Wednesday, January 3, 2018

‘Bomb Cyclone’ Brings Rare Snow to Florida and Georgia

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Children played on a frozen pond in Memphis on Tuesday. Credit Jim Weber/The Commercial Appeal, via Associated Press
The South was feeling the frosty effects on Wednesday of a powerful winter storm, known as a “bomb cyclone,” forecast to hit most of the Eastern United States, prolonging a stretch of strikingly bitter cold that has enveloped much of the country and already buried some places under a record amount of snow.
Months after a busy hurricane season, the storm brought frigid wind, freezing rain and even snow to parts of northern Florida and southern Georgia — areas unaccustomed to white winters. The National Weather Service warned of hazardous travel conditions, including limited visibility and icy roads. Forecasters expect the storm to eventually hit the Northeast, all the way up to Maine.
Heres the latest:
• A winter storm warning has been issued by the National Weather Service for parts of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, with heavy snowfall and wind chills of up to -25 degrees expected.
• Freezing rain and ice shut down significant stretches of highway in northern Florida. The authorities in Leon County, which includes Tallahassee, said Wednesday that more than 50 miles of road on Interstate 10 had been closed in both directions, as were parts of Highway 90.
• Airlines have canceled many flights to and from destinations along the East Coast and warned that their schedules could face continued disruptions. American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue, Southwest and United were among the major carriers that said passengers could change certain travel plans without penalties.
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• It was 35 degrees in Jacksonville, Fla., and New Orleans; 23 degrees in Jackson, Miss.; 28 degrees in Atlanta; and 14 degrees in the Raleigh-Durham area of North Carolina, as of about 7:30 a.m. on Wednesday.
• It was the coldest it has been in Raleigh-Durham in more than 130 years. A temperature of 9 degrees at the area’s airport tied a record low set in 1887, the National Weather Service said.
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So, what’s this about a ‘bomb cyclone’?

When discussing the storm, some weather forecasters have referred to a “bomb cyclone.” Calling it a “bomb” sounds dire, but those kinds of storms are not exceedingly rare — there was one in New England recently.
What makes a storm a “bomb” is how fast the atmospheric pressure falls; falling atmospheric pressure is a characteristic of all storms. By definition, the barometric pressure must drop by at least 24 millibars in 24 hours for a storm to be called a bomb cyclone.
Here’s how it works: Deep drops in barometric pressure occur when a region of warm air meets one of cold air. The air starts to move, and the rotation of the earth creates a cyclonic effect. The direction is counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere (when viewed from above), leading to winds that come out of the northeast — a Nor’easter.
That’s what happened at the end of October, when warm air from the remnants of a tropical cyclone over the Atlantic collided with a cold front coming from the Midwest. Among other impacts then, more than 80,000 electric customers in Maine lost power as high winds toppled trees.
A similar effect is expected late Wednesday, as warm air over the ocean meets extremely cold polar air that has descended over the East. Pressure is expected to fall quickly from Florida northward.
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Tony Sampson tried to warm up by a fire underneath a freeway in Houston, where temperatures were in the 30s on Tuesday. Credit Michael Ciaglo/Houston Chronicle, via Associated Press

New York and the Northeast can expect frigid and snowy conditions.

New York City is forecast to receive four to six inches of snow, beginning Wednesday night, with a dangerously cold -14 degree wind chill, the Weather Service said in a briefing.
Chilly gusts of up to 50 m.p.h. are likely to whip eastern Long Island and southeastern Connecticut starting late Thursday morning, bringing with them the potential for downed tree limbs and scattered power outages, the National Weather Service said.
Over a foot of snow, with possible blizzard conditions, is likely in New London and New Haven Counties in Connecticut, in Suffolk County on Long Island and in Middlesex County in New Jersey through Thursday.
A 25- to 50-mile westward shift of the storm’s predicted path would increase the likelihood of a foot of snow for Long Island and Connecticut and more than six inches in the New York and New Jersey metropolitan areas.
For Bostonians, Wednesday’s forecast high of 28 degrees was almost a welcome relief after days of temperatures that hovered in or near the single digits. But it was quite literally cold comfort, with Thursday’s storm expected to drop 8 to 12 inches of snow on the city and potentially create blizzard conditions up and down the New England coast.
The National Weather Service posted winter storm warnings beginning at 1 a.m. Thursday for a broad swath of Massachusetts and all of Rhode Island, and a blizzard warning stretched along much of the coast, from Cape Cod to the Canadian border.
“Travel will be very difficult to impossible,” said a bulletin from the Weather Service’s office in Taunton, Mass., which also warned of potential for coastal flooding and up to 14 inches of snowfall in places. The snow could fall as fast as 2-3 inches per hour on Thursday morning, the service said.
The storm will follow a long period of deep cold that has already taxed transit systems, fuel supplies and homeless shelters in New England. And it has turned many of the region’s harbors to ice.
“Oh yeah, we’re frozen solid,” said Dawson Farber, the harbormaster in Dennis, Mass., who said the harbor looked like “a huge saltwater skating rink right in front of my window.”
As the South endured a particularly unusual dose of frigid weather, Washington remained firmly in the grip of a winter that has already proven treacherous. The District of Columbia government activated its cold emergency plan on Dec. 27, and on Wednesday, it extended it further.
Washington’s strategy calls for emergency shelters to open in all four of the city’s quadrants and for officials to provide transportation to “warmth and safety.”
On Wednesday morning, city firefighters were breaking ice along a segment of the Potomac River that divides Virginia and the District. The city also noted that the weather was proving helpful for training: Workers were using the arctic conditions to train for ice rescues.
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A fountain froze on Wednesday in Atlanta, where temperatures dipped into the 20s. Credit David Goldman/Associated Press

Snow is falling in some unlikely places.

By the time workdays would normally be beginning, light snow had already fallen in northern Florida and southern Georgia — areas that are not highly accustomed to winter weather.
Tallahassee, Florida’s capital, sees flurries every few years, said Mark Wool, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s Tallahassee office. But the tenth to two-tenths of an inch of snow recorded Wednesday? Not since 1989.
“It’s quite rare,” Mr. Wool said. “Everybody down here’s pretty excited.”
The dusting, which was preceded by a couple of hours of freezing rain, lasted about an hour. It was over by about 9 a.m., though more snow was falling just north of Tallahassee, in southern Georgia.
Chris Jones, the fire chief in Thomas County in southern Georgia, said the snowfall was brief there, too.
“The radar indication was almost spot on: When it moved past us on the radar, it almost stopped immediately,” said Mr. Jones, who added that there had been small accumulations, but that the roads were rapidly clearing.
A handful of school districts in North Florida that had already resumed classes after winter break, including in Tallahassee and Gainesville, had previously closed. It is the second time in recent months that many children in the area will lose school days because of the weather: Hurricane Irma forced shutdowns in September.

Southern governors are encouraging residents to stay aware.

Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina said on Wednesday he would declare an emergency in places forecast to be affected by the storm, including eastern counties unused to snow. Up to 8 inches are expected in Camden and Currituck Counties, in the state’s northeastern edge.
“What I worry about are people in their homes who may lose power and may lose the ability to heat their homes,” Mr. Cooper said.
His administration is providing four-wheelers and Humvees to local governments to help people who might get stranded. State troopers are marking abandoned cars along roads to ensure no one is left stranded.
“The good news is that the storm is moving quickly and should be gone by Thursday evening,” the governor said. “The bad news is that we will have unusually cold temperatures sticking around for several days.”
On Tuesday, Gov. Nathan Deal of Georgia declared an emergency for 28 counties along or near the state’s southeastern coast. Mr. Deal’s declaration includes Chatham County, home to about 289,000 people.
Mr. Deal was among the Georgia politicians who received criticism after a winter storm paralyzed Atlanta in 2014. In a statement on Tuesday evening, he noted that the state Department of Transportation had sent all of its brine trucks, as well as 75 plows, to southeast Georgia.
“I encourage all Georgians in the potentially impacted areas to stay informed, get prepared and be safe,” he said.

What’s happening to the birds that flew south for the winter?

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A thin layer of ice formed on a pond in Salem, Va., on Tuesday as much of the Eastern United States shivered through freezing temperatures. Credit Erica Yoon/The Roanoke Times, via Associated Press
Geoff LeBaron, the director of Audubon’s Christmas Bird Count, a kind of early-winter bird census that has been taking place since the year 1900, said that, fortunately, birds that could not effectively weather cold snaps were already further south than the continental United States.
“Warblers, thrushes, tanagers, they’re down in Central and South America,” he said. “The birds that winter in the Southern U.S. are better able to withstand the temperatures and have more flexibility in terms of the food they can eat.”
Mr. LeBaron said that waterfowl and marsh birds might be affected if there was significant snow cover or if water sources were frozen over.
And he warned that the increasing number of hummingbirds that spend the winter in the South might be affected, and said that people who maintain the birds’ feeders should keep the feeders warm and well-supplied.
But he said that the short amount of time the cold was expected to last would allow others to scrounge through.
“The birds that are wintering down there are going to have to hunker down and deal with the conditions,” he said.
Just like the humans.

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