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Dangerous heat wave to expand east early this week, affecting 170 million people. Details here Chevron right

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Arctic blast to usher in rapid freeze-up, snow potential behind early-week flooding threat in Northeast

By Renee Duff, AccuWeather senior meteorologist

Published Dec 8, 2019 12:36 PM EDT

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Residents in the Northeast will need all types of outerwear early this week as soaking rain and a surge of milder air will be quickly followed by tumbling temperatures and even some snow.

AccuWeather meteorologists expect a variety of hazards ranging from reduced visibility from rain and fog to icy roadways due to a rapid freeze-up.

A storm will track from the central Plains to the Great Lakes and southeastern Canada into Monday night.

As snow and cold plunge into the Midwest behind the storm, mild and moist air will flow into the Ohio Valley and Northeast out ahead of it.

Periods of rain, areas of fog and milder conditions will accompany the approaching storm into Tuesday.

The combination of the rain plus snowmelt will heighten the risk of flooding from northeastern Pennsylvania and northern New Jersey into interior parts of southern New England, according to AccuWeather Meteorologist Kyle Elliott.

Portions of New York state and New England remain buried underneath a foot or more of snow following an impressive snowstorm during the first week of December. As much as 1-3 inches of water is locked up within this snowpack, the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center reports.

"Some quick rises on small streams are likely with minor flooding possible in low-lying areas that are prone to flooding during heavy rain or spring thaw events," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Alex Sosnowski said.

"Some of the rivers may surge to bank full as well," he added.

Where no snow is on the ground, the risk of flooding will be highly localized.

Related:

ICYMI: December kicks off with snowstorms, hurricane-force winds in US, tropical cyclones around the world
Thanksgiving storm resurfaces a mystery from the depths of Lake Michigan
Bundle up: Coldest air yet this season to send Midwest into deep freeze next week
Snow to threaten slick travel along 1,000-mile corridor of US

Even in the absence of flooding, there will be hazards to motorists due to low visibility from downpours and fog, as well as a heightened risk of hydroplaning while traveling at highway speeds.

Airline passengers at the major hubs in the Northeast may face delays due to the rain and low cloud ceiling.

Ponchos will be a must for people heading to the City of Brotherly Love for the Monday Night Football game between the New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles with periods of rain expected throughout the contest.

But fans will not need cold weather gear as temperatures will climb as the rain moves in.

On Monday, highs are forecast to surge into the 40s F across the northern tier and the 50s and 60s across part of the mid-Atlantic region. Temperatures will climb even further on Tuesday.

Arctic air to blast in behind rain, cause changeover to snow

Residents will experience a temperature whiplash later on Tuesday and Wednesday as Arctic air is unleashed in the storm's wake.

"Colder air behind the storm will catch up with the rain Tuesday night resulting in rain ending as wet snow," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Bob Smerbeck said.

Rain will transition to snow first across a swath of the Tennessee late Tuesday before a similar changeover occurs in the Northeast later on Tuesday night.

However, AccuWeather meteorologists cannot rule out the potential for a slick Wednesday morning commute from the central Appalachians to the Interstate-95 corridor from Washington, D.C., to Boston.

Regardless of how much snow falls, areas of slush and standing water can freeze as temperatures plummet in the Northeast, leaving untreated roads and sidewalks slippery.

"Highs on Wednesday may be on the order of 20-25 degrees lower than Tuesday and struggle to reach the freezing mark by Thursday," Elliott said.

How long this cold air remains over the Northeast will be a key factor in determining whether yet another significant storm could bring winter weather or mostly rain to the region by the weekend.

Download the free AccuWeather app to check the forecast in your area. Keep checking back on AccuWeather.com and stay tuned to the AccuWeather Network on DirecTV, Frontier and Verizon Fios.

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