The period between Thanksgiving and Christmas will begin with a major Great Lakes snow event from Thursday to Friday and an Great Lakes/Midwest snowstorm this weekend and it could end with a White Christmas in many parts of the country. Two of the factors that have been highlighted here, likely leading to a cold and active stretch of weather, include an unusual early season stratospheric warming event and the likely movement of a tropical disturbance into a location that favors colder-than-normal conditions across a large part of the nation. Both of these phenomena – stratospheric warming and tropical forcing – will likely lead to a “buckling” of the polar jet stream which can lead to the unleashing of multiple Arctic air masses from northern Canada into the US (with intense cold in the table), and an activation of the southern branch of the jet stream which will likely produce multiple snow/ice threats.
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Breezy and cooler today with afternoon temperatures likely confined to the 40’s and peak on Wednesday afternoon around the 50-degree mark. After a milder Turkey Day and day on Friday, winter weather arrives in full throttle this weekend with the chance of snow showers across the plains and mountains and dropping temperatures such that highs on Sunday may be confined to the 20’s.
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After another quiet day at mid-week, a storm system should bring cooler conditions and some shower activity to the Denver metro region today and tonight and snow can fall in nearby higher elevation locations. The pattern for the weekend should become drier and warmer with sunshine likely on both days.
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Another relatively quiet day coming to the metro region featuring some sunshine and temperatures peaking in the middle 60’s. It turns colder-than-normal on Thursday, and the weather becomes somewhat unsettled with the chance of showers as we head to the end of the week.
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A storm system will edge away from the area today, but winds can remain quite noticeable and mountain snow may continue for awhile longer. After high temperatures near the 60-degree mark today and Tuesday, the rest of the week looks colder and there can be some rain and/or snow shower activity at times.
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The dry weather pattern continues across the area with no appreciable precipitation expected through the upcoming weekend. Temperatures will continue to run at above-normal levels with highs near 75 degrees and the low-to-mid 70’s on Friday afternoon. It does finally become more unsettled later in the weekend and early part of next week and the chance of rain and/or snow showers will be on the rise.
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An Arctic air mass that originated near the North Pole has infiltrated the eastern states today and it will have an impact all the way down to southern Florida by Tuesday morning. In fact, temperatures on Tuesday morning are likely to bottom out in the 30’s across the central part of the Sunshine State and the 40’s in southern Florida. At the same time, many suburban locations along the Mid-Atlantic’s I-95 corridor region from DC-to-Philly-to-NYC will feature the first hard freeze of the season with overnight lows well down in the 20’s in many spots. There is accumulating snow to go along with this early week Arctic blast with favored areas including the Great Lakes, interior sections of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast US, and the central Appalachians where a vigorous upper-level low is helping to destabilize the atmosphere in a big way.
While there will likely continue to be colder-than-normal temperatures across the northeastern states during the second half of the week, this winter-like pattern does not look like it’ll continue through November. In fact, there are signs for warmer-than-normal conditions to cover much of the nation from next week into the following week and it may include one or more severe weather outbreaks as well. Looking farther down the road, numerous signals point to a sustained colder-than-normal period to start the winter season as we transition into the month of December.
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The dry weather pattern continues across the area with no appreciable precipitation expected over at least the next few days. Temperatures should reach around the 70-degree mark this afternoon and for the next couple of afternoons for daily highs.
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An Arctic air mass that had its origins right near the North Pole will invade the eastern US early next week and there will be impacts felt all the way down to Florida. This will be the coldest air mass so far this season and many spots in the eastern states will experience their first hard freeze of the fall. A vigorous upper-level low will accompany this Arctic blast causing widespread unstable conditions and the result will likely be accumulating snow across some of the higher elevation Appalachian Mountains, and just downstream of the Great Lakes in those usual “favored” areas. And given an expected widespread area of unstable conditions, snow showers are even on the table for the immediate I-95 corridor from later Monday into Monday night. Looking ahead, it doesn’t look like there will be any sustained warmup across the northeastern part of the nation following this early next Arctic air outbreak with additional cold shots to follow into mid-month.
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The dry weather pattern continues across the area with no appreciable precipitation expected over the next several days. Temperatures should reach the 70-degree mark this afternoon and the breeze will be quite noticeable with gusts likely to 30 mph or so.
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