Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC
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176 FXUS62 KRAH 021710 AFDRAH Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 110 PM EDT Sun Jun 2 2024 .SYNOPSIS... An upper trough crossing the region will provide some cloudiness and widely scattered light showers today and tonight. Otherwise, look for a warmer temperatures, more humidity, and increasing chances for daytime shower and thunderstorm activity as we head through the first half of the week. && .NEAR TERM /TODAY AND TONIGHT/... As of 942 AM Sunday... Morning satellite imagery continues to show widespread cloud cover across NC in advance of an approaching longwave trough over the TN valley. A weak embedded wave within the trough, and associated forcing for ascent, has produced some widely scattered showers/sprinkles across the area, but for the most part there is still too much mid level dry air to overcome for showers to reach the ground (depicted well by the dry layer from 600-800mb per 12Z GSO sounding). Cloud cover has held temperatures back a bit this morning but given the relatively mild start to the day, temps are slowly climbing through the upper 60s into the lower 70s as of 1330Z. As the upper trough approaches, surface high pressure will continue to migrate offshore allowing for continued moist advection into the area. The combination of the approaching shortwave and lee troughing east of the mountains should produce additional showers later this afternoon, primarily across the western Piedmont and that is the area where the highest PoPs have been depicted in today`s forecast (30-40 percent). There is an outside chance of a rumble of thunder in that area as well but instability is understandably meager given extensive cloud cover and any storms that develop should remain well below severe limits. As the wave slowly moves east tonight, additional light showers are possible across much of central NC but rainfall amounts will be light (a few hundredths of an inch at most). A broad swath of 15-20 PoPs will remain in the forecast for the evening/overnight period to account for the passage of the trough but once we get back 00Z tonight, all mentions of thunder will be removed from the forecast. High temps today should reach the low to mid 80s. Look for a mild night tonight given cloud cover and increasing dewpoints: low to mid 60s. && .SHORT TERM /MONDAY AND MONDAY NIGHT/... As of 317 AM Sunday... NW flow will persist over the Carolinas given a s/w ridge axis to west and a trough axis to our east. Meanwhile, a backdoor front over VA will gradually drift south toward our area. Low level convergence along and ahead of the aforementioned front, along with convergence invof of the Piedmont trough, may provide enough forcing for widely scattered late-afternoon and evening showers and thunderstorms. Will maintain low-chance PoPs for this time, along with highs in the mid 80s. Lows Monday night in the 60s. && .LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 317 AM Sunday... The extended forecast continues to show an unsettled pattern, with Saturday the only day with high confidence of dry conditions. Perhaps the most difficult aspect of the long term forecast is that the strongest features, a surface low and upper level low, should primarily remain over Canada. Weaker features, a surface cold front (which will bring some drier air but not much in the way of cooler air) and an upper trough rotating around the upper low while the low is over the Great Lakes, will be the forcing mechanisms for any precipitation, which will have lower predictability. Chance pops are expected on Tuesday primarily east of US-1, then all locations should have high chance pops on Wednesday and Thursday. Tonight`s model runs are showing the highest chances of rain remaining to the west of central North Carolina on Wednesday, then shifting the highest chances of rain north of the region on Thursday, a slightly different solution than what was shown 24 hours ago. There is fairly good agreement between deterministic and ensemble models that the cold front should move through late Thursday, then loiter along the coast Friday. This should keep chance pops east of I-95 Friday, with slight chance pops across the rest of the forecast area mainly due to the 00Z GEFS solution. With the front shifting offshore Saturday, that is the one day in the forecast with high confidence for dry conditions. Expect minimal variations in the highs and lows through the period - highs will range from the mid 80s to the low 90s while lows will be in the 60s. && .AVIATION /18Z SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 110 PM Sunday... Mainly light sprinkles across the area at the moment but conditions remain VFR. Additional showers are expected later this afternoon, primarily around INT/GSO and there could be brief periods of MVFR ceilings within the strongest showers. Meanwhile to the east, conditions should remain dry (outside of the aforementioned sprinkle) through 00Z although some of the INT/GSO showers may make a run at RDU right around 00Z and I included a few hours of VCSH. Late tonight, most guidance indicates widely scattered showers across the area as a trough moves through NC. Elected to include a few hours of VCSH at RDU/FAY/RWI as this trough crosses the area although confidence in how this late night scenario will play out is low. Outlook: Additional, mainly diurnally driven showers and storms, are expected through much of this week as we return to a more typical June pattern. Highest storm chances are likely at INT/GSO although all 5 TAF sites could see impacts in the form of non-VFR cigs/vsbys within any showers that develop. && .RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...np NEAR TERM...Leins SHORT TERM...np LONG TERM...Green AVIATION...Leins