Graph
of the Day: Low and high temperature extremes across North America,
3–10 December 2013
NASA,
While
the continental U.S. shivered through an abnormally cold
spell in
December 2013, Alaska experienced record-breaking heat. Both extremes
were caused by an unusual kink in the northern hemisphere’s polar
jet stream, which
caused frigid Arctic air to move south and warm air to head north.
The jet
stream is
a fast-moving belt of westerly winds created by the convergence of
cold air masses from the Arctic and warm air from lower latitudes.
It’s common for it to have meanders called Rossby
waves, but
what was unusual in December 2013 was how amplified and contorted
those waves became after a ridge of
high pressure parked itself over Alaska.
As
warm air pushed north, numerous temperature records fell in Alaska.
On December 7, 2013, temperatures reached 39°F (4°C)
at Deadhorse, an
airport in far northern Alaska that serves Prudhoe Bay. This was the
warmest December temperature measured there since the airport was
established in 1968, according to
Weather Underground historian Christopher Burt. Meanwhile, high
temperature records for December also fell or were tied at Barter
Island, Alaska, and Wainwright,
Alaska. In
contrast, many towns in the Pacific Northwest saw record
coldtemperatures.
This
map of land surface temperature anomalies for December 3–10, 2013,
shows the sharp contrast between Alaska and the western U.S. Based on
data from the Moderate
Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)
on NASA’s Terra satellite,
the map depicts 2013 temperatures compared to the 2001–2010 average
for the same eight day period.
Areas
with warmer than average temperatures are shown in red; near-normal
temperatures are white; and areas that were cooler than the 2000-2011
base period are blue. Note that Land
surface temperatures (LST)
are distinct from the air temperatures that meteorological stations
typically measure. LSTs indicate how hot the surface of the Earth
would feel to
the touch. From
a satellite vantage point, the “surface” includes a number of
materials that capture and retain heat, such as desert sand, the dark
roof of a building, or the pavement of a road. As a result, daytime
land surface temperatures are usually higher than air temperatures.
References
- Climate Central (2012, June 28). While Most of U.S. Froze, Parts of Alaska Set Record Highs. Accessed December 13, 2013.
- Climate Central (2012, December 10) Study Adds to Arctic Warming, Extreme Weather Debate. Accessed June 13, 2013.
- Weather Underground (2013, December 10) New Round of Snow and ice for the U.S.; Extreme Warmth in Alaska.Accessed December 13, 2013.
- Weather Underground (2013, December 9) Record Cold in Western U.S., Record Warmth in Alaska’s Arctic. Accessed December 13, 2013.
Images
by Jesse Allen, NASA’s Earth Observatory using data courtesy of
the MODIS
Land Group.
Additional land
surface temperature anomaly images
available on NASA
Earth Observations.
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