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Mind-Bending Image of Last Month's Polar Vortex
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February, 2014
Just
when you might have been slowly emerging
from the hibernatory winter fetal position, NASA
has brought all of us back to that dark scary place by releasing a
mind-bending visualization of last month’s epic “polar vortex”
cold snap.
Here’s Eric Fetzer, of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in the most visually compelling explanation of the polar vortex I’ve seen yet:
What
Fetzer doesn’t mention is, despite what seemed like a month of
brutal Arctic punishment, January 2014 ended up almost
exactly average,
temperature-wise, for the continental United States.
Yes,
there were many
more daily
cold temperature records set nationwide than warm ones last month,
but that’s largely a result of there being more thermometers in
densely populated areas out East. The magnitude of unseasonable
warmth in California and the West has easily trumped the cold-ness of
the East’s polar vortex, in effect averaging out the nation’s
temperature.
But
simple averages can mask extreme weather: Alaska’s Port
Alsworth hit
a stunning 62 degrees Fahrenheit on
Jan. 27, the warmest temperature ever measured statewide during the
month of January, according to National Weather Service records.
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