Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC

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000 FXUS62 KRAH 180030 AFDRAH Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 830 PM EDT Wed Apr 17 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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A weak cold front will move east across the region tonight, then a stronger cold front will cross the area late Friday into Saturday, before stalling out just to our south. A wave of low pressure will track along the front along the southeast coast late in the weekend.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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As of 830 PM Wednesday... The cold front was still analyzed along the Ohio River this evening, with a surface trough in the lee of the Appalachians. There continued to be limited instability and lift to work with over NC this evening as the best instability was located well to our south, and the dynamics to our northwest. The front will approach later tonight with little fanfare. There have been a few sprinkles in the past few hours, but even the sprinkles were shifting on to the SE, away from our region. Nearly overcast skies were observed back into portions of eastern TN. It will be late tonight before clearing finally works east across the region. Otherwise, expect mainly cloudy skies through the evening then gradual clearing later tonight. Pre-frontal warm conditions with a light SW flow will keep temperatures well above normal. Expect lows in the lower to mid 60s, except some upper 50s NW-N Piedmont if it clears soon enough.
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&& .SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... As of 355 PM Wednesday... Dry and unseasonably warm-mild. In the wake of a shortwave perturbation that will shear east and across the srn Middle Atlantic early Thu morning, progressive shortwave ridging aloft will build across and offshore the South and Middle Atlantic Thu-Thu night. A surface frontal wave, accompanying the aforementioned shearing shortwave perturbation noted above, will develop along a retreating warm front across nrn VA/MD through Wed evening and offshore the DelMarva Thu morning. While an attendant cold front will remain draped in its wake across the Virginias and lwr OH Valley, a trailing trough will move east and across the srn Middle Atlantic Piedmont Thu morning and Coastal Plain through the afternoon. The passage of the trough will be marked by a light wind shift to nwly and marked low-level drying characterized by afternoon surface dewpoints in the mid-upr 40s to lwr 50s. It will remain very warm south the frontal zone, however, with high temperatures comparable to those of Mon - 85-90 F. The dry air will also favor a large diurnal temperature range, with Thu night low temperatures in the 50s, to around 60 in the ern Sandhills/srn Coastal Plain. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... As of 210 PM Wednesday... Shortwave ridging will move offshore on Friday and get replaced by mostly zonal flow aloft, though a weak perturbation in the mean flow looks to pass through in the afternoon. At the surface, a warm front will lift north through central NC on Friday morning, while a much stronger cold front begins to approach from the NW. The primary low will lift from the OH Valley into SE Canada, while a secondary surface low develops and slowly moves east across the Carolinas. Decent heating and surface dew points in the upper-50s to lower-60s will help CAPE reach 500-1000 J/kg, maybe even 1000-1500 J/kg particularly across the south. All of this will bring a chance of showers and storms during the afternoon and evening. So POPs are still chance across the area, but think coverage should be fairly limited given the weak upper forcing. 0-6 km shear around 25-35 kts is borderline for any severe threat, and the SPC has our entire area in a marginal (level 1 of 5) risk on Friday. Deep boundary layer mixing could result in some damaging wind gusts, and isolated large hail cannot be ruled out either. Forecast highs on Friday are a bit cooler than Thursday in most places but still quite warm, ranging from lower-80s in the far north to upper-80s in the far south. Lows Friday night will again be mild, in the mid-50s to lower-60s, as precipitation chances diminish but some cloud cover remains. The cold front will slowly sink south into central NC Friday night or Saturday morning. A shortwave trough will pass well to our north across the OH Valley and northern Mid-Atlantic on Saturday afternoon and evening, again leaving us with weak upper forcing. Ensemble probabilities indicate most places should be dry, but there could still be enough instability ahead of the front (wherever it sets up) to result in more isolated to widely scattered showers and storms, with the best chance across our far southern counties. Coverage appears even more limited overall compared to Friday. The temperature forecast is low confidence as it depends exactly where the front sets up, but there could be a strong north-to-south gradient across the area, and maybe some CAD across the north as a weak high sets up over VA. POPs then increase to likely on Sunday afternoon and evening, highest SE, as the next wave of low pressure rides along the front. With models showing the front well to our south by this point, we would be on the cool and stable side which would preclude any chance of storms and would result in just stratiform rain. Ensemble mean guidance depicts around a third to two thirds of an inch (highest SE), but deterministic ECMWF and GFS guidance indicates totals around an inch can`t be ruled out. Leaned toward the cooler guidance for temperatures on Sunday given potential for more CAD, and highs in the 50s will be possible in some spots with 60s elsewhere, which is well below normal. Widespread rain from the low will end on Monday morning as it lifts NE into the Atlantic. Yet another shortwave will move across the region on Monday afternoon and evening, but the GFS is much stronger with it and brings additional rain (even spawning surface cyclogenesis off the coast), while on the ECMWF it is flatter and mostly dry. Most GEFS are not as wet as the deterministic GFS, so it appears to be an outlier and only have slight chance POPs at this time. Regardless it will be quite cool once again, with raw guidance indicating some highs in the 50s will again be possible. Tuesday will finally turn mostly sunny and dry, before yet another cold front approaches on Wednesday, though the best upper forcing again looks to go to our north. Temperatures will warm back into the 70s on Tuesday and especially Wednesday as the air mass modifies. && .AVIATION /00Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 715 PM Wednesday... 24 hour TAF period: High confidence VFR conditions will prevail through the 24-hr TAF period. A stray shower/sprinkle cannot be ruled out this evening, mainly at the southern and eastern terminals through about midnight. Overcast high clouds should begin to clear from the NNW after midnight, with clear or mostly clear skies expected at all terminals by 12Z Thu. Otherwise, mainly sly to swly winds of 6-10 kts, with a few lingering intermittent gusts of 15-20 kts possible through midnight. Winds should generally remain in the 4-8 kt range through the remainder of the TAF period, gradually veering around to nwly tonight through Thu morning. There could be a brief period of borderline LLWS criteria at KRDU between 06Z and 09Z Thu, but confidence was too low to include in this issuance. -KC Outlook: VFR conditions are expected to dominate through early Fri afternoon, although a period of sub-VFR cigs is expected 09z-13z Fri morning in the northeast (mainly RWI, perhaps reaching RDU). We`ll have a good chance of showers/storms late Fri through Sat morning, with a risk of sub-VFR cigs/vsbys in fog Fri night. Rain chances and the potential for sub-VFR conditions will linger Sun into Mon as the front settles just to our S and cooler high pressure builds in from the N, but uncertainty is high during this time frame. -GIH && .RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Badgett NEAR TERM...Badgett SHORT TERM...MWS LONG TERM...Danco AVIATION...KC/Hartfield

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