World: Lowest Temperature
Record Value | -89.2°C (-128.6°F) |
---|---|
Date of Record | 21 / 7 [July] / 1983 |
Formal WMO Review | Yes (2011) |
Length of Record | 1912-present |
Instrumentation | Maximum/Minimum Thermometer in Standard Stevenson Screen |
Geospatial Location | Vostok, Antarctica [77°32'S, 106°40'E, elevation: 3420m (11,220ft)] |
From Dr. Stephen Warren, University of Washington (8/22/2007): The world record for low temperature was set at Vostok Station, Antarctica, on 21 July 1983. Cerveny et al. (2007) give this temperature as -89.4°C in their Table 2, quoting Krause and Flood (1997), who gave the same value. However, the actual reported temperature was -89.2°C, as shown in the logbook of monthly summaries (Figure 1), which I photographed at the Vostok weather office in January 1991. The error in Krause and Flood (1997) was probably the result of a conversion from Celsius to Fahrenheit and rounding to -129°F, then back-conversion to Celsius.
References
Krause and Flood, 1997: Weather and Climate Extremes, US Army Corps of Engineers Topographic Engineering Centerpp. 89; Information Bulletin of the Soviet Antarctic Expedition (No. 105)
Discussion
This record was confirmed by the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute at Leningrad (St. Petersburg), Russia. Extreme cold resulted from absence of solar radiation, clear skies, little vertical mixing, calm air for a long duration and the station's high elevation.
Previous Record
-88.3°C (-127°F), 24/8/1960 at Vostok Foreign Branch, 1968: Worldwide extremes of temperature, precipitation and pressure recorded by continental ara, U.S Dept. of Commerce; Environmental Sciences Services Administration pp. 4
Additional Images
Closeup Satellite Image of Modern Vostok Station
Regional Satellite Image of Modern Vostok Station