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Sensitivity of Ice Storms in the Southeastern United States to Atlantic SST—Insights from a Case Study of the December 2002 Storm
2006
Monthly Weather Review
Meteorological observations and model simulations are used to show that the catastrophic ice storm of 4-5 December 2002 in the southeastern United States resulted from the combination of a classic winter storm and a warm sea surface temperature (SST) anomaly in the western Atlantic Ocean. At the time of the storm, observations show that the Atlantic SST near the southeastern U.S. coast was 1.0°-1.5°C warmer than its multiyear mean. The impact of this anomalous SST on the ice accumulation of the
doi:10.1175/mwr3127.1
fatcat:wdtbblud4rhb3etv3kux4bkha4