Tuesday, January 18, 2022

As the planet gets warmer, the weather gets colder!

 Researchers told Climate Central that the weather pattern driving the extreme cold into the U.S. — with a weaker polar vortex moving around the Arctic like a slowing spinning top, eventually falling over and blowing open the door to the Arctic freezer — fits with other recently observed instances of unusual fall and wintertime jet stream configurations.

Such weather patterns, which can feature relatively mild conditions in the Arctic at the same time dangerously cold conditions exist in vast parts of the lower 48, may be tied to the rapid warming and loss of sea ice in the Arctic due, in part, to manmade climate change.

source - archived source

Can extreme weather events like this weekend's historic outbreak of cold Arctic air across the U.S. be caused by the warming of the Arctic?

Though it seems counterintuitive – global warming bringing about extreme cold – the answer may be yes, according to scientists like Weather Underground's Dr. Jeff Masters and Dr. Jennifer Francis, a research professor at Rutgers University's Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences.

The cause is believed to lie in the jet stream, the fast-flowing river of air high above the Earth that marks the boundary between cold, polar air to the North and warm tropical air to the South.

As the jet stream shifts position back and forth over North America throughout the year, it plays a major role in the weather patterns and temperatures we experience in the U.S. In recent years, the movement of the jet stream has changed significantly, bringing "weather whiplash" with strange, out-of-season weather events more frequently than in the recent past.

Francis has been a leading voice in recent years for research that points to rapid changes in the Arctic – including a dramatic decline over the past 30 years in Arctic sea ice extent, which exposes more of the Arctic Ocean to the sun's rays in the summer – as the likely culprit behind the jet stream's increasingly odd behavior.

source (archive.org)

These stories are about the record breaking cold of 2014


Is The Record Cold Arctic Outbreak Tied To Global Warming?

By Terrell Johnson

January 07, 2014

Can extreme weather events like this weekend's historic outbreak of cold Arctic air across the U.S. be caused by the warming of the Arctic?

Though it seems counterintuitive – global warming bringing about extreme cold – the answer may be yes, according to scientists like Weather Underground's Dr. Jeff Masters and Dr. Jennifer Francis, a research professor at Rutgers University's Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences.

source


Now, new research from the Korea Polar Research Institute published in Nature Communications found a link between global warming and colder temperatures. Their research discovered that polar ice melts because warm water travels up the Gulf Stream from areas of the Atlantic Ocean, journeying towards regions of Europe such as Scandinavia. The melted ice leads to open water areas, releasing warmth into the air during the colder months. The result? A jet stream weakens, before moving south – and it carries cold air. Researchers of the study stated that if global warming continues to increase ocean temperature, then we are likely to experience colder winters.

 source

It will be interesting to see how long a search engine takes to pick this up.

I predict Google will never list it.


But Bing might





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