PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - The U.S. East Coast is due for a whiplash-inducing stretch of weather that will be rainy, windy and potentially dangerous, due in part to an atmospheric river and developing bomb cyclone.
Atmospheric river and potential bomb cyclone will bring messy, dangerous weather to East Coast
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - The U.S. East Coast is due for a whiplash-inducing stretch of weather that will be rainy, windy and potentially dangerous, due in part to an atmospheric river and developing bomb cyclone.
The storm is expected to bring heavy rain and fierce winds to many areas from Tuesday night to Wednesday night, and flooding is possible in some locales, forecasters said. Utilities were also gearing up for potential power outages from damage caused by winds that could exceed 60 miles per hour (27 kph) in some areas.
One of the key factors driving the weather is an atmospheric river, which is a long band of water vapor that can transport moisture from the tropics to more northern areas, said Derek Schroeter, a forecaster with the National Weather Service in Gray, Maine.
The storm has the ability to hit New England hard because it could tap moisture from the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of the U.S. Southeast, and transport it to places like western Maine, which could see freezing rain, downpours, unseasonably high temperatures and damaging winds all in the span of a day, Schroeter said. The state was preparing for a "multifaceted storm" that could bring two to three inches of rainfall in some areas, Schroeter said.