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How frigid polar vortex blasts are connected to global warming

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How frigid polar vortex blasts are connected to global warming Empty Re: How frigid polar vortex blasts are connected to global warming

Post by Guest 1/2/2019, 19:04

A record-breaking cold wave is sending literal shivers down the spines of millions of Americans. Temperatures across the upper Midwest are forecast to fall an astonishing 50 degrees Fahrenheit (28 degrees Celsius) below normal this week – as low as 35 degrees below zero. Pile a gusty wind on top, and the air will feel like -60 F.

This cold is nothing to sneeze at. The National Weather Service is warning of brutal, life-threatening conditions. Frostbite will strike fast on any exposed skin. At the same time, the North Pole is facing a heat wave with temperatures approaching the freezing point – about 25 degrees Fahrenheit (14 C) above normal [second figure].
What is causing this topsy-turvy pattern? You guessed it: the polar vortex.
In the past several years, thanks to previous cold waves, the polar vortex has become entrenched in our everyday vocabulary and served as a butt of jokes for late-night TV hosts and politicians. But what is it really? Is it escaping from its usual Arctic haunts more often? And a question that looms large in my work: How does global warming fit into the story?
Rivers of air
Actually, there are two polar vortices in the Northern Hemisphere, stacked on top of each other. The lower one is usually and more accurately called the jet stream. It's a meandering river of strong westerly winds around the Northern Hemisphere, about seven miles above Earth's surface, near the height where jets fly.


Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2019-01-frigid-polar-vortex-blasts-global.html#jCp

How frigid polar vortex blasts are connected to global warming 1-howfrigidpol

How frigid polar vortex blasts are connected to global warming 3-howfrigidpol

Deep freezes in a warming world

Splits in the stratospheric polar vortex do happen naturally, but should we expect to see them more often thanks to climate change and rapid Arctic warming? It is possible that these cold intrusions could become a more regular winter story. This is a hot research topic and is by no means settled, but a handful of studies offer compelling evidence that the stratospheric polar vortex is changing, and that this trend can explain bouts of unusually cold winter weather.
Undoubtedly this new polar vortex attack will unleash fresh claims that global warming is a hoax. But this ridiculous notion can be quickly dispelled with a look at predicted temperature departures around the globe for early this week. The lobe of cold air over North America is far outweighed by areas elsewhere in the United States and worldwide that are warmer than normal.
Symptoms of a changing climate are not always obvious or easy to understand, but their causes and future behaviors are increasingly coming into focus. And it's clear that at times, coping with global warming means arming ourselves with extra scarfs, mittens and long underwear.
How frigid polar vortex blasts are connected to global warming 1x1 Explore further: Science Says: Get used to polar vortex outbreaks


Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2019-01-frigid-polar-vortex-blasts-global.html#jCp
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