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Arctic Outbreak to Bring Coldest Air of the Season to Northeast, Subzero Cold to Midwest

By Jon Erdman

The coldest air of the season is poised to plunge into the Northeast this coming Valentine’s Day weekend. This Arctic blast will not only flirt with some daily records, but will also bring subzero cold to parts of the Midwest and reinforce the cold in the Southeast.

A sharp southward nosedive of the polar jet stream will help tap an air mass originating from the Canadian Arctica and send it into the eastern half of the country from Friday through Valentine’s Day.

Valentine's Cold Outbreak Setup

Valentine’s Cold Outbreak Setup

Let’s first break out the timeline of shivering details, then explain why it won’t last long.

Daily High/Lowlights

  • Friday: This potent cold will first be felt in the Midwest Friday, where highs will struggle to get much above zero in the typically coldest spots of eastern North Dakota, northern Minnesota, northern Wisconsin and the U.P. of Michigan.
  • Saturday morning: Subzero lows are expected as far south as parts of the southern and eastern Great Lakes, as well as parts of the Corn Belt. Lows in the teens and 20s below zero can be expected in the Upper Mississippi Valley. Wind chills in the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley will be well below zero.

(FORECAST: Twin Cities | Chicago | Detroit | Buffalo)

Forecast Highs: Valentine's Cold Outbreak

Forecast Highs: Valentine’s Cold Outbreak

  • Saturday: The cold blast arrives in the Northeast, mid-Atlantic states and surges into the Southeast. Highs will hold in the teens and 20s in the Boston-Washington corridor, with single digits and teens the most the thermometer can muster in the interior Northeast, Great Lakes, Ohio Valley and Upper Midwest. Some parts of Upstate New York may even struggle to rise above zero. Some daily record cold highs may be set in the Great Lakes and Appalachians.
  • Sunday morning: Subzero lows are possible in southern New England and the suburbs of New York City and Philadelphia. Single digits and teens will drive into the Piedmont of the Carolinas. A few daily record lows are possible, but widespread record lows aren’t expected. Thirties and 40s will plunge into parts of north and central Florida. The Upper Midwest won’t be quite as cold, but should still have some subzero lows, in spots.

(FORECAST: NYC | Philadelphia | Washington D.C.)

Forecast Lows: Valentine's Cold Outbreak

Forecast Lows: Valentine’s Cold Outbreak

  • Sunday: In the Northeast and Midwest, teens and 20s will be the rule for most on Valentine’s Day. The Carolinas and Tennessee Valley will hold in the 30s and 40s. North Florida will remain cool in the 50s. Some record cold daily high temperatures are possible in the Northeast, Ohio Valley and Appalachians.

Several cities in the Northeast could see their coldest temperatures of the season so far this weekend.

Boston’s Logan Airport hasn’t dipped below 0 degrees yet this winter, but could do so Sunday morning. Incidentally, subzero cold is quite rare in the city of Boston. They’ve only had nine subzero lows so far this century, three of which occurred last winter.

Pittsburgh could also slide below zero Sunday morning, something that happened nine times last winter, but happens, on average, only twice each year.

Why This Won’t Last Long

Now for the good news, if you’re already starting to get a little winter fatigue. The bitterly cold air will be very short-lived. Temperatures will already begin to warm up a bit starting Monday.

Above: Forecast surface temperature anomalies (above and below average) from the Monday evening mean of the ECMWF ensemble forecast. Note how the coldest anomalies (pink, purple, blue contours) largely disappear by next Tuesday at the end of the loop.

The reason for this is another pattern shift next week.

ECMWF ensemble mean forecast made at 7 p.m. ET Monday, of Arctic oscillation (blue), Pacific-North American oscillation (light green) and North Atlantic oscillation (red). Note the AO (blue) and PNA (green) flip sign on Feb. 15, indicative of the pattern change ahead. (The Weather Company, Professional Division)

Essentially, the large northward bulge of the jet stream bringing record warmth to the West, including California and the Desert Southwest, will break down. Weather geeks refer to this as a switch from a positive Pacific-North American oscillation to a negative one.

The corresponding southward plunge of the jet exporting cold air out of Canada into the Midwest and East will then also flatten out next week.

Again, weather geeks would say the Arctic oscillation will switch from negative to positive, meaning the winds around the North Pole will be stronger, keeping the coldest Arctic air bottled up instead of plunging south.

So, expect a February thaw after this weekend’s shivering in parts of the Midwest and East by the latter half of next week.

 

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