Meteorologists are closely monitoring a developing winter storm that could rapidly intensify into a bomb cyclone, posing a renewed threat of heavy snow, damaging winds, and coastal flooding across large portions of the U.S. East Coast this weekend.
Forecast models increasingly agree on the storm’s formation, though uncertainty remains over its exact track and intensity, factors that will ultimately determine where the most severe impacts are felt.
A bomb cyclone — formally known as bombogenesis — occurs when a storm’s central pressure drops by at least 24 millibars within 24 hours. This rapid intensification often results in powerful winter storms capable of producing blizzard-like conditions, particularly when cold Arctic
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