Gillian,

I was told several years ago (2018) by a specialist in this area that these 
extreme southerly dips in the jet stream are a consequence of the weakening of 
the polar vortex on Earth.  It happens I was in Korea at a time corresponding 
to the Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, and we were freezing our asses off under 
a cold spell similar to this one.  It too was due to a very southerly dip in 
the jet stream.  So it was timely for this scientist to talk on the subject, 
and I got to sit with him at lunch and ask more questions.

I have an impression the jet stream functions, at least during part of the 
year, a little like a wall between arctic air contained to the north of it, and 
temperate or equatorial air to the south side.  So when it swings very far 
south, the domain of arctic air extends further south than it normally would, 
and since we don’t normally experience winter arctic air, it seems very cold.  
But apparently these more extreme north-south swings are due to weakening of 
the vortex — when it turns faster the jet stream has less severe excursions.  

My impression, in looking at jet stream patterns after that, is that when we 
see these swings we tend to see them in three places around the world: the 
central-to-eastern US, Eastern Europe or very-west Asia, and then over the 
Korean Peninsula.  I haven’t checked whether they are doing the same thing just 
now.

(The fact that the jet stream likes to make these polygonal shapes reminds me 
of the pictures of the hexagonal patch on the north (?) pole of Saturn, the 
boundary of which I think is a similar kind of formation (roughly).  The 
presence of continents on Earth causes this to not be a pure fluid phenomenon 
as it would be on Saturn.)

The non-intuitive part of it is that the vortex weakens because the arctic is 
not as cold as it should be.  So we feel more cold, but on a global average, we 
are less cold.  A similar phenomenon becomes more intuitive during the summer, 
when northern Sweden is experiencing uncontrollable forest fires.

n.b.  There may be things in what I said above that are wrong because I haven’t 
understood them or didn’t hear it all correctly.  So do find somebody who does 
this for a living to ask.

Eric 



> On Feb 16, 2021, at 1:58 PM, Gillian Densmore <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> For how ass the weather is because of artic air? 
> 
> I am prepared for  to see a lot of fur-fetched replies. We can Wolf down some 
> facts, or just retriever it out as just how it is.
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