WASHINGTON — The nor'easter smacking much of the Northeast with nearly 3 feet of snow in places is as classic and powerful a blizzard as you can get, the strongest in a decade and up there with the most intense in history, meteorologists said.
The nor'easter quickly intensified to easily qualify as a '' bomb cyclone " and featured thundersnow and lightning, two things rarely seen in snowstorms. And while it was paralyzing and potentially dangerous for millions along the Eastern Seaboard, meteorologists found themselves rhapsodizing over its combination of power and beauty.
The storm hit the ''Goldilocks situation" of just the right temperature for wet, heavy snow — any warmer and its precipitation wouldn't have fallen as snow. Any colder and there wouldn't have been as much moisture in the air to feed that snowfall, said Owen Shieh, warning coordination meteorologist at the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center in Maryland.
It also followed the ideal track for maximum snowfall. A little farther inland and it would have lost its warm ocean energy; a bit farther out to sea, and the heaviest snow would have fallen over the water, said Jeff Masters, co-founder of Weather Underground and now meteorologist at Yale Climate Connections.
''I've always been fascinated about how Mother Nature figures out how to put all the pieces together in order to maximize the most extreme outcome,'' said private meteorologist Ryan Maue, a former chief scientist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. ''I think you could make a pretty good case that this is on par with some of the most impressive blizzards in history."
Snow sweet spot that adds up
''There's this sweet spot that can generate your highest snow totals and that's kind of where we're at, so in a way that kind of adds to that classic-ness of it,'' Shieh said.
At 33.5 inches (85.1 centimeters) by about midday Monday, Providence set its all-time record for snowfall, beating the previous record set in 1978, and it was still snowing, the National Weather Service office in Boston reported. But the highest total reported so far was in Warwick, Rhode Island, which barely passed 3 feet at 36.2 inches (92 centimeters).