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Midwest braces for temperatures so low ‘your face will off’ as Northeast braces for blizzard amid polar vortex

America is bracing for a brutal Arctic blast with dangerously low temperatures as a massive polar vortex smashes the country.

Chicago alone could face -20 to -30-degree temperatures next week in a blizzard on the Windy City, according to USA Today. 

‘Your face will fall off at these temperatures,’ meteorologist Ryan Maue said on X

The Northern Centric area of the US will feel a blast of arctic air with the National Weather Service saying: ‘Dangerously cold wind chills and air temperatures will lead to cold weather headlines.’ 

Cold air from Western Canada will cause very cold temperatures that will be 40 degrees below average for February in the central part of the country. 

Montana, North Dakota and Minnesota will also get the brunt end of the cold front in the beginning of the week, according to USA Today. 

‘The coldest mornings will be Monday and Tuesday when life-threatening wind chills are likely,’ NWS in North Dakota said. 

The cold front will reach the Great Plains and parts of South as low as Atlanta next week. 

Chicago could face -20 to -30 degree temperatures next week as winter barrels forward with the potential of dumping a blizzard on the Windy City 

America is bracing for a brutal Arctic blast that will freeze Midwesterners' faces off as a massive polar vortex smashes the country bringing deep freeze and catastrophic winter storms (pictured: Washington DC)

America is bracing for a brutal Arctic blast that will freeze Midwesterners’ faces off as a massive polar vortex smashes the country bringing deep freeze and catastrophic winter storms (pictured: Washington DC) 

'Your face will fall off at these temperatures,' meteorologist Ryan Maue said

‘Your face will fall off at these temperatures,’ meteorologist Ryan Maue said

Dallas will also experience dangerously low wind chills on Wednesday and it will feel like it’s below zero in the morning, according to USA Today. 

Meteorologists are warning this will be the most punishing Arctic invasion yet, cementing this period as one of relentless, record-breaking cold.

Frigid forces in the Arctic are converging, pushing what should be confined to the North Pole deep into the US, several meteorologists tell The Associated Press.

This will be the 10th time this winter the polar vortex – which keeps the coldest air at the top of the world – stretches like a rubber band to send it south, said Judah Cohen, forecast director at the private firm Atmospheric and Environmental Research. 

In a normal winter, it happens maybe two or three times.

This winter, with record snow in New Orleans and drought and destructive wildfires in Southern California, has not been normal.

The latest projected cold outbreak should first hit the northern Rockies and northern Plains Saturday and then stick around all next week. The cold will likely concentrate east of the Rockies with only the far American west and central and southern Florida exempted, meteorologists said.

On Tuesday, expect the Lower 48 states to have an average low of 16.6 degrees Fahrenheit, and then plunge to 14 degrees on Wednesday, Maue said. 

Meteorologists are warning this will be the most punishing Arctic invasion yet, cementing this period as one of relentless, record-breaking cold

Meteorologists are warning this will be the most punishing Arctic invasion yet, cementing this period as one of relentless, record-breaking cold

Cold air from Western Canada will cause very cold temperatures that will be 40 degrees below average for February in the central part of the country (pictured: a snowman in DC)

Cold air from Western Canada will cause very cold temperatures that will be 40 degrees below average for February in the central part of the country (pictured: a snowman in DC)

Montana, North Dakota  and Minnesota will get the brunt end of the cold front in the beginning of the week (pictured: people walking in NYC)

Montana, North Dakota  and Minnesota will get the brunt end of the cold front in the beginning of the week (pictured: people walking in NYC)

The cold front will reach the Great Plains and parts of South as low as Atlanta next week (pictured: Washington DC)

The cold front will reach the Great Plains and parts of South as low as Atlanta next week (pictured: Washington DC) 

Sometime next week, 89 percent of the contiguous United States will be below the freezing mark and 27 percent of the Lower 48 will be below zero, according to National Weather Service forecasts.

Meteorologists expect strong winds to make the cold feel even worse. Every US state but Hawaii, California, and Florida have some or all parts forecast to have a good chance of windchills of 20 degrees or below sometime next week, the National Weather Service predicted.

Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri and Iowa will have ‘probably the most impressive’ cold, with temperatures as much as 35 degrees below what’s normal for this time of year, said Zack Taylor, a meteorologist at the weather service’s Weather Prediction Center. 

NOAA weather models predict Wednesday lows below zero in Oklahoma, Colorado, Nebraska, Missouri, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Wyoming, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan.

Ray King fishes for trout during a steady snowfall at the lake in O'Fallon Park in St. Louis, Mo

Ray King fishes for trout during a steady snowfall at the lake in O’Fallon Park in St. Louis, Mo

A worker clears snow from a sidewalk in the Loop in Chicago as a winter storm passes over. The storm is part of a weather system passing over the central and eastern United States

A worker clears snow from a sidewalk in the Loop in Chicago as a winter storm passes over. The storm is part of a weather system passing over the central and eastern United States

A runner treks through Humboldt Park in Chicago, Illinois as the city braces for 3-6 inches

A runner treks through Humboldt Park in Chicago, Illinois as the city braces for 3-6 inches

Some storms – with flooding, heavy snow or even a nor’easter – could hit during next week’s prolonged cold outbreak, but details on those aren’t certain yet, Taylor said.

‘Everything, all the stars align, all the wind directions in the atmosphere are dragging the cold polar air out of the Canadian Arctic,’ Maue said. 

‘It’s the depths of winter. Everything signals extreme biting, winter cold. Obviously this isn’t the first polar vortex episode of the winter, but it looks to be the most severe.’

A stretched polar vortex like this one happens lower in the atmosphere and is different than when the polar vortex has sudden warming, weakens and all the cold air escapes south and out of the poles, Cohen said. 

During stretching events, the polar vortex remains in place and strong, but it also just pulls and bends. Stretch outbreaks are usually slightly milder than the big polar escape events and often hit the United States, not Europe.

Meteorologists are going to want to study why this stretching is happening so often this year, but it could just be natural randomness, said Laura Ciasto, a meteorologist at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center who specializes in the polar vortex.

The White House is seen as the snow falls earlier this week in Washington DC

The White House is seen as the snow falls earlier this week in Washington DC

A person walks along the shore of ice covered Lake Michigan, February 13, 2025, in Chicago

A person walks along the shore of ice covered Lake Michigan, February 13, 2025, in Chicago 

‘What we’re observing right now is interesting, but not unprecedented,’ said Martin Stendel, a scientist at the National Center for Climate Research in Denmark.

Another factor adding to the polar vortex stretching is a big blob of high pressure in the upper atmosphere over Greenland. It’s moving west and will push the jet stream – the river of air that moves weather systems such as storms – into a pattern that causes polar air to plunge and stay there, Cohen said.

Human-caused climate change may be making the jet stream wavier and more likely to be stuck in that wavy pattern, one of the factors involved, Stendel said.

There haven’t been many winters like this in the past to help meteorologists forecast what will happen next and when the cold will finally go away, Maue said.

Despite the unusually cold winter across the US, the world remains in an overall warming pattern. 

Earth’s average overall temperature set yet another monthly heat record in January. It was the 18th month of the last 19 that the world hit or passed the internationally agreed upon warming limit of 1.5 C (2.7 F) above pre-industrial times.

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