Saturday, February 21, 2015

Wind Chill Warning - Snow Optional - Spring In No Great Hurry This Year

19 F. maximum temperature Saturday at KSTC.
29 F. average high on February 21.
13 F. high on February 21, 2014.

2" snow on the ground in St. Cloud.
25" snow on the ground in St. Cloud on February 21, 2014.

February 21, 1922: Blizzard, ice and thunderstorms across Minnesota. Winds hit 50 mph in Duluth while thunderstorms were reported in the Twin Cities. Heavy ice over southeast Minnesota with 2 inches of ice on wires near Winona. Over two inches of precipitation fell. This was also one of the largest ice storms ever in Wisconsin history with ice four inches in diameter on telegraph wires. One foot of ice covered wire weighed 11 pounds. One killed and four injured in Wisconsin.



Brittle Sunlight

Welcome to Saskatoon! Plug in your car (or your horse), scrape the ice off your contacts and keep an eye out for grizzlies on Doppler! Since when did aerobic shivering become an Olympic sport? Oh well. This too shall pass.

The only thing I can guarantee is sunrise and sunset. The good news, if you're counting the days until spring: nearly 2 hours of additional daylight since December 21. Sustained subzero air in late February and early March is unusual but not unprecedented. This is nature's way of evening up the score after a relatively mild December and January.

There's new scientific research linking a wavier jet stream, upper level winds prone to becoming "stuck" for weeks at a time, to rapid warming of the Arctic. Whatever the cause I'm amazed by the persistence of the pattern we're in, one that favors more cold, dry weather.

Today will be good for allergy sufferers, bad for gardening. The sun will shine, but a numbing breeze will make it feel like 25 below. A thaw is likely Tuesday, but a cold bias continues - another subzero swipe possible the middle of next week. Spring is NOT just around the corner.

Heartwarming news: meteorological winter, the 90 coldest days of the year, ends in 1 week.

Purple Crush. Canada is once again exporting a rude blast of thumb-numbing air south of the border. We'll get even with hot, steamy, sweaty "American Air" in a few months, just to even up the score. Unless you're lapsing into a coma you can clearly see the pulses of subzero air pushing south, sailing directly over Minnesota today; another shot approaching by Wednesday. NOAA model data: Ham Weather.

Mild Bias Worldwide. That probably won't come as much of a shock, but the pockets of persistent cold continue to show up from central Canada into the Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and much of the East Coast. Meanwhile temperatures in the Arctic are averaging 2.64C, about 4F, warmer than normal for February 21. Global temperature anomalies: Climate Reanalyzer, University of Maine.

No Sign Of Mild Close To Home. NOAA has issued a Wind Chill Advisory for much of Minnesota and Wisconsin, including the Twin Cities. Wind Chill Warnings are posted north and west of a line from Duluth to St. Cloud and Willmar for even more dangerous chill factors, reaching -30 to -35F at times.

No Rest For The Weary. Ham Weather's Aeris model guidance shows subzero temperatures from the Dakotas and Minnesota into Wisconsin and much of the Great Lakes Thursday morning at 7 AM as another surge of nippy air sails south; probably not record-setting, and not as cold or persistent as last winter.

Super-Sized February. For many people February is the hardest month; spring is now within sight, but winter relapses are still the norm. We wake up to subzero this morning; today's "high" blipping just above zero by mid afternoon. After waking up to -7F the mercury pushes into the 20s Monday and 30s Tuesday before the next push of Canadian air. Monday appears to be the windiest day of the week with gusts well over 30 mph. And no, I still don't see a "storm". Graphic: Weatherspark.

Weird Winter Weather Plot Thickens As Arctic Swiftly Warms. For a few years now I've been describing what I perceive as changes in the configuration of the jet stream over North America. At first I thought I was hallucinating, but recent research seems to suggest that rapid warming of the Arctic may, in fact, be impacting the shape and persistence of upper level steering winds. Here's an excerpt of a post at The Conversation and Scientific American: "...Other studies suggest that Arctic warming in summer leads to a split jet stream—or two separated rivers of wind—which tends to trap the waves. Those stationary waves cause weather conditions to remain “stuck” for long periods, increasing the likelihood of extreme heat waves, droughts and flooding events in Eurasia and North America. Our own new work, published last month in Environmental Research Letters, uses a variety of new metrics to show that the jet stream is becoming wavier and that rapid Arctic warming is playing a role. If these results are confirmed, then we’ll see our weather patterns become more persistent..." (Image credit: NOAA).

Evidence For A Wavier Jet Stream. A summary of Jennifer Francis's latest research is here.

Meteorology Professor Explains Extreme Weather Pattern. Speaking of a "stuck" jet stream, WGRZ.com in Buffalo has a story explaining how another unusually persistent jet stream configuration is resulting in either record warmth + drought, or mega-blizzards and polar cold; here's an excerpt: "...Professor Stephen Vermette coordinates the Meteorology and Climatology Program at SUNY Buffalo State. He says we can blame these extreme weather patterns on the jet stream. "It's been stuck in place and that's week after week after week, especially February we've been getting some very cold temperatures while places like Montana and Idaho and California, even Alaska, are getting much warmer temperatures," he says. Vermette says more than four-thousand warm temperature records have been set out west just this month alone. But on our side of the map, there have been about 250 cold temperature records set..."

Ironic Captions Encouraged. Thanks to Steve Breen at U-T San Diego for summarizing another all-or-nothing weather proposition.

Second Warmest January On Record, Worldwide. NOAA NCDC has an interesting PDF with highlights of January, and the winter, to date. Only January 2007 was warmer than last month.

A Tale of Extremes. California has been experiencing record warmth, while Boston is digging out from a near-record winter of snow, a parade of coastal storms since late January. I still suspect Minnesota's winter will be close to average overall, colder than average weather in November and February compensating for milder than normal weather in December and January.

2015 Picks Up Where 2014 Record Heat Left Off. Here's a snippet from a post at Climate Central: "...All three agencies ranked 2014 as the warmest year on record by a slim margin, driven by the accumulation of heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Nine of the 10 hottest years on record have all occurred in the 21st century, with the exception of the blockbuster El Nino year of 1998. There hasn’t been a record cold year set since 1911, while during the same period there have been 19 record-warm years, according to a Climate Central analysis..."

Tornado In A Bottle. How many fans does it take to create a miniature tornado in a laboratory? Fewer than you might think, according to an interesting story and video at Slate; here's a clip: "...We can create a 5-meter-wide tornado inside the chamber. A tornado is a combination of rotation and suction. By angling the airflow from the fans around the lower chamber, we control the rotation of a tornado vortex, and we create the suction by running the six huge fans in reverse. The beauty of our tornado is that we can move it along the ground at 2 meters per second..."

Rocket Flown Through Northern Lights To Help Unlock Space Weather Mysteries. Gizmag has the story; here's the introduction: "The northern lights are more than one of nature's most awe inspiring sights, they are an electromagnetic phenomena that can adversely affect power grids and communications and navigation systems. Researchers from the University of Oslo have flown a rocket through the phenomena to take a closer look with the aim of gathering data that will help in predicting space weather..."

Image credit above: "Artist's depiction of the ICI-4 rocket which launched today." (Image: Trond Abrahamsen, Andøya Space Center).

Apple Wants To Start Producing Cars As Soon As 2020. Will they buy Tesla to jump-start their development efforts? It's no longer about digital devices, soon it will be a digital lifestyle, including new transportation options. Here's a clip from a story at Bloomberg Business: "...Tesla’s success in creating a startup car company has shown that the traditional barriers of entry into the auto industry aren’t as difficult to overcome as originally thought, said one person, who asked not to be identified because the matter is private. At the same time, automakers have struggled to bring technical leaps to car development, something that Silicon Valley is also seeking to accomplish. For example, Google Inc. has invested in developing an autonomous vehicle since 2010..." (Image courtesy of iJailbreak).

7 Cities That Are Starting To Go Car-Free. I found this story at fastcoexist.com fascinating - wondering if the trend will come to the Twin Cities; here's an excerpt: "...Traffic in London today moves slower than an average cyclist (or a horse-drawn carriage). Commuters in L.A. spend 90 hours a year stuck in traffic. A U.K. study found that drivers spend 106 days of their lives looking for parking spots. Now a growing number of cities are getting rid of cars in certain neighborhoods through fines, better design, new apps, and, in the case of Milan, even paying commuters to leave their car parked at home and take the train instead..." (If anyone spots the woman in the convertible above please call 911 immediately).


TODAY: Arctic therapy. Sunny, feels like -30. Winds: NW 10-15. High: -1
SUNDAY NIGHT: Clear, still brisk but winds subside a bit. Low: -18
MONDAY: Clouds increase, not as cold. High: 22
TUESDAY: Cloudy, relatively mild with a fleeting thaw. Wake-up: 18. High: 32
WEDNESDAY: Blue sky, cooling down again. Wake-up: 3. High: 14
THURSDAY: Sunny, less wind. Wake-up: -6. High: 12
FRIDAY: Chilly, storms stay south of MN. Wake-up: -4. High: 18
SATURDAY: Clouds increase, still quiet. Wake-up: 4. High: 22



Climate Stories....

Deeper Ties To Corporate Cash For A Doubtful Climate Scientist. Except that he's not a climate scientist; he's an aerospace engineer. His papers over the years have cast doubt on man-made warming; linking any changes in temperature to the sun. And you'll never believe who is major funders are. The New York Times has the story; here's an excerpt: "...Historians and sociologists of science say that since the tobacco wars of the 1960s, corporations trying to block legislation that hurts their interests have employed a strategy of creating the appearance of scientific doubt, usually with the help of ostensibly independent researchers who accept industry funding. Fossil-fuel interests have followed this approach for years, but the mechanics of their activities remained largely hidden..."

Senator Edward Markey To Investigate Energy Companies on Climate Science Funding. Here's a clip from The Boston Globe: "...The Massachusetts Democrat will send letters to fossil fuel companies, trade organizations, and others with a stake in carbon fuels, aiming to reveal other climate-change-skeptical scientists whose work has been subsidized by those parties, a Markey spokesman said via e-mail. “For years, fossil fuel interests and front groups have attacked climate scientists and legislation to cut carbon pollution using junk science and debunked arguments,” Markey said in a statement. “The American public deserve an honest debate that isn’t polluted by the best junk science fossil fuel interests can buy. That’s why I will be launching this investigation to see how widespread this denial-for-hire scheme stretches within the anti-climate action cabal...”

Globola. If it had a scarier name than climate change would we still be sitting on our hands and "debating" the science? Maybe not. Who knows. But Jen Sorensen nails it in this comic.

6 in 10 Americans Have Given Climate Change and Health "No Thought". Here's the intro to a story at weather.com: "Has climate change affected your area? You might not think it, but the answer is yes. "Every American, whether they know it or not, has been affected by climate change,"  Edward Maibach, the director of George Mason University's Center for Climate Change Communication, told weather.com. One of the most prominent ways it is already impacting the U.S. is through health. But most Americans have no concept of the complex intersection between their health and the environment, a report, "Public Perceptions of the Health Consequences of Global Warming," published in October 2014, indicated..."


What If We Lost The Sky? If it ever gets to the point where we need to take drastic action, ie "geoengineering", or pumping chemicals into the stratosphere to try and cool the Earth, other things may be lost, things we tend to take for granted, like blue sky and starry nights. Here's a clip from an Op-Ed at The New York Times: "...If we lose the night sky, he said, “we lose something precious and sacred.” He believes whitening the daytime sky might result in “that same loss of the sense of what’s vast,” a sense his team’s research suggests is “one of the most important things that people build into their lives...”

Fight Climate Change, Make Money. So says Virgin founder Richard Branson in an Op-Ed at CNN; here's a clip: "...Codifying this goal into the international agreement that's taking shape would send the strongest possible market signal that there's money to be made in taking climate change seriously. A net zero position allows business leaders to take short-term action and make long-term plans to develop profitable ways to be competitive, even as they limit emissions, increase efficiency and find strategies to offset the remaining emissions that can't be avoided..."

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