Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Salt Lake City, UT

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153 FXUS65 KSLC 231009 AFDSLC Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Salt Lake City UT 409 AM MDT Thu May 23 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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Warm dry and breezy conditions will persist across portions of southern Utah through Friday, while a cooler and more stable air mass resides across the north. A more potent weather system will bring widespread precipitation to much of northern and central Utah Saturday, along with a cooling trend across the south. Warm and drier conditions will return next week..
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&& .SHORT TERM (Through 12Z/6AM Sunday)...
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Early morning water vapor imagery and objective analysis depict an upper low progressing eastward across southern Idaho, with the associated low level baroclinic zone stretching across southwest Wyoming and northern Utah. The surface front extends along a line from roughly Vernal to Milford, and as this boundary has continued to progress south post frontal winds across northern Utah have largely abated. As such allowed the Wind Advisory to expire at 3AM. Lift along the aforementioned baroclinic zone is resulting in weak bands of precipitation across northern Utah/southwest Wyoming, and these may persist beyond sunrise mainly east of the Wasatch Crest before ending by late morning. The frontal boundary will be slow to push through southern Utah today, and as a result another day of warm, dry and breezy conditions is expected across the lower deserts from St George east to Lake Powell, and north to Hanksville. Temperatures across these areas will again top out in the upper 70s to mid 80s (St George/Zion). Meanwhile, the airmass behind the passing front is much cooler, and temperatures across northern and central Utah will trend 10 to 15 degrees cooler today, struggling to reach the 60F mark along the Wasatch Front. A favorable pressure gradient will result in elevated post frontal winds across the western Uinta Basin and potentially Castle Country as well. These should remain below advisory criteria but will need monitoring. The shallow surface front will briefly push through southern Utah this evening, while the trailing 700mb baroclinic zone stalls across central Utah. This surface boundary will quickly mix northward Friday, eventually stalling across central Utah by mid afternoon. In the wake of this retreating boundary, warm dry and breezy conditions will return to southern Utah Friday afternoon, while a more stable airmass remains entrenched on the cool side of the boundary across northern Utah. Despite this, the airmass will modify allowing temperatures to trend 7-10F warmer Friday afternoon. Additionally, increasing moisture and weak ascent ahead of an approaching shortwave will bring a chance for showers/thunderstorms along and north of the stalled boundary Friday afternoon and evening. The next upper low will dig along the Pacific Northwest coast Friday, then spread inland across the northern Rockies Saturday. Mid level frontogenesis along the stalled baroclinic zone coupled with an influx of moisture associated with the approaching low, and the eventual passage of a shortwave trough rotating around the base of the upper low will work together to bring widespread precipitation to much of northern and central Utah throughout much of Saturday. Snow levels will remain generally above 8000 feet across northern Utah, and 9000 feet across central Utah. Precipitation will remain more spotty across southern Utah as the frontal boundary pushes through this area Saturday afternoon. Precipitation will taper off late Saturday afternoon into Saturday evening as the aforementioned shortwave moves east of the area. The exception may be areas along the Idaho border in closer proximity to the passing upper low Saturday night. .LONG TERM (After 12Z/6AM Sunday)...Through Sunday, should see precipitation tapering off as the system from the prior day(s) departs eastward. Temperatures will warm from that of Saturday, but afternoon highs areawide will remain below seasonal normal for late May. Deterministic and ensemble model guidance continues to show good consensus in support of a building ridge from Memorial Day on into midweek. This will yield dry conditions and a warming trend, with afternoon highs likely near normal on Monday, increasing to above normal moving into the middle of the week. In comparison to prior forecasts, NBM has backed off slightly on the potential for the first 90F or higher day Wednesday afternoon (down to 22% now at KSLC). This appears to be due to potential for an amplifying trough in the PacNW to flatten the ridge or shunt the ridge axis a bit more east of the area, seemingly supported by ~50% of ensemble members. Generally would just anticipate this to result in slightly cooler (but still above normal) temperatures, though something more aggressive/amplified like what the deterministic GFS depicts would certainly be more interesting. This split in ensemble scenarios carries on into Thursday as well, though even then there is ~25% of ensemble membership which support a continued strong ridge. Overall though, looks favorable for a period of more summer-like weather with several days with highs in the low to mid 80s across much the Wasatch Front, and mid to upper 90s in Lower Washington County. While beyond the forecast period, CPC 8 to 14 day also leans in favor of warmer/drier conditions in comparison to normal, so some sort of ridge dominated pattern seems favored to largely persist.
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&& .AVIATION...
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KSLC...In the wake of departing system, terminal will see continued NW winds through the day Thursday, with some gusts up to 25 kts or so possible during the afternoon. Expect winds to gradually relax approaching sunset, with a switch back to lighter SE winds between ~03-05Z early Friday. Otherwise, expect coverage of VFR cloud cover to generally decrease through the day. .REST OF UTAH AND SOUTHWEST WYOMING...Most active portion of system will continue to depart the region. Behind the front, a continued north to northwest wind direction will generally be favored at most terminals. Many terminals will also see some modest gusts, generally in the 20-30 kt range during the day Thursday. Otherwise, expect generally lessening cloud cover at northern terminals, with clear to mostly clear skies persisting at southern terminals.
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&& .FIRE WEATHER...
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A cold front across central Utah early this morning will slowly push south through the day today. Ahead of this front, warm dry and breezy conditions will persist across south central, southeast and east central Utah, where afternoon RH will fall below 15% and winds will gust into the 25-35 mph range. Further north, a much cooler air mass behind this front will result in temperatures trending 10 to 15 degrees cooler across northern and central Utah. This front will briefly push through southern Utah this evening turning winds northwesterly, before retreating north early Friday, and stalling across central Utah Friday afternoon. Warm, dry and breezy conditions will spread across southern Utah again Friday to the south of this front, while the airmass remains more stable but trends a few degrees warmer across northern Utah. Just enough moisture in the vicinity of this front will allow for a few showers and thunderstorms Friday. A more organized weather system will move into the region Saturday, bringing fairly widespread precipitation to much of northern and central Utah. This system will also push the cold front through southern Utah resulting in a cooling trend along with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. A warming and drying trend will follow for the early portion of next week.
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&& .SLC WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... UT...None. WY...None. && $$ SHORT TERM... LONG TERM... AVIATION... FIRE WEATHER... For more information from NOAA`s National Weather Service visit... http://weather.gov/saltlakecity