By Linda Lam
Published: November 9,2014
The
calendar may only say November, but a mid-winter preview is looming
this week. Arctic air has begun spilling into the north-central U.S.,
and it will bring the coldest air by far of this young fall-winter
season to much of the central and eastern U.S.
(MORE: Expert Analysis | Winter Storm Central)
The
cold this time will last longer and will be more widespread than other
cold surges we have seen so far this season. By the end of the week,
more than two-thirds of the U.S. will see below-average temperatures,
and some areas could drop below zero during this cold snap.
The
cold front has already begun its plunge. Colder temperatures arrived in
Montana and the Dakotas late Sunday and will spread across more of the
Plains Monday. Wolf Creek, Montana, fell from 49 degrees to 27 degrees
in just one hour Sunday afternoon, according to Weather Underground
data.
(FORECAST HIGHS: Mon. | Tue. | Wed. | Thu. | Fri.)
Accompanying
the front will be a ripple of low pressure leading to widespread
snowfall across the north-central states. The Weather Channel has
declared this the first named winter storm of the 2014-15 season.
(FORECAST: Winter Storm Astro)
Highs
10 to 35 degrees below average will plunge into the Plains, western
Great Lakes, Upper and mid-Mississippi Valleys on Monday and Tuesday. Minneapolis
will see its first sub-freezing high temperatures of the season this
week. In fact, temperatures may struggle to top the freezing mark in the
Twin Cities for more than a week.
Rapid City, South Dakota, will go from a high in the lower 50s on Sunday to a high in the 20s on Monday.
Chicago
may also see highs near or slightly below freezing through this week
and into early next week. The last time Chicago had a daytime high that
didn't rise above freezing was March 25.
It will be breezy as
well, which will make it feel even colder. Wind chills will range from
the single digits below zero to the teens for much of the northern
Plains and Midwest, especially midweek.
A few record-cold high temperatures are possible as well, particularly in Indianapolis on Wednesday (current record is 33 set in 1996) and Chicago next Saturday (current record is 32 set in 1969).
The
coldest temperatures -- the heart of the cold air -- will be anchored
in the northern Plains and Midwest, but it will stretch across much of
the central and eastern U.S. High temperatures will only be in the teens
for much of the northern Rockies and northern Plains for several days,
especially Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs in the 20s and 30s will dominate
the rest of the Plains and Upper Midwest.
Single-digit lows will
become widespread this week. One of the first places to get that cold
was near Glacier National Park in Montana, where the Logan Pass Visitors
Center dropped to 9 degrees just before 5 p.m. Sunday.
Single-digit
lows will become more widespread in the northern Rockies and northern
Plains beginning Tuesday morning, and will eventually spread east across
much of the Upper Midwest during the week. Lows in the single digits
below zero -- and even a few double-digits below zero -- are likely in
parts of Montana, Wyoming and the western Dakotas by Wednesday and
Thursday mornings, and may show up as far east as the Twin Cities by
next weekend.
Areas that receive significant snowfall from Winter
Storm Astro may see temperatures fall even lower if clear, calm
conditions develop on any given night.
(FORECAST LOWS: Mon. | Tue. | Wed. | Thu. | Fri.)
The
cold front is expected to reach the Northeast by Thursday, with the
brunt of the cold first being felt by Friday. High temperatures won't
likely top 50 degrees Thursday in Washington, D.C. The last time that happened was on March 26. New York City may see its first freeze sometime late this week and Boston may also drop to 32 degrees, which last occurred on April 18.
The cold will also plunge into parts of the South. Nashville will see highs only in the 40s starting Wednesday, and daytime highs in Atlanta may struggle to reach 50 degrees for several days starting late in the week. Dallas will
see high temperatures only in the 40s for several days next week. The
last time Dallas did not reach 50 degrees was back on March 3.
Temperatures will remain below average for the central and eastern U.S. at least through the end of the week.
In
addition to Winter Storm Astro, some lake-effect snow is also expected
to develop by midweek as the cold air locks in across the Great Lakes.
The large expanse of cold air will allow any storm systems crossing the country to bring the potential for wintry weather:
-
One area of low pressure could bring a rain/snow mix to parts of the
Mid-Atlantic and Northeast late in the week. Snow, if any, should be
light.
- A second system could bring snow and ice much farther
south late in the week, possibly bringing winter driving conditions to
Kansas, Missouri, and even Oklahoma by the weekend of Nov. 15-16. It's
not out of the question that this could bring wintry weather to the East
Coast states by early next week, but it's too early to be confident in
any details.
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