A cold airmass plunging out of Canada and a coastal low developing off the Carolinas by Saturday is the kind of weather event you expect in January — not November 1.
Snow is expected to fall over portions of 18 eastern states over the next 3 days, with the potential for earliest-ever snowfall in portions of the Carolinas by noon on Sunday (all forecast graphics courtesy of WeatherBell.com):
The surface air temperature departures from normal show this cold event pushing unusually far south for this time of year, with 20 deg. F below normal over much of the southeast, including all of Florida by Sunday morning:
The deep, cold airmass is what causes the “polar vortex”, which is the swirling of upper-air winds around the airmass. By noon on Saturday, the rapidly moving vortex will be centered near Charleston, SC:
Luckily, the deepening low pressure off the coast is expected to stay offshore, with northerly winds at Cape Hatteras around 50 mph Saturday night:
By Sunday evening, the low is forecast to be centered over the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and by Tuesday morning total snow accumulations of 1 to 2 feet or more are expected over portions of Maine and the Canadian Maritimes.
UPDATE (11:30 a.m. EDT Oct. 30):
Here’s the latest high-resolution model forecast of snowfall ending Saturday evening, showing flurries reaching scattered coastal areas of the Carolinas, and 6″-12″ snowfalls in the Smokey Mountains and to the lee of Lake Michigan in NW Indiana: