Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
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679 FXUS62 KGSP 292207 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 607 PM EDT Mon Apr 29 2024 .SYNOPSIS... The warming trend will continue through mid week as high pressure remains centered just off the Atlantic Coast. A weak cold front is expected to move through the area on Tuesday bringing scattered showers and thunderstorms. Another front is expected to approach the Carolinas by this weekend and bring more showers and thunderstorms to the area. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY/... As of 600 PM EDT Monday: No major changes were needed this update as the forecast remains on track. Otherwise, dry conditions persist area-wide this afternoon with cumulus and cirrus confined to mainly NE GA, the far SW NC mountains, and the western SC Upstate. Cumulus should dissipate around sunset with the loss of daytime heating. However, cirrus will thicken through this evening as a cold front approaches out of the west. An upper ridge will break down as it progresses off the East Coast tonight, downstream of large scale height falls associated with a series of short wave troughs moving east of the Miss Valley. One of these waves is expected to evolve into a small upper low just west of our area tomorrow morning as it catches up to the weakening ridge. A weak cold front will accompany height falls into our forecast area during the daylight hours Tuesday. Pre-frontal convection could make a run toward far western NC by sunrise, warranting chance PoPs for SHRA across those areas prior to 12Z. PoPs ramp up from the west Tuesday as the frontal zone crosses the area, mainly during the afternoon. A consensus of model guidance indicates modest instability...sbCAPE of around 1000 J/kg to interact with a rather weak frontal circulation. Nevertheless, with the upper low poised to pass over the CWA during the afternoon...at least solid chances PoPs appear warranted throughout the CWA, with likelies advertised across much of the western 1/3 or so of the area. Shear parameters are forecast to be unimpressive...around 30 kts of 0-6km bulk shear. Given the expected instability, the potential for severe storms will be very low. Temps are expected to be around 5 degrees above normal through the period. && .SHORT TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 145 PM EDT Monday: By Tuesday evening showers will be well underway as a vigorous shortwave pushes into the Carolinas and attendant frontal boundary arrives from the west. This boundary looks likely to slide entirely east of the area by early Wednesday, giving way to a postfrontal regime for much of the day. The resultant CAA won`t be especially strong, and so winds aren`t expected to be an issue, even in the mountains, and temps won`t see much of a dent. In fact, temperatures will largely be moderated by better solar insolation than Tuesday`s and by rapidly-increasing thickness as potent ridging fills in...and so highs Wednesday afternoon should climb into the low- to mid-80s. Generally quiet and warm weather will persist on Thursday as an expansive upper ridge settles over the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic, and ill-defined high pressure continues at the surface. Thursday`s highs will once again land in the mid-80s. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 203 PM EDT Monday: Thursday night, the Southeast CONUS ridge will begin to deteriorate in response to several northern-stream systems butting up against it on the periphery of a deep upper low over Ontario and Manitoba. Although these systems will be steered north of the forecast area, they`ll help the blocking ridge break down, and by Friday, ripples of embedded upper energy will work their way into the Carolinas. Rainfall is likely along an advancing cold front Friday evening and Saturday. Both Friday evening and again Saturday afternoon, models depict significant sbCAPE developing (and LREF ensemble members only disagree on how much instability we can expect , not whether it`ll develop at all). So, embedded thunderstorms are likely, but in a weakly-sheared environment that should keep severe risk at bay. Sunday and beyond, long-range guidance has begun to converge on the development of a Bermuda high for the start of the next workweek, which will set us up for a pattern more characteristic of July than of early May. Expect diurnal showers and thunder, and temperatures back in the mid-80s by the end of D7. && .AVIATION /22Z MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: VFR conditions are expected for much of the period. SCT cumulus in the 045-060 range are expected to continue this afternoon, primarily at the upstate SC terminals. Otherwise, a cold front will approach the area from the west overnight, and is expected to cross the Terminal Forecast Area on Tuesday. A brief period of MVFR cigs are possible ahead of the front around sunrise Tuesday, but the forecast generally features low VFR cigs for the time being. Shower chances will increase late in the period, warranting Prob30s at most sites Tuesday afternoon. Chances for TSRA will also increase after 18Z Tue, and a Prob30 is included at KCLT during that time. SW winds of around 10 kts are expected this afternoon, with occasional gusts of 15-20 kts possible. Winds will diminish to around 5 kts tonight, before increasing again late Tue morning. Outlook: Scattered showers and storms will remain possible into Tuesday evening. Isolated, mainly diurnal convection is expected Wednesday through Friday. Higher coverage of diurnal convection is expected on Saturday. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...None. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...DEO NEAR TERM...AR/JDL SHORT TERM...MPR LONG TERM...MPR AVIATION...JDL