Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS State College, PA

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951 FXUS61 KCTP 101927 AFDCTP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service State College PA 327 PM EDT Mon Jun 10 2024 .SYNOPSIS... * Today will be coldest day of the week with high temperatures 5F to 15F below average for mid-June. * Isolated showers are possible this afternoon, primarily north of I-80, and Tuesday afternoon in southeast PA, but most locations will stay dry. * Temperatures will be on the rise through the end of the week as high pressure brings a stretch of rain- free weather with relatively low humidity, light winds, and plenty of sunshine. && .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM TUESDAY MORNING/... A potent shortwave aloft today will support more clouds than sun over the higher terrain along with isolated showers across the northern mountains. Partly to mostly cloudy skies will extend all the way into southeast PA thanks to a fair weather stratocumulus deck from this afternoon into the early evening hours. Temperatures this afternoon will struggle to reach 60 degrees across the northern tier and remain in the 60s to mid 70s elsewhere. These high temperatures will be 5F to 15F degrees below average for mid- June. Add a northwest wind to the relatively cool temperatures for this time of year and the difference between being in the sun and in the shade will feel very significant today. A few places could see wind gusts near 20mph before winds die down later this evening. Clouds will taper off across much of the area tonight and another cool night is in store. Lows will range from the mid 40s across the Allegheny Plateau to the mid 50s in the Lower Susquehanna Valley. A stray shower is possible near the Mason-Dixon line late tonight as a weak surface trough traverses the region, but no significant accumulation is expected. Patchy fog could develop along the Laurel ridges and the north west mountains tonight where dew point depressions will be lowest. && .SHORT TERM /6 AM TUESDAY MORNING THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... The upper trough that has kept temperatures below normal will be slow to exit the region on Tuesday. North or northwest winds will continue to promote cold air advection, but the lack of as much cold air aloft should result in fewer clouds and therefore allow temperatures to trend 3 to 6 degrees warmer across higher elevations Tuesday afternoon. Farther southeast, expect a similar day as Monday with highs in the mid 70s. A stray shower or storm is also possible Tuesday afternoon. High pressure will begin to build in Tuesday night, which will support clearing skies and calm winds. Patchy valley fog is possible into Wednesday morning in the deepest valleys of northwest PA. Overnight lows will turn the corner and begin moderating Tuesday night ranging from the upper 40s in the northwest to near 60 in the southeast. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
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Looking at a warm up for the second half of the week, but dewpoints will not add anything to the heat. Other than Friday, most of the time will be dry for a change, after a wet Spring. Height falls could support some strong storms later on Friday, but that will depend on timing, lee trough formation, and moisture convergence. Highest dewpoints fcst to the southeast of the best dynamics. Activity likely to weaken Friday evening, as the cold front drops to the southeast. Next weekend looks dry, as a northerly flow of dry air from Canada is advected into our area. This could be key to the fcst, as if one keeps advecting dry air into the area now and then, this will aid in the upper level ridge building back in. There could be a shower or storm later next Monday, as a more humid airmass works eastward.
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&& .AVIATION /20Z MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... Mainly VFR across much of the airspace today, with the exception of the NW sites where low clouds will likely hold MVFR conditions through tonight. Gusty winds will occur as a upper level trough swings through central PA. Winds are not expected to gust high enough to reach LLWS criteria, but sites today could see gusts up to 25kts. Northwest winds will gradually diminish this afternoon as high pressure builds in across the Great Lakes. Cloud will continue to build in through tonight, but most sites should maintain VFR with ceilings likely to remain near 5000ft. Some lower clouds are possible across the west and north of PA, and BFD will likely (~80%) keep its MVFR cigs through tomorrow morning. Light patchy ridgetop fog could also develop in the NW, but confidence is low enough to not mention it in the BFD TAF. Outlook... Tue-Thu...Predominantly VFR w/ no sig wx expected. Fri...Restrictions possible if afternoon/evening CB/TSRA develops. && .CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Banghoff NEAR TERM...Banghoff/Bowen SHORT TERM...Banghoff/Bowen LONG TERM...Martin AVIATION...Guseman/Bowen