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Earth

Climate Change May Have Caused a 'Wandering' Polar Vortex and a Colder Winter (space.com) 48

Space.com reports: High above the North Pole, the polar vortex, a fast-spinning whirl of frigid air, is doing a weird shimmy that may soon bring cold and snowy weather to the Eastern U.S., Northern Europe and East Asia for weeks on end, meteorologists say.

While it's not unusual for the polar vortex to act up, this particular reconfiguration — wandering around and possibly splitting in two — may be tied to climate change in the rapidly warming Arctic, said Judah Cohen, director of seasonal forecasting at Atmospheric and Environmental Research in Massachusetts, part of Verisk Analytics, a risk-assessment company. "Expect a more wintery back-half of winter here in the Eastern U.S. than what we had in the first half," Cohen told Live Science.

The Arctic is heating up faster than any other region in the world. As a result, sea-ice cover there is shrinking — in September 2020 and December 2020, the Arctic sea-ice cover shrunk to its second-lowest and third-lowest minimum on record for those months, respectively, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. The warmer-than-usual temperatures in the Arctic are likely throwing the polar vortex out of whack, Cohen said... During the winter, a jet stream of air that keeps the polar vortex in place sometimes weakens, allowing the vortex's chilly air to extend southward...

Disruptions to the polar vortex are key for forecasts, as about two weeks after they happen, the troposphere gets a wallop of weird weather, which can last for weeks. Because of this week's polar vortex disruption, "there's indications we'll see some colder weather within two weeks... in the Eastern U.S., Northern Europe and East Asia," Cohen said.

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Climate Change May Have Caused a 'Wandering' Polar Vortex and a Colder Winter

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  • Cold and snowy for weeks means "winter" here.

    I just looked up our degree-days for the season:
        SINCE JUL 1: 2799
        average: 3186
        deviation: -387
        last year: 3099

    so a bit warmer than normal so far. This week is often -30F here, it's going down to 7F later this week. By next week we'll be warming up until August; it never gets bitterly cold outside of January.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      They were literally wrong. A winter is associated with climate and not weather, in a literal sense. A cold winter is the entire season and a few extreme weather events.

      So in reality in literal terms you will generally have warmer winters from here on in but and it is a nasty old butt, you will have more extreme weather events and the existence relative weather and climate balance established over thousands of years, starts to tile to a more warming climate, throwing up extreme weather events in both direct

      • my erections are not teeny tiny. They call it a Hang Dang for a reason....when she sees its...she be like Danngggg
  • 30 years ago when it snowed it would actually be light and fluffy, you know the fun type of snow. Now all we get here in SE PA is a few inches of wet snow, sleet and mess. Maybe two times a year. It is simply never cold enough for good snow anymore.

    I hope this holds true, I can't wait!
  • That is the question. May be or may not be, but either way, it does seem to be changing.
  • Chaos begets chaos (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Firedog ( 230345 ) on Sunday January 10, 2021 @07:32PM (#60922762)

    Hell... Earth's climate is an incredibly chaotic system that we are (as a barely sentient species) just on the verge of potentially being able to understand.

    The places where severe snowfall is expected align with past ice sheet locations, but given the amount of CO2 that weâ(TM)ve pumped into the atmosphere over the last 200 years (and probably the next 50 years at a minimum) I donâ(TM)t think an Ice Age is coming.

    The climate always has changed, and it will continue to do so. Continents move. Nothing is permanent and nothing ever remains the same. It would not be healthy for the planet if we could permanently lock in the current state of climate, however convenient that might be for human legal affairs and property rights.

    We (as a species) have increased the rate of climate change more than usual, but any number of other factors could (and have) do/done that. A large meteorite, a supervolcano erupting... these events *could* happen, and they *do* happen. Every few hundred thousand years or so... and it's completely out of our control, given our current technology. We (as a species) just need to be on alert and prepare for such events. I don't really look at our self-inflicted climate change problem in any different light than that.

    We can't turn back the last 200 years, even if we stopped emitting CO2 tomorrow. It will take centuries for the current "stimulus" to work its way through the system, and who knows what the end state will be. Iâ(TM)m going to guess a mostly ice-free Arctic Ocean and substantial parts of Antarctica becoming open land that will support some sort of plant life. Significant rise in sea levels, maybe 50-60m. But thatâ(TM)s just my gut feel.

    With all that said, I own land at a high elevation and would not personally buy any property lower than 100m above sea level.

    And I think we (as a planet) need to start coming up with plans to resettle all those that live at that elevation level or lower. And plans to pay for it (along with potential mini-terraforming projects to make large parts of Nevada, Arizona, the Sahara, inland Australia, and possibly parts of Antarctica?) inhabitable.

    • With all that said, I own land at a high elevation and would not personally buy any property lower than 100m above sea level.

      Wow! How much do you think the ocean is predicted to rise within your lifetime?

    • Holy crap you fundamentally don't understand the issues at play at all do you. Resettling of a few people in flood zones are a tiny completely irrelevant component of climate change, not even worth mentioning in the footnote of mitigation strategies.

      Do you want to understand what climate change means? Then ask yourself how you elected a leader that decided building a wall on an arbitrary nation border factors in to your realisation that some areas of the world become inhabitable.

      Your assertion that an exter

  • You know, the smoke being blown up everyone's asses from Washington.

  • At least we were warned.
  • by kot-begemot-uk ( 6104030 ) on Monday January 11, 2021 @02:30AM (#60924030) Homepage
    1. Disruptions to polar vortex are regular events. They usually happen in a La Nina year and result in abnormally COLD weather over Siberia and if the disruption is big - Europe. Exhibit A: Winter of 1978-1979, -45 in Moscow on New Year Eve (35 degrees lower than long term average). Exhibit B: Winter of 2011-2012: -35 in Czech Republic, Austria and Southern Germany. One was due this or next year anyway - we are in a La Nina period

    2. The ice picture quoted is simply incorrect. This year was nowhere near as low as as the lowest years so far: 2012-2013 (summer coverage) and 2016-2017 (winter coverage). Exhibit A: Official ICE data by the USA federal agency in charge of that operating at uni of Boulder - http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicen... [nsidc.org]

    It was however, anomalous - extremely long and warm autumn - you can see that from the graph (that is the actual anomaly).

    3. The "live science" article conveniently omits the fact that while the ice coverage in December was lower than long term average by ~ 9% it was the month with the fastest growth on record since the records have begun. That is not surprising when you see the result of the polar vortex perturbation. When the polar vortex has a wobbly, this results is a monster anticyclone forming on top of most of Siberia and parts of Mongolia and China as well as more stable than usual seasonal anti-cyclone over Greenland. These monsters result in an environment which can be best described as ice hell. Exhibit A - official temperature data for December, Northern Hemisphere: http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicen... [nsidc.org]

    As you can see the temperatures across Siberia are at least 5 degrees lower than normal long term average. That spills back into the Arctic and hell freezes. While normal air temperatures over the Arctic oceans are usually in the -10 to -20 even in mid-winter, it is chasing -40 in places this year. The reason for this is that there is no polar vortex to perturb it and spread it around.

    Last, but no least, the whole picture is much more complex and trying to shoehorn absolutely EVERY event into a global warming chant is not science. It is shamanism. While at it, global warming is evident - see the ice pictures. You can see that the two warm currents going INTO the arctic (Gulfstream and Bering) are both significantly stronger than normal resulting in a different ice pattern. They are still managing to keep the sea open despite air at -50 spilling on top from the continent.

    That is much more interesting than shamanic chants about the Vortex being perturbed by warming and is the actual evidence.

  • by MacMann ( 7518492 ) on Monday January 11, 2021 @07:31AM (#60924702)

    I grow tired of articles talking about global warming and offering no solutions. Here's a solution to consider, nuclear fission power. I'll see plenty on Slashdot about wind and solar energy developments but nothing on nuclear power. At least nothing for a long time. Things are happening in nuclear power. There's new stuff all the time. Why not discuss them?

    I had someone bring up how nuclear power is unsafe by pointing to the Fukushima disaster. Someone really smart, a PhD I recall. I replied by pointing out that Fukushima was built before Chernobyl, therefore far from an example of what we can accomplish today. I do wish I could have had more time for this smart person to reply because I would have liked to hear what this intelligent but quite ignorant person would have come up with.

    Nuclear power is safe. Nuclear power is the lowest CO2 energy source we know of. If anyone opposes nuclear fission power then they are not taking global warming seriously.

  • This reminds me of that film: "The Day After Tomorrow" where climate change triggers a new Ice Age. I doubt this will actually happen, but let's see.

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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