The US Midwest is bracing for a potentially historic cold snap caused by the polar vortex extending southward into the Great Lakes area, USA Today reports, citing a National Weather Service (NWS) forecasts.
The cold snap, which the NWS has described as potentially "unprecedented," "brutal" and "life-threatening," is expected to touch down in the US in the middle of next week, affecting nearly 200 million people from the Midwest and the Great Lakes regions to the eastern seaboard, all the way down to Florida.
But the coming storm, arriving from the Canadian Arctic, could be even worse, forecasters warn, with bone-chilling temperatures of as low as —48 degrees Celsius expected in the upper Midwest when accounting for wind chill next week. Residents of Chicago should brace for temperatures of as low as —43 degrees Celsius come next week if forecasts are correct. That's comparable to Oymyakon, Siberia, the coldest permanently inhabited town on earth, where average temperatures dip below —50 degrees Celsius in the winter months.
Wonderful way to visualize the polar vortex…
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) 25 января 2019 г.
The features arrive from the Canadian Arctic — and sometimes they make it into the Lower 48
e.g. GFS (tropopause temperatures) pic.twitter.com/oEvyFdpLdw
According to the Weather Channel, the cold Arctic air will leave Minneapolis, Chicago, Detroit, Des Moines, Iowa and the Ohio Valley facing subzero temperatures as low as —29 degrees Celsius, nearing or dipping below seasonal temperatures in much of the Arctic itself, including Greenland, northern Canada and Alaska.
Keeping things upbeat, some meteorologists have dubbed the coming storm "Barney", as in Barney the Dinosaur, due to forecast maps' use of the colour purple to indicate extremely cold temperatures.
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) 25 января 2019 г.
The polar vortexes, rotating counter-clockwise relative to the earth's orbit around the Sun around the planet's poles, help keep temperatures low in these regions. During the winter in the northern hemisphere, the Arctic polar vortex expands, sending its cold air south. The phenomenon was popularised during the cold North American winter of 2014, but affects areas of Europe, and Asia as well, with notable cold bursts reported in North America in 1977, 1982, 1985 and 1989, according to the National Weather Service.