
"If you were paying close attention to the temperature the past couple of days, you would have noticed it actually got warmer Saturday night into Sunday morning, and then turned colder Sunday morning into Sunday afternoon. It was the opposite of what you would normally expect due to warm and cold air advection disrupting the typical pattern from day to night."
"As we start Christmas week, sunny skies will be prevalent across New England. Temperatures will be holding in the 30s, but with a persistent wind on Monday, wind chill values will be in the single digits over inland areas at sunrise and the teens along the coastline. They will remain in the teens to mid-20s throughout most of the day."
"the timing, on "Christmas Eve Eve," when there is a bit more traffic than usual and people may still be out shopping, could impact travel plans. In terms of accumulation, expect most areas in Southern New England to receive between a half inch and 2 inches of snow. It's not out of the question that some isolated areas could see 3 inches."
Temperatures recently warmed Saturday night then cooled Sunday afternoon due to warm and cold air advection reversing the normal day-to-night pattern. Sunny skies will dominate New England to start Christmas week with highs in the 30s and persistent Monday winds producing single-digit inland wind chills at sunrise and teens along the coast, rising to teens and mid-20s during the day. A warm front approaches Monday night but stays far enough south to delay precipitation until Tuesday. Snow will develop Tuesday, mainly early evening through overnight, with accumulations of 0.5–2 inches, locally up to 3, and higher totals in northern elevations. Cold ground will allow accumulation on roads, potentially impacting travel and requiring plowing.
Read at Boston.com
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