Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Charleston, SC

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830
FXUS62 KCHS 220003
AFDCHS

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Charleston SC
803 PM EDT Fri Jun 21 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Tropical low pressure will move onshore along the Northeast
Florida and Southeast Georgia coast tonight. High pressure will
then become the primary feature this weekend and into next
week.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/...
As of 8 PM, regional radar indicated that the center of a well
defined tropical low was 40 miles southeast of Brunswick,
Georgia. The center of the low is tracking towards the FL/GA
coast; NHC indicates that probs of a tropical cyclone formation
have decreased to 40 percent.

KCLX detected scattered to numerous showers across the forecast
area, greatest near the coast. Recent runs of the HRRR indicate
that the coverage of the inland showers will decrease through
the rest of this evening. Recent SPC Mesoscale Analysis
indicates CAPE values will remain above 1500 J/kg through
midnight. This lingering instability should support scattered
shower coverage this evening. After midnight, PW values will
surge up to 2.2 to 2.4 inches, especially near the center of
the tropical low. HREF indicates that a band of numerous to
widespread showers with embedded thunderstorms will develop
near and just north of the low center late tonight into early
Saturday morning. The combination of lingering instability and
high PWAT should produce a corridor of moderate to even heavy
rainfall south of the Savannah River. In fact, HREF indicates
the probabilities of the 3 hour QPF exceeding 1 inch may peak
at 70% with 30% chance of 3 inches.

The forecast update will feature greater PoPs across southeast
GA late tonight into Saturday morning. In addition, QPF was
increased to over an inch in spots, primarily between McIntosh
and Chatham Counties. Given the thick cloud cover and rounds of
rain expected overnight temperatures were kept generally in the
mid 70s. However the heavy rainfall over southeast GA could
result in wet bulb cooling, resulting in some locations getting
into the low 70s.

&&

.SHORT TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/...
Saturday and Saturday night: Aloft, the forecast area will sit
on the eastern extent of the upper ridge. At the surface, the
main feature of interest will be the remnant circulation of the
tropical disturbance that pushed inland along the northeast
Florida and southeast Georgia coast. This circulation and the
envelope of deep moisture associated with it will linger near
the Georgia coast and will be the focus for thunderstorm
activity likely ongoing at the start of the day. The highest
rain chances and greatest coverage of thunderstorms is expected
to be across the Georgia coastal waters, southeast Georgia, and
up along the Savannah River into southeast South Carolina. Rain
chances peak in the 60 percent range, but could certainly need
to be higher depending on how things evolve overnight. This will
yield the possibility of some locally heavy rainfall, given the
presence of the circulation, deep moisture, and potential for
training storms. For this highlighted area, rainfall amounts of
0.50-1.00" will be common, with potential for locally higher
amounts. Overnight, while the focus for nocturnal convection
should shift offshore, we could still see some showers and
storms periodically attempt to push onshore. Though the highest
chances are positioned over the waters, we do maintain 30-40
percent chances along the entire coast overnight. The presence
of clouds and the expected convection should keep temperatures
down a bit along the coast, with upper 80s common there.
However, further inland we could see some low 90s. Overnight,
lows will be typical of summertime with low to mid 70s.

Sunday through Monday: On Sunday, the remnant circulation should
completely dissipate or at least shift off to the northeast.
This should begin the transition to a more typical summertime
pattern as the subtropical high takes hold with a lee trough
inland across central Georgia and the Carolinas. Convection
should become more diurnal each day, favoring the afternoon and
evening time period. Temperatures will begin to increase as
well, with Sunday highs in the mid to upper 90s inland and low
90s elsewhere. Then by Monday, look for mid to upper 90s across
the entire forecast area. The result for Monday will be heat
index values rising to around 105 for much of the forecast area.

&&

.LONG TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/...
Aloft, the pattern will transition to weak and broad troughing
for much of the upcoming week. At the surface, the pattern
should be typical of summertime with subtropical high pressure
in control. Rain chances will be diurnal, with the highest
chances in the afternoon and evening and then transitioning
offshore to the coastal waters during the overnight periods. The
most notable part of the forecast will be highs in the mid to
upper 90s Tuesday and Wednesday, with a few inland locations
possibly hitting triple digits. For Thursday, mid 90s should be
more common then coming down to the low to mid 90s by Friday.
Depending on how dew point values work out, there could be some
heat index values into the 105-110 degree range Tuesday-
Thursday, primarily along the coastal corridor. If this comes to
fruition, Heat Advisories could be needed.

&&

.AVIATION /00Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
Prior to the 0Z TAFs, KCLX detected shower activity near or over
each terminal. Short duration restrictions are possible with the
occurrence of showers this evening. The potential for MVFR
conditions will be highlighted with a TEMPO from 0-4Z for KCHS
and KJZI. A band of at least moderate showers with embedded
thunderstorms is forecast to develop across the SE GA coast late
tonight with the landfall of a tropical low. The axis of this
convection will likely remain just south of KSAV. However, KSAV
will remain close enough that it may experience period of MVFR
conditions with showers between 5-9Z, highlighted with a TEMPO.
HREF thunder probs increase significantly toward daybreak Sat
across SE GA. In addition, forecast soundings and MOS indicate
MVFR ceilings with restrictions to visibility during showers and
thunderstorms. It appears that MVFR conditions will linger at
KSAV through much of the day, ending around 20Z.

Extended Aviation Outlook: Mostly VFR. However, convection will
bring brief flight restrictions, mainly each afternoon and
evening.

&&

.MARINE...
Tonight: Winds are certainly over performing a bit across the
coastal waters this afternoon with tropical low pressure
located just to the southeast of the Georgia offshore waters.
Enhanced winds will linger into this evening then diminish a bit
overnight as the low moves inland along the far northeast
Florida or southern Georgia coast. Winds/seas will diminish
first over the South Carolina waters, including Charleston
Harbor, and the Georgia waters late. However, there is uncertainty
on how quickly winds/seas will diminish, especially over the
South Carolina waters. The Small Craft Advisory has been
extended until 6 PM for the Charleston Harbor, 8 PM for the
South Santee- Edisto Beach nearshore waters and into the
overnight for the two Georgia marine legs. The highest seas will
occur early this evening, 4-6 ft nearshore and 6-8 ft over the
Georgia offshore waters.

Saturday through Wednesday: South to southwest flow mainly in the
10-15 knot range should prevail across the local waters through
the weekend and into the middle of next week. The exception
will be Sunday night into Monday when winds are expected to
increase a bit as the gradient tightens, with 15-20 knots more
common. Seas should average 2-4 feet through the period, though
perhaps up to 5 feet at times in the outer waters as winds surge
a bit.

Rip Currents: Onshore winds and lingering swell energy will help
to keep the rip risk elevated Saturday and again Sunday. For
Saturday, depending on the peak winds and the amount of swell
that arrives at the beaches, the local rip current calculator
results in a borderline high risk. Current approach is to
maintain the moderate risk for Saturday and allow the overnight
shift to re-evaluate.

&&

.CHS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
GA...High Risk for Rip Currents until 8 PM EDT this evening for GAZ117-
     119-139-141.
SC...High Risk for Rip Currents until 8 PM EDT this evening for
     SCZ048>051.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for AMZ350.
     Small Craft Advisory until midnight EDT tonight for AMZ352-354.
     Small Craft Advisory until 4 AM EDT Saturday for AMZ374.

&&

$$

NEAR TERM...NED/SVS
SHORT TERM...
LONG TERM...
AVIATION...NED
MARINE...