Monday, January 12, 2015

Warmup Awaits Midwest, East During Mid-January

By , Expert Senior Meteorologist
January 12,2015; 8:45PM,EST
 
 
Despite some pockets of cold air in the Midwest and East during the first part of this week, the wheels of change are already in the works for a mild weather pattern for the middle of January.
The storm departing the Northeast will briefly pull cold air into the Midwest and Eastern states into Wednesday. However, the jet stream is about to lock out the cold for the third and much of the fourth week of the month.
The jet stream is a high-speed river of air high above the ground that guides storms and air masses along across the globe.
According to Paul Pastelok, AccuWeather.com chief long-range meteorologist, "During next week, the jet stream will set up in such a way as to keep arctic air bottled up across central and northern Canada and will allow mild Pacific air to flow from west to east across much of the United States."

High temperatures may average 10 to perhaps 20 degrees Fahrenheit above normal in the northern tier states next week, compared to the 10 to 20 degree below normal temperatures during the first full week of January.
In areas from Chicago to Boston and New York City, this will translate to multiple days with highs in the 40s F. In areas from Dallas to Atlanta, the upcoming pattern will bring highs in the 60s on at least several days. From Minneapolis to Buffalo, New York, highs will reach or exceed the freezing mark during a few days.
Temperatures to Moderate This Week
The weather pattern is in transition this week.
Pockets of cold air will remain and can persist where there is snow on the ground into the middle of the week.
Clear skies and light winds at night can lead to frigid conditions during the first half of the week over the Upper Midwest to the interior Northeast.
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Just enough cold air can sink southward to allow a narrow swath of ice and snow Tuesday night into Wednesday in portions of North Carolina and southern Virginia.
During the second half of the week, the pattern will feature near-normal temperatures most days in most locations from the Midwest to the Northeast and South.

When Will Arctic Air Return?
The expanding warmup forecast for next week does not mean that winter is over.
"We expect much colder air to expand southward and then eastward late in the month," Pastelok said.
"The return of the very cold air is likely to occur over the Plains and Rockies within a day or two of Jan. 24, and then the East within a couple of days of the 26th," he continued.
Snow Versus Ice, Rain Just a Matter of Timing
Through the end of January, it appears the cold air and storms will generally remain out of sync to get a major snowfall in the Interstate-95 corridor of the Northeast.
"Storm systems pushing into the Southwestern states have caused an area of high pressure to bulge northward in the Caribbean and southwest Atlantic," Pastelok said.
This has forced stronger storms to track toward the Great Lakes and weaker storms to limp off the southern Atlantic coast.
"In order for there to be be more substantial snow and ice in the coastal mid-Atlantic and southern New England, we would need cold air to come in and hold its ground as a storm is approaching, rather than give up like we have been seeing," Pastelok added.
All it would take is one or two storms to come along with just the right amount of cold air in place for locations in the mid-Atlantic and southeastern New England to receive near-average snowfall for the season.
Thus far snowfall from Washington, D.C., to New York City and Boston has averaged 25 to 50 percent of normal this winter.

On Social Media
Sean Graf
seangraf
More cold air coming from midwest and east coast #WorldNewsTonight
R Andrew Ohge
RAndrewOhge
Warmup Awaits Midwest, East During Mid-January By Alex Sosnowski, Expert Senior Meteorologist January 12, 2015; …lnkd.in/egvmPZm
USA TODAY Travel
usatodaytravel
Bad flying weather this Monday AM. Storm slows flights in East, Midwest; 325+ canceled so far usat.ly/1yZFC5E pic.twitter.com/qVLDAkeVw3
Ronnie Matrix.
Ronnie_Matrix
@justatraveler Rainy and cold gloomy weather but it should warm up by mid week. How is it in the Midwest?
 
 
  • Cory Morrison · · Top Commenter · Sheridan College, Oakville
    This has so far been an average winter in the Great Lakes and Northeast (Mild December offset by Cold January). Maybe it just seems so mild since last year was unusually cold every winter month.
    • Matthew White · Top Commenter
      I agree, this winter isn't my kind. I keep getting concerned that winter will be ruined in February and the days leading up to the first day of spring.
    • Cory Morrison · · Top Commenter · Sheridan College, Oakville
      I do prefer milder than average winters over colder than average winters, I was just saying that this winter is not as mild as some people may think it is.
    • Matthew White · Top Commenter
      Cory Morrison I understand, not everyone is a fan of winter. in my opinion, I rather have snowy winters than these boring winters and yeah this winter is not that mild, I think December will be the only mild month this winter.
    • Cory Morrison · · Top Commenter · Sheridan College, Oakville
      This has been a lot like 2009-2010 and the early part of 2010-2011, when Southern Ontario had many days below freezing but with little snow cover.
    • Matthew White · Top Commenter
      Cory Morrison I think I remember those winters. we had winters that were awesome and ones that really sucked. by the way your interesting to talk to. :) we can both talk weather.
    • Aaron Ginther · Top Commenter · Lynchburg, Virginia
      2009-10 was an epic winter for us.. it was named "Snowpocolypse 2010". The Mid-Atlantic was slammed with snow after snow after snow. We ended up with our 3rd snowiest winter since records began in the late 1800's. I'd live to see 2009-10 happen again in my lifetime. Historic winter for sure, and in February we were dumped with 2 major snowfalls that shut down cities all along the east coast.
  • Grant McGuire · Top Commenter · Western Connecticut State University
    Remember the old days when we had just one (1) Arctic outbreak a year?
    • Aaron Ginther · Top Commenter · Lynchburg, Virginia
      I can assure you during the old days there was MANY more than one arctic outbreak in a winter season. Last winter was the closest to an old fashioned winter we have had since the 90's. The younger generations that have not lived through the earlier decades such as the 50's, 60's, 70's, etc.. don't know what "real" cold is.
    • Grant McGuire · Top Commenter · Western Connecticut State University
      It's good that extreme cold is alien to us. I also think nothing of having 90-degree days all summer; perfectly normal
    • Cory Morrison · · Top Commenter · Sheridan College, Oakville
      I think Grant was mainly referring to some of the milder winters of the 1990's and 2000's, but yes, several winters in the 1960's and 1970's were just as or almost as cold as 2013-2014. This winter seems more like the moderately cold winters of 2002-2003 or 2003-2004 so far.
  • Peter James · Top Commenter · Pilot at Corporate Jet Flight Department
    yuck, go away warm air... another wimpy winter?
  • Jim Feigert · Pennsylvania State University
    It looks like the dreaded southeast ridge is going to destroy the above normal snowfall forecast for this winter. Maybe next year.
 
 

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