Sudden Warming Can Flip The Polar Vortex And Winter Patterns
Sudden Warming Can Flip The Polar Vortex And Winter Patterns
US · Published Nov 20, 2025
Sudden Stratospheric Warmings (SSWs) disrupt the polar vortex, influencing winter weather patterns.
SSWs can lead to cold outbreaks across the Northern Hemisphere weeks after the warming event.
Changes in the jet stream, influenced by SSWs, can cause prolonged periods of extreme weather.
Sudden warmings impact Northern Hemisphere weather patterns
Sudden stratospheric warmings (SSWs) are dramatic events in the winter atmosphere that can significantly impact weather patterns across the Northern Hemisphere. These warmings occur when powerful atmospheric waves surge upward, causing a rapid increase in temperature in the polar stratosphere, about 30 kilometers above the Earth's surface. This sudden warming disrupts the polar vortex, a swirling mass of cold air that typically resides over the Arctic during winter.
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