Two winter storms will bring snow, freezing rain and Arctic cold in a one-two punch to parts of the United States this week.
Some 29 million people were under winter alerts across the central Plains, the Midwest, the Ohio Valley and the mid-Atlantic on Monday morning ahead of two winter storms expected this week.
The first storm will take shape across the central Plains, with rain and light icing across Oklahoma and Arkansas. Come Tuesday, the storm will produce moderate snow from Kentucky to Maryland.
The mid-Atlantic will feel the biggest snow totals with 3 to 6 inches possible. Locally higher amounts of up to 8 inches canât be ruled out. Washington, D.C., and Baltimore are forecast to pick up 4 to 6 inches of snow with a glaze of ice, Philadelphia could see 2 to 3 inches and New York City around 1 inch.
The southern side of the storm system will see heavy rain possible Tuesday and Wednesday across the South. There, 1 to 3 inches of rain, with locally higher amounts, is possible through Thursday.
The National Weather Service’s Weather Prediction Center has issued a slight risk of excessive rainfall over parts of the southern Plains and the lower Mississippi Valley from Tuesday into Wednesday morning because of possible localized flooding. Cities to watch for possible urban flooding include Shreveport, Louisiana; Jackson, Mississippi; Birmingham, Alabama; Atlanta; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Asheville, North Carolina.
The storm will also see Arctic cold air bring temperatures 25 to 40 degrees below average across the northern Rockies and the northern high Plains.
The weather service office in Boulder, Colorado, said âthe main chunk of arctic airâ arrives Wednesday, and will leave temperature highs in the teens.  Meanwhile, the weather service office in Bismarck, North Dakota, said life-threatening wind chills as low as minus 55 degrees Fahrenheit are forecast Monday night into Tuesday morning.
The second storm will start with light snow Tuesday night across Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas. By Wednesday, it’ll produce moderate to heavy snow from Kansas to Michigan, with accumulating snow possible for the major metro areas of Kansas City, Missouri; Des Moines, Iowa; Chicago; Milwaukee and Detroit.
In Chicago, the heaviest snow is forecast to fall during the Wednesday evening commute. While itâs too soon to predict how much snow will fall in the Windy City, âcomparing the four models, we get anywhere between 4 and 8 inches of snow,â NBC Chicago meteorologist Alicia Roman said.
On Thursday, the storm will exit into Canada, bringing snow to northern New England and rain to the Interstate 95 corridor from Boston to Raleigh, North Carolina.
Some strong to severe storms will also be possible along the Florida Panhandle, southern Alabama, southern Georgia and coastal South Carolina on Thursday.
A wintry mix of sleet and freezing rain could lead to ice accumulation of 1/10 of an inch Monday evening into Wednesday in central/eastern Oklahoma into the Ozarks, according to the weather serviceâs morning advisory.
The agency warned that travel will become extremely hazardous especially during the Tuesday evening commute because of freezing rain as a winter storm spreads across the central Appalachians and the mid-Atlantic states Tuesday through Wednesday.
The one-two punch comes as much of the country is digging out from a big winter storm that swept through the Midwest and the Northeast this weekend.
The weekendâs weather saw much of the Northeast blanketed in white. New York Cityâs Central Park was covered in a dusting of fresh powder, as was Bostonâs skyline; Boston Logan International Airport logged 5.5 inches of snow in 24 hours by Sunday evening.
The weather also led to travel woes â including crashes on icy roads in multiple states, as well as more than 3,000 domestic flight delays Sunday, according to the travel tracker FlightAware.com.