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The polar vortex has fractured, and the eastern U.S. faces a punishing stretch of winter weather

Forecasts call for a very cold and stormy pattern, just underway, to peak in a few weeks

January 15, 2019 at 12:32 p.m. EST
Comparison of the polar vortex on Dec. 18, 2018 and Jan. 3. (earth.nullschool.net)

The swirling winds tens of thousands of feet high in the sky above the Arctic — the dreaded polar vortex — broke apart into three parts to ring in 2019. Now the eastern half of the United States is about to feel the consequences.

Weather models project the onset of a severe and punishing winter weather pattern in just over 10 days, with extreme cold and heightened storminess. In fact, the transition to this harsh winter pattern has likely already begun.

Before and during the vortex disruption, locations east of the Rockies basked in unusually mild weather for weeks. Washington witnessed 28 days of warmer-than-normal weather, and the first half of January ranked among the top 10 warmest on record in Minneapolis and Milwaukee:

But the polar vortex split, which forecasters predicted in December, has likely triggered a transition toward a much more wintry pattern.

Even though the vortex split around the start of the New Year, it often takes weeks for the effects to become apparent in day-to-day weather. The vortex zips around the North Pole high in the stratosphere about twice as high up as commercial aircraft fly, so its downward propagation through the atmosphere is a drawn out process.

This past weekend’s storm which dumped 10 inches of snow in both St. Louis and Washington may have been one of the first indicators of the shift to harsher winter conditions.

“I think the snowstorm this weekend was related to the vortex split,” said Judah Cohen, a researcher at Atmospheric and Environmental Research in Boston, and polar vortex expert. “I think we’re seeing the impacts already.”

After the vortex fractures, it can fundamentally alter the flow in the atmosphere. Steering winds which blow from west to east — transporting mild air from the Pacific Ocean over the continental U.S. — shift to more north and south. Arctic air can more readily be drawn into the North America and Europe.

“The first order impact [of a vortex split] is that you slow the west to east flow and add more of a north-south component,” said Cohen. “There’s a much greater exchange of arctic air that’s moving south.”

A blast of a bitter Arctic air is forecast to plunge into the eastern U.S. late this week and this weekend, the coldest of the winter so far in some areas — another possible sign of the vortex disruption.

By Sunday, temperatures are forecast to be about 10 to 25 degrees colder than normal in the central U.S. and parts of the East. Temperatures may plunge below zero in Kansas City on Sunday, where the AFC championship game between the Chiefs and the New England Patriots will be played.

But this cold snap may still just be an appetizer.

Computer models suggest the onset of persistent and acute cold may hold off until between Jan. 25 and 30. In the meantime, temperatures may fluctuate wildly as this new, harsh regime becomes established.

“This is more of a transition period,” said Michael Ventrice, a meteorological scientist at the Weather Co., which is owned by IBM. “We’re kicking out the old regime when the Pacific jet was bringing a lot of warmth to the U.S.”

The signal for an extended period of cold and potentially stormy weather is very strong continuing well into February, say long-range forecasters. “I think you can be very confident,” Ventrice said.

Ventrice said the European modeling system has been predicting this cold pattern for six straight weeks without exception, which is rare. “There’s something big driving this signal and it’s tied to the stratospheric warming [or vortex split]."

The American modeling system is in agreement with the European in forecasting the initiation of a very cold pattern in about two weeks.

Once this wintry pattern becomes entrenched, it may be difficult to dislodge.

“These impacts can last four to six, and maybe eight, weeks,” said Cohen, who expects the worst winter conditions to peak in February. After last year’s polar vortex disruption in February, abnormally cold and stormy weather dominated the eastern U.S. in March and well into April.

While forecasters cannot predict exactly how cold it will get this year, where and when big storms will form and who will get the most snow, Cohen said to expect “intense periods of winter weather becoming more frequent including more frequent episodes of arctic outbreaks."

Because of the developing El Nino event, which adds moisture to storms traveling across the South, the snow potential will also be enhanced during this period. “We’re seeing all of these southern stream storms, which will act as seedlings for nor’easters,” Ventrice said.

Ventrice said he expects the cold to penetrate into the Deep South and that, by the end of February, winter will have worn out its welcome.

“I think it’s going to be a completely 180 in the psyche for people living in the eastern U.S.,” Ventrice said. “In Boston, we want the snow now because we haven’t had it. By the time this is over, we’re going to be ready to be done.”

Amidst a partial government shutdown, residents in D.C. and Virginia enjoyed the first significant snowfall of the season on Jan. 13. (Video: Elyse Samuels, David Bruns, Whitney Leaming/The Washington Post)