During the past week, a blast of Arctic air has put the
entire nation under an intense cold spell. Temperatures this past week dropped
30 to 40 degrees in one day in some areas with intense snowfall and winds were
present all over the Rockies and Cascades. The question that everyone seems to
be having about this Arctic Blast is, how long is this going to last? To
answer, we have to look at the cause of such an anomaly in temperature for this
time of year.
Picture representation of how the powerful Low of Nuri helps create a large ridge which in turn pulls Arctic air southward |
A large intense low-pressure system which was the remnants
of Super Typhoon Nuri moved off the coast of Alaska around 2 weeks ago. This low-pressure
system caused pressure readings as low as 925mb in the Aleutians, 70mph wind
gusts and 50 foot waves. This system was strong enough to pull warm moist air
up from the Pacific and drive warm air pole-ward. This knocks the “polar vortex” or the pocket
of very cold air, also known as the polar low, southward. With no strong
weather pattern blocking its path, cold air can gain momentum and cause the
entire polar jet to dip well into the Southern Plains. This causes the blocking high that once was
in the higher altitudes to descend to the Continental US, making it very hard
to move. Cold air being dense and near the surface makes it very hard to move
with such stable conditions. Highs in the Midwest and the Plains will remain in
the 20s and teens, while the Northeast will remain in the 30s.
The worst of the frigid temperatures will slowly make their way eastward through next week |
So when will the Arctic Blast end for this region?-Well
things are not exactly looking good at least in the short term forecast for
this region for the cold. A new batch of cold air and high pressure is moving
across the Ohio Valley and slowly making it over the Appalachians; that is
something that does not happen often. This means even colder temperatures
expected early next week with a likely chance we will see some precipitation
(most likely in the form of just rain) on Sunday Night into Monday as the front
passes through the region. This will mean blisteringly cold temperatures with
highs barely making it out of the 30s on Tuesday and Wednesday. Slowly but
surely though, this Arctic front will start to recede as a new system is
starting to form in the Pacific Northwest which will push Eastward into next
week. This weather system will bring warmer temperatures and rain throughout
the region and is scheduled to arrive at the end of next weekend into the
beginning of next week.
There are still many questions we have with the forecast
moving forward, including a disturbance on Friday evening, which could lead to
mixed precipitation depending on how things shape out. I did not want to go
into too much detail regarding the different variables that go into the long
range forecast quite yet as they are themselves still up in the air.
Summary: Cold will remain. Sunny skies and High Pressure
most days, the second front will move through on Sunday Night bringing rain and
a fresh batch of cold air. Colder next week. Friday’s weather will be of a
mixed precipitation possibly depending on the temperature sounding. Late next
weekend will be the break from the cold.
Any further questions? Feel free to message me or comment on the post!
-James
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