Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC

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637
FXUS62 KRAH 211727
AFDRAH

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Raleigh NC
125 PM EDT Tue May 21 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
High pressure over the western Atlantic will extend across the
Southeast ahead of a cold front that will approach from the west and
become quasi-stationary from the Middle Atlantic to the lower MS
Valley Thursday and Friday.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
As of 125 PM Tuesday...

Weak high pressure has been nearly stationary off the Delmarva
Peninsula for the last 24 hours and will remain there through the
overnight hours. Some diurnal cumulus clouds have developed this
afternoon, although coverage is less than it was yesterday. Less
cloud cover will help afternoon temperatures to be about 3-5 degrees
higher than yesterday, reaching the low to mid 80s. Skies should
remain mostly clear tonight, except there should be cloud cover over
the eastern part of the state. The low clouds and moisture have been
shunted a little farther each of the last few nights, so tonight the
forecast is for cloud cover to not extend much farther west than I-
95. While there was some localized dense fog across eastern counties
this morning, that is not expected tonight. Lows will range from the
mid 50s to the mid 60s.

&&

.SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY AND WEDNESDAY NIGHT/...
As of 400 AM Tuesday...

A sub-tropical mid-level ridge and the underlying wrn extension of
surface high pressure centered over the wrn Atlantic will remain
over the Southeast, while an Appalachian-lee surface trough will
develop across the srn Middle Atlantic Piedmont. Warmer and dry
conditions will result, with highs in the mid-upr 80s, followed by
milder lows in the mid 50s to lwr 60s.

&&

.LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
As of 346 AM Tuesday...

Upper pattern through the extended: A low-amplitude upper trough
will lift through the Great Lakes Thursday.  A series of short waves
will then move through the TN Valley and wash out over the southern
Appalachians Friday through Monday.

Thursday:  On Thursday, a low-amplitude upper trough will lift
through the Great Lakes. Some mid-level energy associated with this
feature may trickle down into our central to northern locations and
promote showers/storms later in the day. While some deterministic
models suggest better coverage over central NC Thursday evening
(e.g. GFS, Canadian, EURO), ensemble guidance has higher
probabilities for precipitation staying north into central VA,
lowering with southeastward extend.  This makes sense conceptually
as the better forcing/low-level moisture still appears to stay to
our north. As such, decided to lean on ensemble guidance and
continue to hold just slight to low chance POPs Thursday
afternoon/evening.

Ensembles continue to simulate a potentially potent short wave
riding through the TN Valley Friday, followed by a secondary vort
signature passing over central NC on Saturday. Deterministic models
are still in a bit of disagreement wrt the evolution of these
features, but overall it still looks like periods of unsettled
weather should occur Friday through Monday. Severe weather
parameters are not popping off the charts at this point during this
period. However, ensembles continue to simulate periods of
relatively higher shear (~30 to 35 kts) and elongated hodographs on
Friday. Thus, a few isolated stronger storms may be possible Friday
afternoon/evening.

There is high probabilities amongst ensembles that temperatures will
exceed the mid 80s both Thursday and Friday.  The quartile spread
widens a bit more over the weekend, likely due to differing
solutions wrt to any sfc boundaries. Regardless, temps will likely
remain in the 80s this upcoming weekend and continue into early next
week.

&&

.AVIATION /17Z TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
As of 105 PM Tuesday...

TAF period: High confidence in VFR conditions for all terminals
except RWI. At these four sites, some diurnal cumulus clouds are
expected with light east-northeast wind today, eventually veering to
the southwest Wednesday morning. For RWI, have gone with a
persistence forecast as each of the last several mornings have seen
conditions drop to IFR/LIFR across much of eastern North Carolina,
and imagine this could be the case again tomorrow morning. However,
each day the western extent of the low conditions have moved farther
east, and it is possible that all restrictions may remain east of
RWI.

Outlook: There will be a chance of showers/storms at INT/GSO
Thursday afternoon, then diurnally driven showers/storms will be
possible at all terminals Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

&&

.RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.

&&

$$
SYNOPSIS...MWS
NEAR TERM...Green
SHORT TERM...MWS
LONG TERM...Luchetti
AVIATION...Green