Winter
Comes Back: Return of the Polar Vortex?
Another
bout of painfully cold Arctic air is on its way to the northern
United States, reviving talk of what has become popularly known as
the "polar vortex."
24
Febraury, 2014
Another
bout of painfully cold Arctic air is on its way to the northern
United States, reviving talk of what has become popularly known as
the "polar vortex."
By
Thursday, temperatures will have dropped to as low as 30 degrees
Fahrenheit (17 degrees Celsius) below the average temperature for
this time of the year, meteorologists say, with highs dipping down
into the teens in New York City and into the single digits in
Chicago. Average temperatures for this time of year in those regions
are generally closer to 45 and 40 F (7.2 and 4.4 C), respectively,
said Bernie Rayno, a meteorologist with Accuweather.
While
it's not necessarily inaccurate to refer to the event as the "polar
vortex," Rayno said, the increased hype around this phrase
since January's
deep chill has
warped people's perceptions of what is actually a fairly common
weather phenomenon. [Weirdo
Weather: 7 Rare Weather Events]
"We
have seen this happen every winter in the past 24 years I have been a
meteorologist, but this winter, it has happened more frequently in
the upper Midwest and Northeast," Rayno told Live Science.
The polar
vortex,
despite what its name may imply, is not a storm but a
"planetary-scale mid- to high-latitude circumpolar cyclonic
circulation, extending from the middle troposphere to the
stratosphere," according to a portion of the American
Meteorological Society's recently updated definition. (The middle
troposphere and stratosphere are components of the Earth's
atmosphere.)
That
vortex is always present, Rayno said, but it's generally trapped at
polar latitudes due to a barricade created by the jet stream, the air
current that travels from west to east across the United States. But
when the jet stream sinks farther south than usual due to changes in
weather patterns, it can allow cold air to flood south and bathe the
country in unusually bitter temperatures.
While
temperatures this week are not expected to plunge as low as they did
in the January event, Rayno said that this may be the coldest event
of the season relative to average temperatures for the time of year.
And
if the cold weren't enough to get folks anxious for spring to come, a
snowstorm is also expected to hit the Northeast directly before the
bitter temperatures descend on the region, Rayno said.
Global
Climate Stats: Where
Does January Rank?
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