Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Wilmington, NC

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451 FXUS62 KILM 300751 AFDILM Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Wilmington NC 351 AM EDT Sun Jun 30 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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One more hot and very humid day is expected today before a cold front arrives tonight and Monday with increased coverage of showers and thunderstorms. Relatively cooler and drier conditions will develop behind the front on Tuesday. Stifling heat and humidity should return late in the week.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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A weakness between two mid-level anticyclones will allow a shortwave to dive southeastward and bring unsettled weather across the region, especially during the latter half of the period. Prior to this, weak flow through the troposphere and the remains of mid-level dry air and subsidence should keep overall convective coverage today in the isolated to widely scattered category, with some focus along the sea breeze. Further inland, height falls and subtle cooling/moistening aloft should support a greater coverage of showers and thunderstorms, initially forming into one or more lines along the Piedmont trough to our northwest and spreading southeast late in the afternoon and into this evening. Given the very moist environment characterized by PWATs in the range of 2-2.5", very heavy rainfall may cause isolated flash flooding and isolated wet microbursts may produce wind damage in the strongest storms. As nocturnal cooling commences and surface-based convective inhibition increases while instability decreases, an overall decline in storm coverage and intensity should take place, although isolated showers and storms forming along remnant outflows will remain possible through the first half of the night (through around 06Z). Later in the night (mainly after 08Z), the cold front itself, in tandem with forcing for ascent provided by the incoming shortwave, should yield an uncharacteristic increase in shower/storm coverage, with the most widespread activity expected to develop and track southward through the Cape Fear region and more scattered activity in the Pee Dee region. With long, skinny CAPE profiles seen in forecast soundings, overall storm intensity should be tame, but very heavy rainfall and isolated flash flooding will be a threat.
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&& .SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/...
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An unusually strong upper disturbance (for July standards) will dive southeastward across the Northeast states Monday, pushing a cold front southward across the Carolinas. The front should intercept a very humid airmass with precipitable water values up to 2.5 inches. Widespread showers and thunderstorms should be ongoing Monday morning and will follow the front southward throughout the day. The potential for heavy rainfall exists with high freezing levels and deep warm cloud coalescence expected to occur. Weak low level lapse rates should limit the probability of severe weather. The airmass should dry out from the top down behind the front Monday afternoon into Monday night with precipitation largely ending away from the South Carolina coast. Northeast winds will bring gradually drier air in and dewpoints by sunrise Tuesday morning could be in the 60s all the way down to Georgetown, SC. Not exactly "open the windows" kind of weather but better than the upper 70s dewpoints we`ve dealt with for most of the past week. Highs Monday and Tuesday should be limited to the lower to middle 80s with nighttime lows falling in the 60s away from the beaches.
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&& .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
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The subtropical ridge should build almost directly across the Carolinas Wednesday through Friday leading to surging temperatures. Surface high pressure located well offshore should resume southerly winds again which will advect a fully tropical airmass back across the Carolinas. The combination of temperatures rising well into the 90s inland plus dewpoints in the 70s should lead to heat indices rising above 105 degrees by Friday. By Saturday, 00z operational runs of the models diverge with the specifics surrounding an upper trough that tries to cut off between the Southeast Coast and Bermuda, but upper ridging will almost certainly remain intact near the Carolinas. A second day of sultry heat and humidity could push heat indices above 110 degrees. This is the level where we would transition from a "heat advisory" to an "excessive heat warning" so watch the forecast closely for Saturday.
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&& .AVIATION /06Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... Mainly VFR conditions are expected to prevail through the remainder of the night, except for passing MVFR stratocu along the coastal terminals. Given similar conditions to last night, opted to include a TEMPO group at inland terminals to account for the possibility of fog/low stratus around and soon after dawn, with this mixing out by around 12Z if it does develop. During the day, pop-up showers and thunderstorms are possible along and near the sea breeze for the coastal terminals while somewhat more organized lines of showers and storms should develop and spread southeastward into the inland terminals by late in the afternoon. Some uncertainty still exists regarding the coverage of storms, but I have just enough confidence to maintain a prevailing TSRA group for those areas. Otherwise, the loss of heating should result in a general weakening/dissipation of convection during the evening with a period of relatively dry conditions expected late in the 06Z TAF period. Extended Outlook...An approaching cold front will trigger scattered convection over Sunday night into Monday, with periodic MVFR/IFR possible. Depending on how far south the front reaches, brief MVFR cig or vis flight restrictions may occur at times well into Monday night for the coastal terminals. Otherwise, for Tuesday through Thursday, VFR should dominate. && .MARINE...
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Through Tonight...An approaching cold front will bring an increase in southerly flow over the waters today with speeds of 10-15 kts and gusts near 20 kts this afternoon and evening. Winds gradually veer to southwesterly late in the night as the front draws near. Waves around 2 ft this morning increase to 3 ft this afternoon in light of the stronger southerly flow and some 4 footers may be observed in the outer waters off Cape Fear near 20 nmi. Southerly 1-3 ft wind waves and 1-2 ft ESErly 8 sec swell will be the main contributors to the wave spectrum today. Numerous showers and thunderstorms are expected to affect the waters starting very late tonight as a cold front nears from the north. Monday through Thursday Night...All models show a strong cold front (by July standards anyway) moving through from the north Monday. Southwest winds should shift northeasterly during the day as the boundary drops south, accompanied by widespread showers and thunderstorms. Gusty winds and reduced visibility in heavy rain will be possible in storms. The front should make it down to near the FL-GA state line Monday night before stalling. A period of breezy northeast winds 15-20 knots is expected behind the front here Monday afternoon continuing into Monday night before slowly veering easterly and diminishing in speed Tuesday through Wednesday. Although not explicitly shown in the forecast, it would only take a few more knots of wind to reach Small Craft Advisory criteria Monday night. As it stands now, growing wind chop behind the front should increase sea heights to 4-5 feet Monday night. Long fetch lengths on easterly winds Tuesday and Wednesday will lead to only a slow reduction in seas although wave periods should lengthen with time as swell becomes more dominant. It`s also worth mentioning that small but very long period swells from Hurricane Beryl could arrive as early as Wednesday night with wave periods around 15 seconds shown in the latest model guidance.
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&& .FIRE WEATHER...
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Although there has been isolated heavy rainfall in spots over the past few days, the current U.S. Drought Monitor shows moderate drought (D1) exists across portions of eastern North and South Carolina. This drought has developed due to 60 day rainfall totals running well below normal plus recent hot, dry weather. Widespread soaking rain appears possible with tonight and Monday`s frontal passage with 1 to 2 inch totals forecast. Hot and dry weather should redevelop late in the week and may continue through July 4.
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&& .ILM WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NC...Heat Advisory from 11 AM this morning to 7 PM EDT this evening for NCZ087-096-099-105>110. SC...Heat Advisory from 11 AM this morning to 7 PM EDT this evening for SCZ017-023-024-032-033-039-054>056-058-059. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...TRA NEAR TERM...ABW SHORT TERM...TRA LONG TERM...TRA AVIATION...ABW MARINE...ABW/TRA FIRE WEATHER...TRA