Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS State College, PA

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932
FXUS61 KCTP 291539
AFDCTP

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service State College PA
1139 AM EDT Sat Jun 29 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Low pressure will track north of Pennsylvania this weekend, with
the associated warm front lifting through the state today and
the trailing cold front pushing through on Sunday.

A large high pressure system will build into the region early
in the upcoming week, then a dying cold front will likely push
in from the Great Lakes and stall out over the area late next
week.

&&

.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 7 PM THIS EVENING/...
Rain/showers across the nrn tier have been generally light with
obs there only in the hundreths in the Elk-Tioga Co corridor,
but nrn Warren and McKean Cos have had a little over half an
inch in the last 6 hrs. High PWATs make efficient rainfall.
Showers over SWrn PA are moving into our CWA at about 40KTs. No
really deep convection in those yet, though, with only a couple
ltg strikes embedded. The clouds are thinning in the central
mtns, and briefly cleared in the SW. Elsewhere only tiny breaks
in the overcast thus far. Mixing should continue to make more
breaks/thin spots occur and allow temps to get warm enough to
trigger additional showers and storms by noon. The vort max over
roughly eastern LE should continue ENE, and the lull/slight
suppression of convection currently over ern and central OH
could delay development of deep convection over PBZ`s area over
the next 1-2 hrs and could help our wrn highlands keep
convection weaker, too. But, the wave of showers in the
Alleghenies right now could assist in the development over our
south-central counties shortly. But, the earlier breaks in the
clouds in our SW have closed up for the most part and the
thicker lower clouds in the E will help keep things suppressed
(not totally) before late aftn or early evening there. Minor
tweaks to near term sky/PoPs were all that were made with this
update. See the hydro section below, too.

Prev...
A low amplitude upper trough will approach from the Grt Lks
this weekend, with the associated surface low passing well north
of PA through Southern Ontario/Quebec. The attendant warm front
is progged to lift through Central PA this afternoon and
the trailing cold front should slice southeast across the
forecast area during the daylight hours of Sunday.

A developing and relatively strong southwesterly low level jet
(focused across the Northern counties of PA this morning and
mainly across the Susq Valley later this afternoon and evening)
and surging pwats ahead of an approaching mid/upper level
shortwave will overrun warm front, slowly advancing NE across
the middle and upper Ohio river Valley. This will bring the best
chance of showers and a slight chance of tsra to the N Mtns
between throughout much of the remainder of the morning hours
today.

The area of greatest concern for scattered strong to potentially
severe TSRA with the threat for heavy rain and flash flooding
will spread south and east later this morning through this
afternoon as the axis of the LLJ slides east and the favorable
RR quad of an approx 2 sigma upper level jet and its enhanced
MESO-B lift moves overhead.

(Moved hydro talk below to a hydro section)

With high pressure passing off of the New England coast the
increasingly moist low level south to southeast near surface
flow and moderate to strong low level speed and directional
shear will bring favorable hodographs and low LCLs to support
the threat of discrete TSRA cells and short line segments with
their long axis oriented at a large angle to the deep layer
shear vector, creating the potential for BKN-S signatures and
transient/weak QLCS tornadoes formed by descending rear inflow
jets and even some fairly strong and persistent mesocyclones
with the more discrete cells.

As detailed by the previous fcst discussions - Model soundings
indicate there will be a good deal of cloudiness today,
especially over the north-central mountains, where model RH
profiles indicate stratus could linger into the early afternoon
ahead of the approaching warm front. However, even modest
diurnal heating should yield capes in the neighborhood of 1000
J/kg Sat afternoon per latest ensemble output. The moderate
instability, combined with progged 0-6km shear of 40-50kts, is
more than sufficient to support organized strong/severe
convection Sat PM with a few supercells and an isolated tornado
possible, especially across the northwest half of the forecast
area, where HREF UHEL values are highest and STP values peak
near 2.

Temps will start the day in the 60s. Highs will range from the
low to mid 70s over the Ncent Mtns to the mid and upper 80s in
the Southern Valleys.

&&

.SHORT TERM /7 PM THIS EVENING THROUGH 6 PM SUNDAY/...
Latest model guidance indicates the bulk of the convection will
shift east of the region late tonight, as the lead shortwave
and plume of highest pwats exit the state. However, passage of
the surface cold front will bring the chance for another round
of convection Sunday. Locations most likely to see potential
strong/svr t-storms are over the southeastern part of the CWA
due to a fropa coinciding with peak heating of the late
afternoon.

Lows tonight will be very mild and in the mid 60s to mid 70s or
10 to 15 deg F above normal.

Max temps Sunday will be a few to several deg F higher than
today (Sat) in all locations.

&&

.LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/...
Once the cold front clears, the door will be open for another
seasonably cool/dry airmass to invade the Commonwealth. This
will result in a less humid and comfortably dry start to July on
Monday.

A fair and cool Monday night looks likely as high pressure and
associated dry airmass build directly over PA, resulting in
efficient radiational cooling and min temps several degrees
below normal. Fair and warmer weather is expected Tuesday into
at least the first half of Wednesday, as upper level ridging
builds over the state and surface high drifts offshore.

All medium range guidance tracks a weakening shortwave well
north of PA late Wednesday into Thursday. The dying cold front
is likely to sag into the state Thursday and stall out in the
vicinity of PA through Friday. Falling heights/surging low level
moisture ahead of the front could support scattered convection
as early as Wednesday afternoon over the northwest half of PA.
However, a better chance of showers/tsra areawide will come
with the arrival of the front Thu into Friday. Early best guess
of late week rainfall based on ensemble plumes ranges from 0.25
to 0.75 inches, with the highest amounts over the N Mtns and
least in the south.

Heat and humidity should peak ahead of the front Wed-Thu.
Ensemble mean 850mb temps surging to near 20C indicate max temps
could reach the low to perhaps mid 90s in the Lower Susq Valley
Thursday, with high humidity pushing heat indices into the mid
and upper 90s. Ensemble plumes suggest slightly cooler daytime
temps late week, due to more clouds/showers. However, high pwats
in the vicinity of the stalling front should result in muggy
nights and above normal min temps the entire second half of next
week.

Models begin to diverge as we head into the weekend. Most
guidance suggests that rain chances stick around through at
least Saturday as another cold front approaches the area.

&&

.AVIATION /16Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
Late morning update.

Some adjustments to the TAFS so far, but fcst in good shape
overnall.

Most of the showers have been across the north overnight and
into the mid morning hours. Echo tops high enough for thunder
have been largely from about Route 6 northward. Cells moving
from the west southwest at about 35 to 40 mph, as winds estimted
by radar about 35 knots at 4000 feet (VAD winds).

Earlier discussion below.

A warm front crossing through the region is providing ample
moisture advection in southeast flow. Low stratus has blanketed
much of central PA with MVFR cigs as of 1130 UTC Sat, with the
exception of JST and BFD, where conds are still VFR. LLWS will
continue this morning across the northern airfields.

The low stratus is expected to lift and become broken to
scattered in the morning over the S, and gradually work
northward a bit in the mid-day and aftn. Numerous TS/SHRA will
be popping up over the NWrn third of PA in the morning and
stronger thunderstorms develop later on Saturday. High moisture
will make the potential for very heavy rain and very low vsbys
in the TSRA. TSRA will continue pressing SE thru the evening and
first half of the night Sat night. The chance for showers and
storms will linger across the southeast Sunday as a cold front
drags it`s feet moving through the area. There could be fog Sat
night in the NW (BFD), but that will depend on the amt of
clearing. IFR from overnight/AM fog (Sun morning) at BFD is only
a 40pct chc at this point, and lower elsewhere as not much
clearing is expected elsewhere.

Outlook...

Mon-Tue...Dry weather with VFR conditions except perhaps some AM
valley fog N.

Wed...PM TSRA moving across from W-E.

&&

.HYDROLOGY...
Over half of an inch of rain last night and this morning over
the far NW has increased confidence that the precip in the N
will be very efficient today. While dbZ and the amt of ltg may
not impress today, the moist adibatic profiles and deep warm
layer will make for heavy rain at times. Draw back to fast storm
motions: 1) radar may underestimate precip as the fast cells
skip along in between scans, and 2) it`s tough to get flooding
when the cells have a low residence time. However the repeated
showers/storms could (easily) overcome that issue.

Prev...
The area of greatest concern for heavy rain and flash flooding
will spread south and east later this morning through this
afternoon as the axis of the LLJ slides east and the favorable
RR quad of an approx 2 sigma upper level jet and its enhanced
MESO-B lift moves overhead.

PWAT values increased steadily from west to east overnight from
a little over one inch to start the night to around 1.6 inches
early today.

PWATS via the GEFS will peak around +3 sigma or about 2.25
inches later this morning through this afternoon (which are
values that haven`t been seen so far in PA during 2024). This
anomalous, deep moisture will support the threat for locally
very heavy rain (in excess of 2 inches/hour) within a broad
area of 1 to 1.5 inch basin average storm total rain forecast
for much of Central and Northern PA. Issued a Flood Watch from
12Z today through 06Z Sunday for much of Central and Northern
PA where FFG values are well under 2 inches/3 hours across
parts of the Northern Mtns.

&&

.CLIMATE...
Through 6/27, June ranks as the second warmest on record at
Harrisburg with an average monthly temperature of 76 degrees or
+3.8 degrees above normal.

&&

.CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
Flood Watch through late tonight for PAZ004>006-010>012-
017>019-024>028-037-041-042-045-046-049>053.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...Lambert/Fitzgerald
NEAR TERM...Lambert/Fitzgerald/Dangelo
SHORT TERM...Fitzgerald/Steinbugl
LONG TERM...Fitzgerald/Bauco
AVIATION...Lambert/Martin/Colbert
HYDROLOGY...Lambert/Dangelo
CLIMATE...Steinbugl