Bomb cyclone to slam Connecticut and East Coast
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Thousands in the Northeast remained without power amid freezing temperatures Tuesday morning as people from that region and the mid-Atlantic dug out from extreme snowfall – including more than 2 feet in several states – from the previous two days and faced continuing travel disruptions including hundreds of canceled flights.
The Northeast is currently picking up the pieces after a massive winter storm morphed into a “bomb cyclone,” shattering snowfall records and bringing daily life to a standstill from the Mid-Atlantic to Maine.
A departing bomb cyclone lashed the Northeast coast with hurricane-force wind gusts, set all-time snowfall records and is already being dubbed "The Blizzard of 2026" as it becomes the benchmark for
What is a blizzard, and did NYC get a bomb cyclone, blizzard? NOAA's NWS and AccuWeather forecasters give the latest updates.
Bomb cyclones can happen in any season, but mainly occur during fall and winter.
A major snow storm hitting the northeast U.S. has been captured in satellite imagery.
Blizzard conditions can reduce visibility to less than 0.25 mile, which makes travel especially hazardous. New York City has put a travel ban on its roads starting at 9 p.m. on Sunday night. The winds and heavy, wet snow with this storm could also cause power outages by weighing down power lines and tree branches.
The normally busy streets of New York City are practically empty as a bomb cyclone brings over 15 inches of snow to parts of the city, the most since 2021.
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