Polar vortex bringing frigid temperatures to Canada, U.S.

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Manmade climate change is here folks.


Polar vortex bringing frigid temperatures to Canada, U.S.

After a mild fall so far, temperatures have plunged dramatically in recent days across much of Western Canada, and now the cold will extend to Eastern Canada this week because of a polar vortex.

Temperatures around –30 C combined with winds up to 15 km/hr led to extreme wind chill values of –40 or colder in southwestern Manitoba on the weekend.

Extreme cold warnings were in effect Sunday in central and northern Alberta, where temperatures dipped below –20, with wind chill values near or below -40.

B.C.'s Central Coast and inland areas were expected to see a high of 0 on Sunday with a warning for wind chill values of -20 to -25, continuing Sunday through Monday morning.

The polar vortex, a swirl of air moving counterclockwise, is drawing its cold air from a ridge of high pressure over the North Pacific and a second one over Western Europe, said Chris St. Clair of the Weather Network.

Arctic air slowly spilling south

"The two ridges are holding the cold in place. The cold air settles to the surface and very slowly is spilling to the south," he said.

Forecasters say the cold circulation of air will push down temperatures from -2 to -15 through the course of the week in the Lower Great Lakes and produce a wind chill of around -20 by Wednesday, with similar temperatures on Thursday in Montreal and Atlantic Canada.

In the interim, lake-effect snow coming off what Environment Canada is calling a "Colorado Low" is in the forecast Sunday afternoon for parts of southern Ontario. A total of 10 to 15 centimetres of snow is expected with westerly winds. Snow began over southwestern Ontario Sunday morning and the system was to reach eastern Ontario by late afternoon.

About 10 centimetres of snow was expected for Ottawa and Montreal on Monday morning. In Atlantic Canada, flurries and occasional snow squalls are expected over northern and western Cape Breton Sunday and Sunday night before gradually easing Monday morning.

The Arctic blast will hit the U.S. Midwest on Tuesday with the coldest temperatures of -12 C and lower in Minnesota.

Chicago's department of streets and sanitation is monitoring a storm system that was to move into northern Illinois later Sunday afternoon, bringing up to 27 centimetres of snow.

Up to a metre of snow has fallen in northeastern Ohio since Friday, weather forecasters said Sunday.

U.S. meteorologists have warned that December will deliver round after round of bitter cold to the majority of the United States. The plunging temperatures come after the warmest-ever October through November period for the Lower 48 states.

Polar vortex bringing frigid temperatures to Canada, U.S. - Canada - CBC News
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Don't worry Das, there is no carbon tax if you don't believe in it. :lol:
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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The article is about the polar vortex (a fancy name for winter cold snap). The stupid comment by the OP about climate change was the one I was addressing.

It's a fancy name for something that has existed for eons. Circumpolar winds.

Mars has them, Venus has them, Saturn and some of its moons have them....


Polar vortices across the solar system
Posted by Emily Lakdawalla

2014/01/10 05:49 UTC

Topics: pretty pictures, Cassini, Titan, Venus Express, Venus, explaining science, Mars, Saturn, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter

If you live in the U.S. you've heard a lot about the "polar vortex" that's making lives miserable for nearly everybody on the continent this week. (Everybody, that is, except for southern Californians. Ahem.) I guess a comment was made somewhere that the notion of a polar vortex was a recent invention -- I did not see that original comment, but I saw the response to it by all the atmospheric scientists I follow on Twitter. I was particularly amused by a retweet of television meteorologist Al Roker's response: he went to his bookshelf and pulled out the 1959 American Meteorological Society Glossary of Meteorology and showed that there was such a thing as a polar vortex being discussed even in those ancient times.

polar vortex -- (Also called polar cyclone, polar low, circumpolar whirl.) The large-scale cyclonic circulation in the middle and upper troposphere centered generally in the polar regions. Specifically, the vortex has two centers in the mean, one near Baffin Island and another over northeast Siberia. The associated cyclonic wind system cromprises the westerlies of middle latitudes.

Now, I am not an atmospheric scientist. But one thing I have learned well about atmospheric science is that what happens in Earth's atmosphere, usually happens in other atmospheres. Indeed, there is a polar vortex in every atmosphere -- it's just what happens when there is an atmosphere over a spinning ball. So here's a little tour of polar vortices in the solar system.

Mercury has no atmosphere -- it has an "exosphere", which essentially means that although there are molecules moving about in the space above the solid surface, there are too few of them for collisions to take place. Without collisions, you have no wind, no circulation.

Next out is Venus. Venus has wonderful polar vortices -- in fact, there is usually a dipole, a double vortex at each pole. That's what Pioneer Venus saw, and it's also what Venus Express usually sees

Etc etc etc.

You're just making yourself look dumb by not reading the article.
 

Jinentonix

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 6, 2015
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Winter is climate change. LOL

And love the logic on how global warming causes cold weather. Idiot logic.
Actually, the logic isn't idiotic. Pretty much every warming event was preceded, or more accurately, interrupted by a cooling event. As temps increase, more and more melt water flows into the oceans temporarily cooling them causing global temps to drop. But as the glaciers diminish further and the melt water slows to a trickle, the oceans warm up again and you have your global warming event.
As history has amply proven, this does not require human influence to occur.

As for the polar vortex, it's been understood since at least the '50s that volcanic eruptions have a direct influence on the polar vortex. That influence can last as long as 2-3 years after an eruption.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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Manmade climate change is here folks.
Really?? You actually want to promote that man made winter, does that not make us the gods of the place then??

It's going to be here for awhile so get used to it. Think of this map when you plan your escape to the south.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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The article is about the polar vortex (a fancy name for winter cold snap). The stupid comment by the OP about climate change was the one I was addressing.

The polar vortex is not a fancy name for a winter cold snap.

At least make an effort to be honest lol
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
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Except for a probable increase in tornados in Southern Ontario, warming will likely improve the climate, there.