Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Knoxville/Tri Cities, TN
Issued by NWS Knoxville/Tri Cities, TN
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362 FXUS64 KMRX 180723 AFDMRX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Morristown TN 323 AM EDT Wed Sep 18 2024 ...New SHORT TERM, LONG TERM... .SHORT TERM... (Today and tonight) Issued at 255 AM EDT Wed Sep 18 2024 Key Messages: 1. Isolated to scattered showers and possibly some thunderstorms, are possible this afternoon and evening for similar areas that saw precipitation yesterday - northeast Tennessee, southwest Virginia & North Carolina, and in the foothills of the Southern Appalachians. 2. High temperatures bounce back into the 80s today for much of non-elevated areas. Discussion: What`s left of the tropical cyclone, is currently centered over the Carolina`s providing some cloud cover and fog under broken skies. Through the next 24 hours, a weak low will develop off of the Virginia coast and try to get it`s act together as it deepens some before reaching New England by tomorrow. Wrap around from that system and residual energy leftover under troughing aloft, will bring showers and maybe some thunderstorms back to the same areas this afternoon and evening; most likely less in the form of amounts. Chances for thunder are pretty low (< 30 percent), so not expecting any severe weather. It doesn`t appear rain will be as widespread as it was early yesterday either. Again, the southern valley and plateau will not see much in the way of any accumulating precipitation which is not what a lot want to hear. Temperatures are expected to be several degrees warmer this afternoon with readings back in the 80s for many. For comparison, our climate sites ranged in the mid 70s and upper 60s for highs Tuesday. Like some areas are seeing this morning, low clouds and fog development may be possible again Thursday morning. && .LONG TERM... (Thursday through Tuesday) Issued at 255 AM EDT Wed Sep 18 2024 Key Messages: 1. Other than showers and an isolated rumble of thunder in the east on Thursday, dry and progressively warmer conditions are expected Friday through the weekend. 2. Early next week, temperatures moderate closer to normal with some low-end rain chances returning. Discussion: Not much has changed for the long term forecast. An upper low to our east early Thursday will lift northeast to become an east coast trough by Friday morning. Meanwhile ridging to our west, anchored over Texas, will strengthen and expand to the east through at least the first half of the weekend. Still can`t rule out some isolated to scattered showers in the northeast on Thursday, and possibly even a rumble of thunder, but in general expect dry and increasingly warmer conditions Thursday through Saturday. With the strengthening ridge and H85 temps warming to 18-19C Friday and Saturday, feel pretty confident in saying some locations in the south will likely see highs top 90 degrees. This won`t be calendar day record territory, but it will definitely be warm. Did undercut NBM dewpoints by a decent amount. Models suggest deep mixing through this period, with increasingly dry air in place so I went with a blend of CONSAll and the NBM 10th percentile to bring dewpoints down a bit. Expect we`ll see some areas of sub-forty percent RH on Friday and Saturday as a result. Winds should be light though, so no notable uptick in fire weather concerns exist. On Sunday, similarly strong ridging will remain in place, keeping the area very warm and dry. By early next week, the main question will be how troughing to our northwest will evolve. Some solutions suggest a strong system to develop and progress to our north with others showing more zonal evolution. Seems like the trends have been towards a less dynamic system and more zonal upper pattern, but there`s still quite a bit of uncertainty. In any case, some moderation in temperatures and a return of low-end rain chances can be expected. && .AVIATION... (06Z TAFS) Issued at 146 AM EDT Wed Sep 18 2024 BLUF: a complicated overnight aviation forecast. TYS has gone down harder/faster than originally thought, while TRI is still VFR. Current HREF guidance shows CIGS and VSBY will impact TYS the most overnight. Still some indication TRI will go down too, but not too overly confident on timing and extent. Wouldn`t be surprised if TYS remains LIFR much of the night, but will keep a close eye. Given the current wind direction, TRI may also escape lower flight categories if they become downsloped. CHA recently reached MVFR CIGS, so would expect that to persist through the morning. Guidance wants to throw in some fog there, but not too sure that`s possible given how dry they have been, although climate earlier reported a Trace of rainfall. CIGS and VSBY overall will improve into Wednesday with chances for afternoon and evening showers returning for TYS and TRI. TRI I believe may have the better chance of thunder, so that was left and TYS removed. && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... Chattanooga Airport, TN 85 65 88 64 / 10 0 0 0 Knoxville McGhee Tyson Airport, TN 83 64 85 61 / 20 10 10 0 Oak Ridge, TN 83 63 85 61 / 10 0 10 0 Tri Cities Airport, TN 79 61 80 59 / 30 10 30 0 && .MRX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NC...NONE. TN...NONE. VA...NONE. && $$ SHORT TERM...KS LONG TERM....CD AVIATION...KS