Now
The clouds and rain are resulting from a frontal system and surface low pressure associated with an upper-level area of low pressure. The upper-level low has been cut off from the main west-to-east steering winds in the upper atmosphere, and is stalled over the Tennessee and lower Mississippi valleys. With the weather system nearly stationary or even moving slightly westward, conditions will be slow to clear out over the next couple of days.
Map of surface pressure (solid lines) and 500 mb height (color shading) this morning from Unisys
Tonight and Tomorrow
For the outlook through the rest of the week and into the weekend, scroll on down to Camden's post below.
Climate Corner
Weather Channel senior meteorologist Buzz Bernard had an excellent post last week on the difference between climate science and climate policy. PM Update endorses his invitation to provide "some peer-reviewed scientific work that addresses 'other causes'" of global warming. (No, news reports of a retired professor's rants are not "peer-reviewed", no matter how prominently they were featured on the Drudge Report or squawk radio.)
Political Science
Speaking of policy (notice this is a separate section from the one above), a more careful review of the links in yesterday's Update indicates that the Warner-Lieberman climate bill hasn't been totally "endorsed" by anybody (except perhaps the WaPo in their Monday editorial). The Union of Concerned Scientists also regards the bill as a "good starting point for debate".
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