Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC

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080 FXUS62 KRAH 230714 AFDRAH Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 315 AM EDT Thu May 23 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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A warm and humid air mass over our region, combined with the passage of a series of upper level disturbances over the area, will produce unsettled weather through Monday, with daily chances of showers and storms. A drier air mass will arrive by the middle of next week.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 900 PM Tuesday... Isolated terrain driven convection that developed within the instability maximum in place across the mountains and foothills has fizzled out. Meanwhile, a convective complex of showers and thunderstorms over eastern Kentucky and TN, is starting to weaken. This weakening trend is expected to continue as the storms progress eastward into an increasingly less unstable airmass. As such, dry conditions are expected to persist overnight. Western portions of the forecast will see an increase in some debris cloudiness. Elsewhere, it should remain mostly clear overnight mainly in the mid 60s, except for some lower 60s in the cooler locations. && .SHORT TERM /FRIDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT/...
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As of 145 AM Thursday... Tough to have a lot of confidence in the forecast for Friday, given that the timing and evolution of convection in our area will be greatly dependent on what happens today in NC (including any lingering outflows or differential heating boundaries) and upstream in the S Plains into the lower Miss Valley, as any resulting MCVs from this area (riding on long-fetch SW flow from off Baja California) could help drive our Friday storm chances. This uncertainty is reflected in the later hours of the CAMs, which show little agreement. The most likely scenario involves some combination of the larger scale mid level trough now over the Desert Southwest, a residual MCV from today`s S Plains convection, and perhaps a weak boundary left over our region from today`s storms, all working with high PW in the 90th percentile, marginal to mdt SBCAPE, and warm surface temps and dewpoints in the warm sector within weak lee surface troughing to promote scattered to numerous multicell storms from mid to late afternoon through the evening. Such storms would be most likely across our S and E, as some models suggest that an earlier mid level wave at 700 mb pushing off the Mid Atlantic coast in the early afternoon would introduce some brief WNW flow and drying across our N and W. Then the GFS/ECMWF depict a trailing shortwave trough (perhaps an MCV) moving into the NC mountains Fri evening/night, which, if it occurs, could support additional late-day mountain convection poised to push into the NC Piedmont overnight. Will start with slight shower chances through lunchtime, then ramp up pops to good chance everywhere except likely far S and SE, where any lingering boundary from today is apt to settle. Will keep chance pops going overnight for showers and isolated storm, but again, confidence in all of this is low, considering how much is predicated on today`s activity here and well upstream. Under partly to mostly cloudy skies, and starting the day with thicknesses just a bit above normal, expect highs in the 80s (low NW ranging to upper SE), around 5 degrees above normal, followed by muggy lows in the mid 60s to lower 70s, 8-10 degrees above normal. -GIH
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&& .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
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As of 310 AM Thursday... Daily chances for showers and storms are expected Sat through Mon, with pops decreasing by Tue/Wed with a shift in the longwave pattern. The aforementioned Fri night shortwave trough is expected to be over central or eastern VA/NC Sat morning. If this feature is a bit slower, then the cooler mid levels and DVPA may prompt high coverage of storms with heating across our east. If this wave is faster, then that will bring rearward shortwave ridging into our area Sat, reducing our pops. With our area firmly in warm/moist advection, PW still above normal, and surface troughing still in place over the area, will lean on the high side of climo pops, esp E, with 40% NW ranging to 55-60% SE Sat. Expect a brief downturn in pops late Sat night through much of Sun as the shortwave ridging passes overhead coincident with a dip in PW, but with upstream convection in the Plains and Miss Valley continuing to eject perturbations through the Mid Atlantic region with no real pattern change for us at the surface, we should see convection chances quickly return, and will retain chance pops Sun afternoon and evening. We start to see signs of a longwave pattern change starting Memorial Day, as a deep northern stream low/trough moves into the Midwest/Great Lakes. This will set up faster and more cyclonic mid level flow with steepening mid level lapse rates, suggesting high pops, esp late in the day and into Mon night. Will have good chance to likely pops, highest Mon afternoon/evening. As longwave troughing sets up over E NOAM, Tue/Wed should be fairly dry with below-climo chances for showers and storms. Thicknesses will hold above normal Sat, favoring highs in the 80s to near 90, then highs will reach peaks of mid 80s to lower 90s Sun and Mon, pushing heat indices well into the 90s all but the far N. By Tue, as the upper trough axis and associated cold front move through, temps should drop back close to normal. -GIH
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&& .AVIATION /06Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 145 AM Thursday... VFR conditions are expected to continue through this morning into this afternoon. Showers and thunderstorms are expected to develop over the NC mountains by 18z and track along a common cold pool from INT/GSO (21z) through RDU (23z) and a weakening trend as they approach RWI/FAY (00/01z). Trailing stratiform rain and isolated thunder may linger for a few hours through midnight, especially at FAY and RWI. Surface winds of 5-10 kts out of the southwest through the afternoon will veer to generally westerly post showers/storms. Reduced vsby and strong, gusty winds should be expected where storms occur. Looking ahead: Sub-VFR cigs and vsbys may develop in the wake of the convection Thu night and linger through early Fri morning, but confidence in spatial coverage and flight category is low at this time. Primarily diurnally driven showers/storms will be possible at all terminals Fri through Mon. && .RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Hartfield NEAR TERM...CBL SHORT TERM...Hartfield LONG TERM...Hartfield AVIATION...Swiggett/KC