Fifteen years later he believes he has some answers.

A man shovels snow in Silver Spring, Maryland, on February 6, 2010. The storm, dubbed "Snowmageddon," stretched from Indiana to Pennsylvania and into parts of New York and North Carolina.
A man shovels snow in Silver Spring, Maryland, on February 6, 2010. The storm, dubbed “Snowmageddon,” stretched from Indiana to Pennsylvania and into parts of New York and North Carolina. 

Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images

There is a general consensus there will be fewer nor’easters in a warmer world, because the Arctic is heating up faster than the rest of the Northern Hemisphere meaning there is less of a temperature contrast to fuel the storms.

But what has been unclear is what will happen to the intensity of these storms, which have tended to be understudied, Mann said.

The next 'Storm of the Century' could be even stronger, new study shows