Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC

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312
FXUS62 KRAH 250601
AFDRAH

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Raleigh NC
153 AM EDT Sat May 25 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Above normal temperatures along with humid and unsettled weather
will continue through Memorial Day. A cold front will move through
Monday night, bringing drier, more seasonable, and less humid
conditions Tuesday through Friday.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
As of 750 PM Friday...

Latest analysis shows two shortwaves of interest in the mid-levels.
The first is presently over eastern NC and southeastern VA. At the
surface tied to this feature are some subtle surface troughs, one
moving south into the VA/NC border near the northern Coastal Plain.
The second trough stretches from the eastern Sandhills to roughly
the central Coastal Plain. Convection continues to fire along and
east of these trough features. The convection over the central and
southern Coastal Plain should continue to drift to the east over the
next hour or so, exiting central NC as the mid-level energy pushes
east. The convection moving SSE toward Roanoke Rapids is weakening
as it moves south, into an area of little effective shear but CAPE
still upwards of 1500 J/kg. A low-end chance of showers/storms will
exist for the next few hours, into late evening, over the northern
Coastal Plain as a result, with some convection firing along the
outflow. Storms should not be severe given waning instability and
weak shear.

The second shortwave is roughly over the TN valley, with convection
currently over much of SC. Models take this feature eastward
overnight, reaching the west/southern Piedmont toward the early
morning hours of Sat. Some of the CAMs, such as the HRRR, kick off
some isolated showers or storms in this region, but confidence is
low on coverage, if any, given convective minimum and increasing
CIN. For now, we left slight chances in the southern Piedmont.

There will be the potential for fog over the NE Piedmont to
central/northern Coastal Plain, though little rain has fallen over
the Coastal Plain so confidence is low on placement and extent, if
any. High clouds spreading east from SC may also limit radiational
cooling. Lows are expected to range in the low to mid 60s.

&&

.SHORT TERM /SATURDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT/...
As of 240 PM Friday...

There are lower chances of thunderstorms Saturday, but hot
temperatures expected.

A remnant MCV may be over portions of southwest or far southern NC
at the start of Saturday. The flow aloft would support this MCV
tracking ESE into southern NC or upstate SC Saturday. In addition,
weak surface troughing will hold across our Piedmont with mid/upper
troughing. Strong surface heating will aid in temperatures reaching
the 87-92 range most areas. With high moisture through the column
and higher than average dewpoints in the mid 60s to around 70,
isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible with heating, with
highest chance across the southwest, south, and southeast zones or
per the track of the remnant MCV and near the surface boundary. Some
of the latest hi-res models suggest that much of the convection
Saturday afternoon may be over GA/SC with a minimum over NC. This
trend will be monitored. Otherwise, isolated to scattered
thunderstorms are expected to diminish Saturday evening. Lows will
be generally 65-70.

&&

.LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/...
As of 155 AM Saturday...

High rain chances Memorial Day into the night will yield to an
imminent pattern change to drier and less humid conditions starting
Tue and lasting through the week.

The details in timing and location of convection Mon/Mon night will
greatly depend on what culminates prior in situ and upstream, given
the outsized influence of various mid level perturbations (mostly
MCVs) and surface boundaries (differential heating discontinuities,
new and old outflows, and sea breezes) in focusing showers and
storms and guiding their tracks and evolution. And lingering debris
clouds from Sun/Sun night convection here and immediately upstream
may affect our heating and potential buoyancy Mon. What is of higher
certainty is the continued presence of a warm and humid air mass, a
deeply moist column, and increasing winds at all levels ahead of an
approaching surface cold front and a profound longwave trough/low
sweeping through the Midwest and Great Lakes region Mon. This will
create favorable conditions for scattered to numerous showers and
storms with improving organization late day heading into Mon night.
The LREF members have SBCAPE peaking at 1000-2500 J/kg (25th/75th)
over much of central NC, with mid level flow strengthening to 40-50
kts amid PW of 1.5-1.75". Incoming dynamic forcing for ascent in the
form of mid level DPVA (in particular with a late-day shortwave
trough swinging through W and N NC) and upper divergence should also
boost storm intensity and organization. Will have pops rising to
good chance to categorical, highest NW in the afternoon and in the
Coastal Plain in the evening, trending down overnight with cold
front passage. Highs in the upper 80s-lower 90s. With the front
passing through Mon night, lows should be in the lower 60s NW but
still mid 60s to near 70 S and E.

Mostly dry weather will follow for the rest of this period. The
longwave trough axis will still be to our W Tue, and while there may
be minor waves shifting through SC and SE NC, much of the deeper
moisture will have pushed E of our area or even offshore. Will keep
a slight chance of an afternoon shower or storm in our far SE, as
large scale models show the front slowing or lingering over our SE
sections where surface temps and dewpoints are apt to be elevated. A
dry NW flow will keep the column dry and stable Tue night through
Wed, although the notably cooler air will still be held up W of the
mountains until a secondary reinforcing dry cold front drops SE
through our area late Wed through Wed night. Behind this front,
dewpoints will drop even more, bottoming out in the 50s and perhaps
even some 40s Thu/Fri as surface high pressure sourced from central
Canada builds in from the NW and N. Temps will still be near to
slightly above normal Tue/Wed, before dropping to a few degrees
below normal Thu/Fri with low humidity and lots of sunshine. -GIH

&&

.AVIATION /06Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
As of 150 AM Saturday...

Tricky aviation forecast for this morning through daybreak. Cirrus
over much of central NC has prevented prolonged fog development thus
far, but a thinning trend has been evident on satellite imagery over
the past couple hours with most locations calm at the surface.
Crossover temperatures at most terminals will likely be too low for
prevailing fog with the exception of RWI. Guidance continues to
favor RWI and the vicinity for IFR/LIFR fog this morning with the
06z TAFs leaning on climatology for timing of lowest restrictions.
Shallow fog/stratus will lift through 13z with isolated to scattered
afternoon/evening showers and storms yet again. Best chance for
organized convection will be near the Triad terminals (GSO/INT) with
airmass storms possible elsewhere.

Looking ahead: Primarily diurnally driven showers/storms will be
possible at all terminals through Mon, with the best chances Mon
aft/eve ahead of a cold front, which should move through the area
Mon night.

&&

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

&&

$$
SYNOPSIS...Hartfield
NEAR TERM...Kren
SHORT TERM...Badgett
LONG TERM...Hartfield
AVIATION...Swiggett/KC