Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Blacksburg, VA

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985 FXUS61 KRNK 090035 AFDRNK Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Blacksburg VA 835 PM EDT Sat Jun 8 2024 .SYNOPSIS... High pressure will promote mainly dry conditions through tonight. A cold front tracks across the area Sunday with scattered showers and thunderstorms mainly in the mountains. Dry weather returns Monday. Next opportunity for showers looks like it will hold off until the end of next week. The week as a whole is expected to be dry. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY/...
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As of 835 PM EDT Saturday... Key Messages: 1. Increasing clouds tonight, but remaining dry. 2. An Autumn-like frontal passage Sunday with mountain showers and breezy conditions. Mid to high levels clouds have spread over the region associated with a remnant Mesoscale Convective Vortex (MCV). NWS radars showed scattered light returns around 10Kft within the clouds. No changes to probability of precipitation or temperatures needed at this time. Previous Discussion As of 230 PM EDT Saturday... Passage of an upper level disturbance, remnant Mesoscale Convective Vortex (MCV), is expected tonight. Other than some increase in cloudiness, chance for measurable rainfall is very low. May see some virga show up on the regional radars, but doubt anything other than a few sprinkles reach the surface. Clouds should insulate us from radiational cooling tonight, so not expecting temperatures to be as cool as last night. Add 5 to 10 degrees from last night`s lows and you should be in the ball park for tonight. In the wake of the MCV expect winds to increase from the west northwest. Models are advertising 85H winds near 35 kts Sunday. A surface cold front will cross the forecast area later in the day providing some lift for a few showers and isolated thunderstorms. Not too excited about rain chance however, the west wind behind the MCV deterring vertical motion due to the downslope west-northwest wind. Convective allowing models (CAMs) are overdone on precip and will hedge toward the drier synoptic models. Think best opportunity for showers and thunderstorms would be across TN and into NC where wake winds behind MCV and negative vorticity advection will have less influence. As such will place highest pops across the NC High Country and into the NC Piedmont.
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&& .SHORT TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/... As of 230 PM EDT Saturday... Key Points: 1. Slightly below normal temperatures. 2. Lingering scattered showers south and east Sunday evening. 3. Dry Monday through Tuesday other than some isolated showers across the mountains on Monday. A look at the 8 June 00Z NCEP Ensemble Mean 500 mb Geopotential heights shows a slow moving upper trough expected to arrive on Sunday night and linger through Monday. By Tuesday, the trough axis shifts northeast to over New England while a shortwave ridge builds over the Ohio Valley. At the surface, a cold front heads east of the region Sunday night. For Monday, this front stalls near the coast of the Carolinas as high pressure advances eastward from the Central Plains states. By Tuesday, the center of the high will be closer to our area, centered over the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys. Output from the 8 June 00Z Ensemble Situational Awareness Table shows 850mb temperatures Sunday night falling from around +14C to +16C at sunset to around +10C to +12C by daybreak Monday. On Monday, these values expand in range slightly to +10C to +13C. The values around +10C across western sections of the region will fall into the 2.5 to 10 percentile of the 30-year climatology. The dip in temperatures continues into Monday night with values in the +9C to +11C range across the region. Those areas around or below +10C again will fall within the 2.5 to 10 percentile. By Tuesday afternoon, 850mb temperatures start to inch higher and reach +12C to +14C by the late afternoon. Precipitable Water values Sunday night are expected to gradually decrease to the 0.75 to 1.00 inch range by daybreak Monday. By the afternoon, the region will average about 0.75 inch. Values around or little over 0.75 inch will continue through Tuesday night. The above weather scenario suggests some lingering showers Sunday evening across primarily southern and eastern parts of the region as a cold front exits the region. By Monday, the vast majority of the area will be dry. We will have to watch for some isolated upslope showers across Southeast West Virginia. Additionally, with the axis of the upper trough still over the area, we could still have some increase mid-level lapse rates over head which may prompt some instability aloft development during the afternoon. Any daytime development should wane quickly after sunset. Dry and cooler than normal conditions will take us into Tuesday and Tuesday night. Confidence in the above weather pattern is moderate to high. && .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 230 PM EDT Saturday... Key Points: 1. Temperatures trending to values above normal. 2. Most locations will remain dry. 3. Better chances of showers/storms Thursday/Friday, primarily over the mountains. A look at the 8 June 00Z NCEP Ensemble Mean 500 mb Geopotential heights shows the tail of a broad upper trough situated over our area Wednesday and Thursday. On Friday, this trough gains a bit of energy as a shortwave trough moving east along the US/Canadian border helps to amplify it. However, the bulk of the associated energy is still expected to remain north of our area. On Saturday, the trough axis begins to shift northeast with building heights over our region. At the surface, in general, high pressure will remain over our area mid-week heading into the weekend. A backdoor cold front will try to reach our area Friday into Saturday. Its success is still in question. Output from the 8 June 00Z Ensemble Situational Awareness Table shows 850mb temperatures are expected to average +16C across the region on Wednesday, +18C on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. The readings from Thursday and onward just touch the 90 to 97.5 percentile of the 30-year climatology. Precipitable Water values will average 1.00 inch Wednesday, 1.25 inch Thursday, and 1.25 to 1.50 inch Friday and Saturday. With the bulk of the upper level dynamics shunted well north towards the Canadian border, our weather from mid-week through the start of the weekend is expected to mainly dry. Temperatures will trend milder each day, with values above normal Thursday and Friday. While precipitation chances are not zero. They will be on the small side across the mountains where the effects of differential heating and orographical effects could allow for peak heating of the day isolated showers. Confidence in the days these occur and offering a location other than the mountains is low. However, as we move into Thursday and Friday, the center of the ridge is expected to be slightly east of the region. This would allow for the pooling for somewhat better moisture into the region. A cold front may cross the region on Saturday. This could allow for somewhat better coverage and slightly cooler temperatures, but confidence in its passage on Saturday also has low confidence. Our greatest confidence during this time period is on the warming trend and most locations being dry. && .AVIATION /01Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
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As of 750 PM EDT Saturday... VFR expected through 12Z/8AM, with cloud bases generally remaining above 8kft AGL. Winds will be out of the west to northwest, generally less than 10 kts, then begin gusting again Sunday morning. Winds will be 30-40kts at 5kft AGL. Expect surface gusts in the 20-30 kt range. Ceilings will lower from west to east in the mountains in the afternoon, with MVFR at KLWB and KBLF after 16Z/noon. Have also added light showers in at KBLF. Bufkit forecast soundings showed other local sites only partially saturated through the end of the day. Average confidence for ceiling, wind, and visibility. EXTENDED AVIATION OUTLOOK... VFR for most of the period. Mainly dry conditions expected Monday through Wednesday. The probability of precipitation increases again for Thursday.
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&& .RNK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VA...None. NC...None. WV...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...PM NEAR TERM...AMS/PM SHORT TERM...DS LONG TERM...DS AVIATION...AMS/PM