Weather forecast

Soaring Temperature Trend Continues Through Weekend

A return to normal conditions for this time of year won't come until Tuesday

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Temps will soar again today. Much of this is a consequence of the mild airmass we’re in, but there’s also a bit of a helping hand from the sun.

Although pretty feeble, the sun does impart some warmth. However, now that we’re in solar winter, defined as the shortest (and eventually coldest) days of the year, we’re incapable of creating Vitamin D at this latitude.

As you might have heard, we’re anything but cold in the days to come. Temperatures are expected to soar straight through Monday, with the Sunday/Monday combo plate appearing as the warmest of the bunch. What’s gnawing at some folks is why it’s so warm this late in the year – especially with the sun angle so low.

The jet stream is to thank (or blame depending on your perspective). It’s a stream of wind in the atmosphere that drives weather systems across the globe. It’s sensitive to large disturbances (i.e., storms) that cause it to dip and rise in certain places. You can liken it to a water balloon; squeeze it in one spot, and other spots bulge. We have a “squeeze” going on in the West that is bringing rain, snow and cold. That squeeze is causing both the Pacific High (east of Hawaii) and the Bermuda High (off the Eastern Seaboard) to bulge or flex. The result is warmth here in the East, lots of it. While this squeezing and bulging is a common occurrence in the jet stream, global warming is playing in the background, and the warmth is both amplified and prolonged.

The warm stretch should set some records this weekend and perhaps into Monday, but as a front comes swinging through Monday night, the toasty temps come to a close. Tuesday we’ll be slammed back to Earth with a resounding thud. Temps fall to seasonable levels, with more cooling into Wednesday.

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