Categories: loan

Think it’s cold now? Just wait for this week’s Arctic blast that is poised to break records

It’s cold now, but another punch of arctic air will take it to another level. Due to recent winter storms, more than 200 million people will wake up to freezing temperatures as the coldest air of the season sweeps across the Plains, Midwest, Great Lakes and Northeast. This extensive dive puts dozens of daily records in play.

After lots of snow last week, the Midwest is now bracing for some of the coldest temperatures of the season.

Bitter cold from Canada will move into the Northern Plains and upper Midwest on Wednesday. High temperatures will be 15 to 25 degrees below normal and parts of the Dakotas will struggle to reach 10 degrees. More than a dozen cities in the upper Midwest could set new record cold daily highs.

CNN Weather

Thursday morning will be the coldest as actual air temperatures are forecast to drop into the double digits below zero in southern Iowa and Nebraska. Wind chills of -10 to -25 will be common.

Des Moines and Cedar Rapids, Iowa, are each set to break daily low temperature records Thursday, dropping to -11 degrees and -7 degrees, respectively. Cedar Rapids may only warm to single digits above zero Thursday afternoon, which would set a new record for coldest high temperature for the day.

CNN Weather

Afternoon temperatures in much of the Midwest will be stuck in the teens — 20 to 30 degrees below normal for early December.

Records could also fall from Illinois to the East Coast on Friday morning. Chicago could drop its daily minimum temperature by 4 degrees below the record while Indianapolis could reach a record 8 degrees – last set in 1886. Low temperatures will be in the teens across Pennsylvania, breaking daily records in many cities.

Friday morning will be New York City’s coldest day since early March, with temperatures in the low 20s. Records could fall for the city’s JFK and LaGuardia airports. Cold wind will sting.

CNN Weather

Blame the polar vortex

The winter storms that hit the U.S. this week — and those forecast for the next two weeks — may be linked in large part to the displacement of the polar vortex that began in late November, researchers told CNN.

The polar vortex is a circular flow of intense air in the Arctic that can trap cold air in that region. Recently, however, it has weakened and moved south toward the mid-latitudes, blowing cold, arctic air into heavily populated areas.

That could create tornado conditions, said Andrea Lopez Lang, a meteorologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, as cold air from up north collides with relatively warm air.

And a weak polar vortex also means a wavy jet stream. These are air currents that flow west-to-east in the Northern Hemisphere. A wavy jet stream can give people whiplash, said MIT meteorologist Judah Cohen.

For the remainder of December, we can expect frequent oscillations between mild-to-average conditions and cooler temperatures as storms move through.

However, López Lang cautioned that this polar vortex phenomenon is not the only factor behind those upcoming temperature fluctuations. “It’s definitely contributing, but it’s not the whole story,” she said.

Is this the end of the cold snap? Amy Butler, NOAA’s research meteorologist, warned of another cold snap by mid-December. “This polar vortex appears to spread further into North America in about 7-10 days,” he noted.

We’re still about three weeks away from the official start of winter, but Mother Nature is off to a pretty head start.

CNN meteorologists Mary Gilbert and Taylor Ward contributed to this report.

Create an account at CNN.com for more CNN news and newsletters

admin

Recent Posts

The new Target policy makes some shoppers uncomfortable

As someone who has covered the retail sector for more than a decade, I can…

33 minutes ago

‘Big short’ investor Michael Burry details possible ‘catastrophic scenarios’ as Bitcoin continues to fall.

Michael Burry is sounding the alarm about what could happen if Bitcoin continues to slide…

2 hours ago

Woody Allen’s wife, Soon-Yi Previn, told Epstein that the #MeToo campaign had ‘gone too far’

Soon-Yi Previn, the wife of film director Woody Allen, sent an email to convicted sex…

3 hours ago

Winter Olympics: Why doctors say Lindsay Vonn has ‘great chance to perform well’ despite ACL tear

MILAN - When sports fans hear an athlete has torn his ACL, the immediate assumption…

4 hours ago

According to the family, the woman, who posed as a student from Boston, left the teen with bruises

A 34-year-old woman posing as a student at various Boston public schools tricked children into…

5 hours ago

Lexington Reddit questioned why the mayor’s road was plowed. The municipality has said that it is not biased

In our reality check stories, Herald-Leader journalists explore deeper questions about facts, results and accountability.…

6 hours ago