very very zonal/wet. Siberian snow cover has failed to progress west to low levels in europe, held off by Atlantic weather, till now. I mentioned in NA drift post warm pool developing at LAB current? Its weird, in my addled brain that is something that could shift the status quo. NAO/AO after being -ve almost all summer has been average to +ve since november mostly.....had no blocking so far, maybe an ssta shift would change that 🤷🏼♂️
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Dec 24, 2019 2:50:27 GMT
Your cold events and the warm pool of PNW fire the jet over the atlantic. Its a touch further south then normal hence UK's below average CET's october/november, but very very zonal/wet. Siberian snow cover has failed to progress west to low levels in europe, held off by Atlantic weather, till now. I mentioned in NA drift post warm pool developing at LAB current? Its weird, in my addled brain that is something that could shift the status quo. NAO/AO after being -ve almost all summer has been average to +ve since november mostly.....had no blocking so far, maybe an ssta shift would change that 🤷🏼♂️ That is such a settled analysis that I am in danger of becoming a believer.
|
|
|
Post by nautonnier on Dec 30, 2019 12:20:23 GMT
|
|
|
Post by nautonnier on Jan 27, 2020 9:54:12 GMT
|
|
|
Post by nautonnier on Jan 28, 2020 17:48:50 GMT
|
|
|
Post by acidohm on Jan 28, 2020 19:17:08 GMT
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Jan 28, 2020 21:57:38 GMT
Looks like one of dem butterfly charts for psychos.
|
|
|
Post by nautonnier on Jan 29, 2020 15:14:42 GMT
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Jan 29, 2020 16:00:06 GMT
This is a perfect example of how the short series visually misses the convex curve developing in the more recent data ... and the straight-line fit does the same thing. There are no longer-term straight-line relationships in nature.
|
|