Most Powerful Forces on Earth: Polar Vortex | Fatal Forecast | Free Documentary

482,713
0
Published 2023-07-26
Fatal Forecast: Polar Vortex - Deadly Forces of Nature | Disaster Documentary

Fatal Forecast: - Deadly Forces of Nature:    • Most Powerful Forces on Earth: Tornad...  

It began deep in the Arctic Ocean, where the atmosphere is warming twice as fast as the rest of the earth. It was the changing climate over the North Pole that determined the outcome of the winter of 2014 in North America and around the world. Strong westerly winds sent frigid air from the top of the world down to the tropics in an extraordinary event called the polar vortex.
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
Subscribe Free Documentary Channel for free: bit.ly/2YJ4XzQ
Instagram: instagram.com/free.documentary/
Facebook: bit.ly/2QfRxbG
Twitter: bit.ly/2QlwRiI
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
#FreeDocumentary #Documentary #FatalForecast
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
Free Documentary is dedicated to bringing high-class documentaries to you on YouTube for free. With the latest camera equipment used by well-known filmmakers working for famous production studios. You will see fascinating shots from the deep seas and up in the air, capturing great stories and pictures of everything our beautiful and interesting planet has to offer.

We bring documentaries about our world: from the deadliest roads to amazing engineering, to prison life, the most dangerous jobs, nature, wildlife, culture, people from all walks of life, and history on our Free Documentary channels. Check out all our channels under the CHANNELS TAB.

All Comments (21)
  • @FreeDocumentary
    It began deep in the Arctic Ocean, where the atmosphere is warming twice as fast as the rest of the earth. It was the changing climate over the North Pole that determined the outcome of the winter of 2014 in North America and around the world. Strong westerly winds sent frigid air from the top of the world down to the tropics in an extraordinary event called the polar vortex. It’s a phenomenon that hits the US mostly. It has to do with the topography mostly. I’ve experienced it. It’s brrr 🥶
  • Just looking at this makes me shiver. When I was young and so much in love with my wife wintertime was ok because we did have a great down comforter and a really good bed. Didn't have to work and we stayed in bed for month. What a time! Now living back in Germany and being by myself winter sucks. Stay warm and loving.
  • @Mama_n_zylie
    I’m from this area on Ohio in the “2nd snow belt” and it’s was rough but we have super cold temps but it never hangs around long. We had super cold temps in 90’s that to me seemed worse and long lasting on the temps side. Our weather is all over the place so we locals watch weather often all year round the Lake Erie either brings us storms or pushes them south. The frozen waves from this was cool to see tho
  • @drew-shourd
    For real, I live in S.W. Michigan, Benton Harbor, the southern tip of the Lake Michigan Triangle, 15 miles from the beach and we get some wAcKy weather here for sure. Mant don't realize that Lake Michigan is so huge, it can create it's own weather....nuts.
  • @Omar-lq8bm
    2021 and living along the Texas Gulf Coast my wife and I were in a survival mode with sub freezing temps for better that 30 hours at a time during nine days. We lost power for four days. For us here it wreaked havoc not being prepared for for it. 246 fatalities state wide. Last time we'd suffered an ice storm was decades ago which I can remember didn't last as long.
  • @ChasOnErie
    From cleveland since 1945 … 2014 was nothing compared to 1949-1950-1962-63-1978….!!!!!1982-83.. so cold , my front OFVTHE house had frost on all the wall surface .. all three floors … whole wall of church looked like the inside of a freezer .. the entire wall was ice covered . Wall of church and my home faced north west !!!! I know , we were there !!!! He mentions Lake Erie .. you have been able to drive on the ice to Put in Bay island for the last 200 years ..?car or horse drawn !!!!
  • I've been over the north pole several times the ice fields are growing not shrinking
  • I was in Michigan in 2014 when that Polar Vortex hit there, it was so cold like -13. Couldn’t even go outside, it was painfully cold. Your face and hair just turn icy instantly. I grew up in Michigan and had never experienced weather that cold before.
  • @johngreen4147
    Love Free Documentary, how about translating in local languages and spreading this amazing masterpiece to people around the world?
  • @lucasjames7524
    2014 was frigid. It was the last below-average year we had here where I am in the NE United States. Every year since then has been above average. Just wait until the AMOC shuts down; Europe will freeze.
  • @Suemack24
    People wishing to be considered to play a role in politics and lead others, need to pass a basic exam in all elementary school subjects as a minimum. Holding up a snowball is so embarrassing for him showing how uneducated and ignorant he is big Wally.
  • @lethaleefox6017
    Polar Vortex is an interesting wrinkle... looking at some of the temperature graphs back to 56 million years ago, the PETM... afterwards the fast temperature drop over a short time period is a pattern in a lot of the spikes in temperature recorded... an interesting puzzle piece. Extreme weather... increased amounts of wildfires increasing CO2 and maybe burning methane produced in fertile soils fresh soils exposed to vigorous plant growth, O2 production ... extended Polar air over continents... extended snow coverage over time... reducing methane release in iced areas... the interacting elements are quite a rabbit hole to go down... do any climate models show a way Polar Vortexes might flip a rise back into an ice age again? Over a term of a thousand years? The post maximum dips in temperature? Another curious question... if North America were to shift drift direction from going west to more north to bump into Asia closing Arctic Ocean with land... how would that affect global climate? Not a happening in lifetime question... something is pushing Africa into Europe.... Geologic time did show some Snowball Earth situations distant past. The range of change has been impressive... figuring out how to do recoverable carbon storage longer term might be very useful to learn... knowing how to adjust the world thermostat would take a lot of effort to learn both up and down controls.
  • @aced33
    hi, being use to the cold temperature in Canada, temperatures between -15 and -27 Degree Celsius during the winter months are normal from our perspective, but when you are not use to the cold, and all of a sudden, from warm to cold, in a matter of days, not much time for the body to adjust it's self. Or the other way around, from cold right into a heat wave, I would die because of the heat, I like the cold, lol.
  • @JamesBrown-ih9co
    well, here in buffalo, ny, we get..."100 feet of snow in the middle of summer!" so a polar votex is just a cool refreshing breeze.
  • @yousifatobiya7279
    Abstract : The energy that dominates the earth is very great, some of it is natural, like the heat of the sun and volcanoes, and some of it is human action, by cutting down trees, without replacing them and cultivating in their place... There are five forces that control or dominate the planet... 1- The first theory (horizontal dynamic movement) and its end... The occurrence of storms, rain, floods and snow, at unexpected times and places, is because of the expiration of this theory, which needs to be balanced... 2- The second theory (vertical dynamic movement) and its end... This movement or force controls or dominates the earthquakes, earth cracks, drying up of rivers and lakes, earth openings, mountain collapses, and the emergence of drinking water springs on the ground... It becomes out of control... These phenomena increased due to the end of this theory... The third theory: it is water that rotates the earth... The fourth theory: the Earth's axis of rotation has tilted 2° degrees... The fifth theory: The Earth has a new orbit... These studies had completed and sent on July 26th 2000 YOUSIF A TOBIYA FORCIBLY DISPLACE
  • @shannonspage9360
    All you can really do at some point is to stay home, put on some comfy clothes, and watch the snow out your window. Last year their were a lot of people who died from exposure due to being stuck in their car.
  • @marysalinas3961
    Fine-Tuning: The four fundamental forces come into play in the vastness of the cosmos and in the infinite smallness of atomic structures. Yes, everything we see around us is involved. Even from this standpoint on the fine-tuning of the electromagnetic force. Four Fundamental Physical Forces 1: Gravity-a very weak force on the level of atoms. It affects large objects -planets, stars, galaxies. 2: Electromagnetism -the key attracting force between protons and electrons, allowing molecules to form. Lightning is one evidence of its power. 3: Strong nuclear force -the force that glues protons and neutrons together in the nucleus of an atom. 4: weak nuclear force -the force that governs the decay of radioactive elements and the efficient thermonuclear activity of the sun. The electromagnetic force. If it were significantly weaker, electrons would not be held around the nucleus of an atom. Yes, because atoms could not combine to form molecules. Meaning no life.