The Polar Vortex Is Collapsing — Here's What That Means for Your Winter Weather
By Tom Metcalfe, Live Science ContributorLive Science,
18 January, 2019
A simulated image of the stratospheric winds over the North Pole Jan. 18, 2019, showing how the northern polar vortex has split into two major parts – one over Canada and one over Russia.
Credit: earth.nullschool.net
The blast of Arctic weather headed for the United States this weekend could be a first sign of still worse things to come this winter, with signs that a circular low-pressure system of swirling winds that normally keeps frigid air locked up at the North Pole has been disrupted and split into smaller parts.
The
disruption in this counterclockwise-spinning beast, called the
polar vortex,
is thought to be caused in part by a warm summer over the Arctic and
a relatively cold fall over Siberia. The result for the United States
and northern Europe? A severe winter lasting throughout February and
possibly into March.
Meteorologist
Judah Cohen agreed that the breaking up of the polar vortex could be
the culprit for the coming storm. Cohen, the director of seasonal
forecasting for the weather risk management company Atmospheric and
Environmental Research (AER), based in Lexington, Massachusetts, told
Live Science that the coming snowstorms in the United States this
weekend are consistent with weather models that predicted severe
wintry weather to come in the coming weeks. [Infographic:
Earth's Atmosphere Top to Bottom]
The
weather models suggested that the disruptions would follow the
pattern of polar vortex disruptions seen during the northern winter
last year, which resulted in freezing weather across the United
States in December and January, and a severe cold snap in March over
the United Kingdom.
"This
pattern looks much more active, [with] more winter type
storms and Arctic outbreaks — I think I would attribute it to
definitely being a polar vortex disruption, because it is very
consistent with what we've seen in the past," Cohen said.
Polar winds
The northern
polar vortex is
a fast-flowing stream of air that circles the North Pole in the upper
parts of the atmosphere, known as the stratosphere, about 20 miles
(32 kilometers) above the surface.
A
similar polar
vortex exists over the South Pole,
but it is the northern polar vortex that can bring severe winter
weather to the United States and Europe.
When
the northern polar vortex is strong, Cohen explained, it keeps most
of the air cooled by the Arctic in the polar region, resulting in
mild winter temperatures in the middle latitudes of the eastern
United States, and in northern Europe and Asia.
But
when the polar vortex weakens, the once-trapped cold air can meander
throughout the top of the Northern Hemisphere, bringing polar
temperatures and extreme winter weather to lower latitudes, he said.
This
diagram shows the normal activity of the northern polar vortex (left)
and what happens when the polar vortex weakens.
Credit:
NOAA
"Think
of the polar vortex as a spinning top, and where the polar vortex
goes so goes the cold air," Cohen said. "A strong polar
vortex is a fast, tightly spinning top centered over the
North Pole,
keeping all the cold air with it close by over the Arctic. [But]
a weak or perturbed polar vortex is a spinning top that has been
banged or bumped into an object multiple times … the top slows down
and wobbles and can meander from its location."
As
for what knocked into this spinning top, Cohen points, in part, to
summer warming in the Arctic region and a relatively cold fall in
Siberia.
"I
have argued that Arctic change has certainly been a contributor,"
he said. "The loss of sea ice, especially in the Barents and
Kara seas, which are near Scandinavia in north-west Russia … and
also an increasing trend in Siberian snow cover in October, I think
that has also been contributing.
Winter weather
In
recent days, weather scientists have seen the northern polar vortex
split into three smaller parts, which have now changed into two
giant patches of polar winds in
the stratosphere — one over northern Canada and one over central
Russia.
Snowstorms
have been forecast today (Jan. 18) and tomorrow (Jan. 19) for the
central Plains and Midwest of the United States, as part of what's
being called winter storm Harper; and the winter weather is expected
to hit the mid-Atlantic
and Northeast of
the United States later in the weekend.
Cohen
said these patterns followed the weather
patterns seen last winter,
which was exceptionally cold in the United States over the New
Year and the first weeks of 2018.
But
he warned that a cold snap isn't a foregone conclusion; the winter
weather could still turn out to be relatively mild if the polar
vortex returns to its normal configuration in the coming weeks.
"Right
now, the weather looks like it is very consistent with our
expectations of how the weather would transition following these type
of events, but we'll see," he said. "These [weather
patterns] tend to be episodic, so it doesn't come all down once …
not every day will be below normal, and we will not have snow every
day."
Cohen
added, "[But] I think at least through the end of February, and
I would think probably into early March, there will be kind of a
skewing of the probabilities or the frequency of severe winter
weather."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.