7:00 AM | ****Arctic front arrives this afternoon with potential damaging wind gusts, possible snow showers and even a heavy snow squall...near zero degrees in some spots by late tonight****
Paul Dorian
6-Day DC Forecast
Today
Increasing clouds, quite cold, becoming windy with gusts to 50 mph, snow showers are possible this afternoon, perhaps even a heavy snow squall, highs in the lower 30’s
Tonight
Becoming mainly clear, windy, bitterly cold, lows near zero degrees in some spots with painfully cold wind chills
Thursday
Bitter cold, windy, mainly sunny skies, it’ll be a struggle for temperatures to reach the 20 degree mark and wind chill values will be painfully low
Thursday Night
Mainly clear, not as windy, bitter cold, lower teens for late night lows
Friday
Becoming mainly cloudy, quite cold, chance for some snow, upper 20’s for afternoon highs
Saturday
Mainly sunny, cold, near 40 degrees
Sunday
Mainly sunny early, clouds late, not as cold, near 50 degrees
Monday
Partly sunny, milder, chance of showers, low-to-mid 50’s
Discussion
The next 24 hours will bring weather to the Mid-Atlantic region that is not often seen around here. First, an Arctic front will blast through the region this afternoon and it could be accompanied by potentially damaging wind gusts of 50 mph or so, scattered snow showers, and perhaps a heavy snow squall. Any spot hit by a snow squall will see dramatically reduced visibility, strong winds, brief, but intense snowfall with a quick small accumulation and slippery roads. The most likely timing for this frontal passage is between noon and 4PM in the DC-to-Philly-to-NYC corridor. Once the front clears the region, temperatures will plunge late in the day and early tonight reaching late night lows near zero degrees in many suburban locations along the I-95 corridor. Temperatures on Thursday will struggle to climb to 20 degrees despite plenty of sunshine. Wind chills will be painfully cold tonight and on Thursday at levels well below zero. The winds lighten up tomorrow night, but temperatures can fall back to the lower teens in many spots. A quick-hitting low pressure system could throw some snow our way on Friday afternoon. Elsewhere, extreme cold has grinded the Upper Midwest to a virtual standstill with most schools and businesses closed for the next couple of days. Wind chills have reached very dangerous levels with some spots at more than 60 degrees below zero and this type of cold can cause frostbite in just a matter of a few minutes.
Meteorologist Paul Dorian
Perspecta, Inc.
perspectaweather.com