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7:00 AM | **Accumulating snow possible on Saturday following passage of Arctic cold front**

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Weather forecasting and analysis, space and historic events, climate information

7:00 AM | **Accumulating snow possible on Saturday following passage of Arctic cold front**

Paul Dorian

6-Day forecast for the Washington, D.C. metro region

Today

Mainly cloudy with occasional showers, chilly, highs in the upper 40’s

Tonight

Mainly cloudy, chilly, maybe a lingering shower or some patchy drizzle, lows near 40 degrees

Wednesday

Becoming mainly sunny, mild, low-to-mid 50’s for afternoon highs

Wednesday Night

Becoming mainly cloudy, chilly, chance of a shower or two, lower 40’s for late night lows

Thursday

Mainly sunny, chilly, becoming quite windy with gusts to 40 mph, upper 40’s

Friday

Mainly sunny, cold, breezy, mid 30’s; chance of snow towards morning

Saturday

Snow that will likely transition to rain, icing is possible during the transition period, some accumulations are likely before any changeover, mid-to-upper 30’s

Sunday

Partly sunny, windy, cold, possible snow showers early, mid 30’s

Discussion

A strong cold front will push through the Mid-Atlantic region on Thursday and Arctic air will follow at the end of the work week. High pressure will build across southeastern Canada as we begin the weekend and this system will be a key player in the likelihood of accumulating snow on Saturday. Low pressure will develop over the Midwest on Saturday and a frontal system extending to its east will generate west-to-east moving precipitation which will most likely arrive as snow in the I-95 corridor from DC-to-Philly-to-NYC The low pressure system will head towards the eastern Great Lakes and a secondary system may try to form near the Mid-Atlantic coastline. It is likely that the snow which falls at the onset of the weekend storm system will transition to a mix of rain, sleet and snow and perhaps then change back to all snow before ending early Sunday. The cold air mass that arrives by Friday will be reluctant to give up its ground on Saturday as it’ll be anchored by a strong high pressure system to the north.

Meteorologist Paul Dorian
Perspecta, Inc.
perspectaweather.com