Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC

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744 FXUS62 KRAH 020152 AFDRAH Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 950 PM EDT Sat Jun 1 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Canadian high pressure centered across the area will move offshore tonight. The high pressure will move out into the western Atlantic by Monday, bringing warmer and more humid air, along with mainly diurnally driven showers and thunderstorms across the area through mid week. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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As of 950 PM Saturday... High pressure remains in place at the surface and aloft across the Mid Atlantic this evening. Mid level water vapor imagery shows a ridge axis from southern NY to SC, with a trough over KY/TN. Cloud cover associated with this trough continues to stream eastward, with cirrus now thickening up across NC. Temperatures at mid-evening ranged in the mid 60s north to mid 70s south. Dew points had come up into the 50s to near 60. Showers (mostly light) were observed over portions of eastern TN/KY and north GA. Tonight, the upper low/trough axis will shift slowly east. As it does so, there will continue to be moisture advection. However, the forecast lift into western NC remains weak. Therefore, the latest hi-res models that depict some light showers into western NC overnight appears reasonable. For our region, we will continue to mention a slight chance of showers mainly along the Yadkin River of the western Piedmont toward sunrise. Otherwise, mid clouds will be on the increase and this will hold temperatures up from last night. Expect mostly upper 50s to mid 60s.
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&& .SHORT TERM /SUNDAY AND SUNDAY NIGHT/... As of 241 PM Saturday... Sunday will continue to see mid level moisture advection into the area with PW`s gradually climbing into the 1.5 - 1.75 inch range by late in the day. Meanwhile, lee troughing east of the mountains and associated surface convergence will likely result in the development of afternoon showers and isolated thunderstorms, mainly across the western Piedmont. Instability is meager with only 100-250 J/KG on offer, so anything that develops should remain well below severe limits. While most of the showers should dissipate quickly with the loss of daytime heating, most models suggest a weak mid level shortwave will move into the area overnight with another round of widely scattered showers possible into the early morning hours on Monday. PoPs will be highest in the west during the daytime hours (generally between 30-40 percent), then falling to around 20 percent area-wide during the evening/overnight hours. Temperatures should be on par with today, perhaps a few degrees warmer. Highs in the low/mid 80s. Lows in the low to mid 60s. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 150 PM Saturday... Temps and humidity will return to more typical summertime values this week. Low confidence in Mon/Tue given weak flow within an ill- defined pattern beneath diffuse mid level ridging over E NOAM. A pattern shift to troughing centered over the Great Lakes region by late week should lead to a trend to more organized precip potential mid week. Confidence then dips again into next weekend with increasing model spread in the longwave pattern. Mon-Tue: Between a deep closed low over the NW Atlantic and a potent trough moving into the PacNW and into the Dakotas and Upper Midwest through Tue, very baggy and narrow mid level ridging will build through E NOAM, resulting in a weak steering flow over our area. Our moisture will increase through the column, including near the surface where temps will also be on the upswing with good diurnal heating and a S or SW flow on the back side of the exiting surface high. Our precip chances will largely be scattered slow-moving or meandering convection focused on weak and subtly boundaries, although some models suggest that a backdoor synoptic front will drop SSW into NC, driven by a cooler/denser air mass being propelled southward down the Mid Atlantic coast due to the NW Atlantic low. Will keep pops near or just over climatology, focused on afternoon/evening, with the potential for isolated heavy totals due to the expected rising PW, slow cell motion, and perhaps a backdoor front to focus lift. Expect near normal temps Mon, with highs in the 80s, then a degree or two higher Tue, mid 80s to near 90. Lows in the 60s. Wed-Thu: Pops should be highest these two days. Northern stream troughing in the Upper Midwest early Wed will continue to deepen and dig strongly to the SE through the Great Lakes region into the Ohio Valley, leading to strengthening WNW steering flow at our latitude and, especially, to our W and NW. Forecast PW is quite high, at or above 2" on deterministic models, nearing records. We could see a setup favoring nocturnal backbuilding MCSs upstream over the Mid Miss Valley into the Ohio Valley/Mid South, including diffluent thicknesses and nighttime low level SW jetting to our W/NW, which may mean increased clouds overall along with passing convective debris clouds and/or MCVs spreading in. But we can`t pin down such details at this time range with any reasonable confidence, so for now will have pops above climatology (high chances) with convection potential more spread throughout the day and night (i.e., less likely to be focused purely on the afternoon/evening hours). Temps should be near to a category above normal with considerable cloudiness. Fri-Sat: The overall longwave pattern is expected to shift to anomalously low mid level heights across a large swath of the northeast CONUS as a deep northern stream low settles over or just N of the Great Lakes. Deterministic models and ensemble modeling systems are all in pretty good agreement on this, although they differ in terms of the associated trough -- primarily whether this low digs SE/negatively toward NC or becomes more W-E oriented to our N. In either scenario, we`re likely to see this culminate in a surface cold front passage yielding a chance of storms Fri with dry and less humid weather by Sat. But if the upper trough digs less strongly toward NC and instead in a more W-E fashion, we could see a surface front stalling overhead or even holding to our NW, keeping us in the warmer air or causing a quick rebound back into warmer air by late Sat. Will have chance pops mainly E Fri, then generally dry weather Sat with most ensemble members suggesting us getting into and staying in the drier air Sat. Temps near normal. -GIH && .AVIATION /00Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 700 PM Saturday... There is high confidence in VFR conditions through the TAF period. Clouds will thicken and lower overnight into Sunday, but mostly with mid and high-level bases. Increasing moist flow could favor some VCSH at INT in the morning Sun. Additionally, a weak disturbance could bring some isolated showers at INT/GSO Sun afternoon or evening. Confidence was too low to mention thunder given weak instability and little agreement amongst the model guidance. RDU/FAY/RWI should remain dry through the period. South-southwest winds will persist between 5 and 12 kt, at times gusting to 18 kt at GSO/INT. Outlook: Moisture will continue to return to the area in the coming week, with increasing chances for showers each day, especially at INT/GSO. Showers are likely to be diurnal in nature through Thursday with brief periods of sub-VFR weather possible within heavier downpours. && .RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Leins/CBL NEAR TERM...Badgett SHORT TERM...Leins LONG TERM...Hartfield AVIATION...Kren/Leins