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Weather

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Tracking one more cool day across the Valley to wrap up the work week
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In this Weather Wednesday we explore how a spike in sunspots helps create the colorful aurora.
Nature's beauty from a weather perspective
Weather is nonlinear; it does not converge to an average.
StormTRACKER Meteorologist John Wheeler looks at the changing weather patterns.
The summer just feels like it is getting tired.
On August 20, 2004, it was 34 degrees in Fargo and 32 degrees in Grand Forks.
On rare occasions, heat bursts have caused temperatures to exceed 100 degrees.
While many swear by old methods, winter forecasting from folklore fails to produce accurate results.
Sunspots are associated with intense magnetic activity and their presence often coincides with the Northern Lights.
The rain cells were small but slow-moving, and were producing rain at rates in excess of 4 inches an hour.
Here in the mid-latitudes, sunrises and sunsets take much longer than in the tropics.

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Stormtracker Team
Robert Poynter
Robert Poynter
Charles Pekar - WDAY Headshots 2023.jpg
Charles Pekar
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Robert Daley

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