Polar vortex to unleash frigid Arctic blast

Frigid temperatures and snow ahead

Frigid temperatures and snow ahead

01:34

The polar vortex has become synonymous with winter’s most brutal cold. For days, the weather system has been sitting and spinning right along the U.S.-Canada border, with temperatures as low as 43 degrees below zero in northern Minnesota. 

But now, there are signs it is about to surge south, bringing with it record-shattering cold air from the far reaches of Alaska and Northern Canada. By the weekend, temperatures in Kansas City and St. Louis will be below what’s normal for Fairbanks, Alaska.

Ahead of this Arctic blast, there will be a series of winter storms along the collision zone of cold and warm air, bringing ice from Texas to Tennessee and significant snow to Washington, D.C.   

The polar vortex is a sprawling area of cold upper-level low pressure that typically resides in the Arctic. But every so often, the normal winter pattern becomes disrupted, splitting the polar vortex and sending pieces flying in different directions. One of those pieces is sitting just north of the U.S.-Canada border.

When this bowling ball of bitter cold air leaves Manitoba and heads SE, the door will open once or twice for a high-end winter storm somewhere along the East Coast.

Pushing Arctic air towards the Gulf Stream loads the powder keg, but there’s no guarantee it will blow just right. pic.twitter.com/Kq3ohWQva0

— Jack Sillin (@JackSillin) February 9, 2021

This bitter airmass landed there because of a phenomenon called a sudden stratospheric warming, a natural event that occurs 50,000 to 100,000 feet above the Arctic every couple of years, throwing weather patterns off-kilter. This event is often followed by a mountain of unusually warm air near the Arctic circle that acts to reroute pieces of the cold polar vortex southward. 

CBS News

This type of pattern creates extremes all over the world. For the past couple of weeks, instead of a gradual temperature gradient around the Northern Hemisphere, there have been pockets of extreme cold intermixed with record warmth.

Can really see the impact of #PolarVortex variability comparing global temperatures last & this February. Contributing to a possible rare normal to even slightly below normal global mean temperature just 2 months after warmest year on record. Figures from: https://t.co/hsTgSlVHbm pic.twitter.com/VAiqv3Wl1N

— Judah Cohen (@judah47) February 9, 2021

As a result, temperatures on Tuesday dropped to 43 degrees below zero Fahrenheit in Cotton, Minnesota, which was 133 degrees colder than the hottest temperature in the U.S. — 90 degrees — in south Florida. 

Here’s a look at the national high and low temperature from yesterday, February 8.

The warmest was down here in Florida, at 90 degrees. Cotton Minnesota was the coldest at -43!#flwx #mnwx @CBS12 pic.twitter.com/vO99yP74W5

— Lauren Olesky (@LoleskyWX) February 9, 2021

In a bout of weather whiplash, the bitter cold comes on the heels of one of the top 10 warmest Januarys on record in the U.S., with the highest departures from normal right where the coldest air is now.

Talk about a 180! Left: January temperatures as compared to normal. Right: Today’s departures from normal. While the warmest air relative to normal in January was in the Northern Plains, now the coldest relative to normal is there. #WeatherWhiplash pic.twitter.com/TtEbJSLev5

— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) February 9, 2021

And the most frigid air has yet to invade the U.S. Currently, record-setting high pressure, which is associated with the coldest airmasses, is building in Alaska and western Canada. It’s so cold in Saskatchewan, Canada, that residents are pulling out the old bucket of water trick, when water instantly freezes into ice crystals when it hits the air. 

Wait for it…

Extremely cold in Canada 🇨🇦 right now 🥶 This is what happens when you throw boiling water into the frigid air… It looks like a cloud and effectively is!pic.twitter.com/hZur9zQqth

— Scott Duncan (@ScottDuncanWX) February 9, 2021

This most frigid airmass will begin it’s move southward, down the east slope of the Rockies on Friday. Temperatures this Valentine’s Day weekend will be 40 to 50 degrees Fahrenheit below normal throughout the middle of the country.

Record-setting cold air will be pouring south into the U.S. over the next several days as Arctic high pressure settles south from Canada. It’ll be the coldest air of the season with high temperatures in some cases over 40 degrees below average! Bundle up!https://t.co/sbUJ2UeH9i pic.twitter.com/Y8zh0FBEFl

— NWS Weather Prediction Center (@NWSWPC) February 9, 2021

From Friday through Monday, more than 100 record low readings will be in jeopardy in the heartland, with temperatures as low as 40 degrees below zero in the northern Plain States and wind chills as low as 60 below on Sunday morning.

CBS News

Temperatures will drop to near zero as far south as North Texas. On Sunday, temperatures in Kansas City and St. Louis, Missouri, will not climb out of the single digits, colder than the normal high temperature of 7 degrees in Fairbanks, Alaska, this time of year.

Extreme cold will not be the only hazard. Disturbances will ride along the frontal boundary separating bitter cold to the north and warm, moist air to the south. From Wednesday through Friday snow, ice and rain will straddle the boundary, with some areas from Dallas, Texas, to Little Rock, Arkansas, to Lexington, Kentucky, getting a glaze of treacherous ice.

Washington, D.C., will be just north of the front, and for the nation’s capital, that means mainly snow. From Wednesday afternoon through Friday morning, the area will pick up an extended period of intermittent light to moderate snowfall. In total, from West Virginia to Roanoke and Northern Virginia a general 5 to 10 inches will accumulate.

CBS News

Further north in New York City, the cold-dry airmass will block the storm system, keeping it to the south. While snow showers will fly on Thursday and Friday, they will not amount to much. That is, until Sunday, when a stronger storm looks to take aim at the rest of the Northeast. If it materializes, another significant snow and ice storm may be in the cards.

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