


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Mt. Holly, NJ
Issued by NWS Mt. Holly, NJ
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976 FXUS61 KPHI 151043 AFDPHI Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Mount Holly NJ 643 AM EDT Sun Jun 15 2025 .SYNOPSIS... A stationary front will remain situated across near the Chesapeake region through Tuesday yielding unsettled weather conditions. The front will then begin to lift northward as a warm front on Tuesday night into Wednesday across our area as an area of high pressure settles near Bermuda mid-week. A low pressure system begins to approach the area on Thursday with a cold frontal passage Thursday night. High pressure returns for Friday into next weekend. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... Cloudy, showery, drizzly, and humid conditions expected to close out the weekend along with below normal temperatures. Continuing with Saurday`s theme, nothing of particular interest to note as far as impacts go with the convective activity in our region, however the lousy conditions won`t be good news for any outdoor activities. Quasi zonal and relatively weak flow will continue to prevail aloft, though we will remain in the vicinity of the right entrance region of a zonal jet toward our northeast. This mid level diffluence will continue to provide a prolonged period of modest ascent through tonight, which will lead to prevailing cloudy skies and periods of showery weather. At the surface, a stalled to slowly moving frontal boundary will remain in place to our southwest, with surface ridging extending into the region from southern New England. As far as precipitation chances go, not great confidence through tonight regarding any details of timing and coverage of showers. There will continue to be a lot of mesoscale factors at play. Long story short, there will be at least some chance of showers through tonight. PWats will be high (1.25-1.75"), so any robust and persistent convection that can develop will produce efficient rainfall rates. Any heavier rainfall will be very brief, and thus the flood threat is low. With the frontal boundary now well displaced to our southwest, we`ll have much less diurnal influence on convection. The latest guidance still varies considerably in timing and coverage of precipitation today through tonight, which isn`t surprising given the subtle forcing at play. The overnight showers should wane toward mid morning, then another round of showers may develop by midday into the afternoon, but again, low confidence on this. We`ve stuck with NBM PoPs through tonight for the forecast. The main idea is scattered showers can be expected. An isolated rumble of thunder is possible, but the chance of lightning is quite low overall as the instability is to our southwest where the frontal boundary is located. Areas of drizzle or fog may develop across the coastal plain as well. Temperatures will be mainly in the 60s to perhaps near 70 degrees in Delmarva. Lows tonight in the mid 50s to low 60s. && .SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/... There continues to be little overall chance to the beginning of the workweek as a low pressure system will ride along the stationary boundary located to our south. The bulk of the shower threat will be displaced to the south but there does appear to be a brief period when we`ll see some light rain develop with perhaps a rumble of thunder. For areas north of Philadelphia, it should largely should remain dry (PoPs less than 20%). On Monday evening, the boundary will gradually start lift north as a modest warm front leading to warming temperatures hading into the work week. Another weak disturbance will ride along the boundary yielding another period for some rain showers and isolated thunder to occur (PoPs 20-40%) across the entire region as the front is in closer proximity to the area Tuesday into Tuesday evening. As the previous shift discussed, by no means do we anticipate a washout but there will be periods of unsettled weather with light rain/drizzle coming through in rounds. Highs will mainly be in the upper 60s to mid 70s on Monday with mid to upper 70s on Tuesday. Lows will remain uniform mainly in the 50s and 60s. && .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... High pressure starts building through the middle of the week with warm air advection pushing into the region. An upper level ridge will be located over the Southeast US on Wednesday as a trough develops over the Great Lakes region on Thursday. This will push temps well into the upper 80s to low 90`s for areas south and east of I95. Surface high pressure will be located near Bermuda where it will persist through the end of the week. Low pressure will also be tracking through the Great Lakes on Thursday tracking and into New England on Friday with a cold front trailing to the southwest, crossing through late in the week. For Wednesday, we`ll begin to see the beginning of a considerable warm-up as the warm front lifts north of the area. Some spotty thunderstorms may occur due to the combination of the passage of the front and diurnal heating. Otherwise, attention then turns to the cold front that will approach the area on Thursday into Thursday night. Forcing does appear to be quite strong with the deepening trough, so at this point it does seem plausible for there to be at the very least some strong thunderstorms around Thursday afternoon and evening. This is supported quite well by the machine learning guidance by UCAR/NCAR which has a targeted area of severe weather potential over the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Will continue to monitor for trends in the guidance but regardless, the general idea that a front will bring showers and thunderstorms to the area is consistent with the guidance. Improving weather should return by Friday and into next weekend as high pressure returns. && .AVIATION /12Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... The following discussion is for KPHL, KPNE, KTTN, KABE, KRDG, KILG, KMIV, KACY and surrounding areas. Today...Any IFR ceilings early will improve to MVFR for most terminals by 15Z or so. MVFR visibilities in scattered showers and drizzle/fog at times. Otherwise, mainly prevailing VFR visibility. East to northeast winds near 10 kts. Low confidence on the timing/details, but high confidence in prevailing restrictions. Tonight...IFR ceilings likely developing, with some LIFR possible. Fog development is possible as well, but lower confidence on this. Scattered showers possible. Northeast winds 5-10 kts. High confidence in prevailing IFR, but low confidence on details. Outlook... Monday through Tuesday night...Primarily below VFR conditions expected with several rounds of rain showers and isolated thunderstorms possible. Wednesday through Thursday...Primarily VFR expected with at times periods of sub-VFR conditions possible in thunderstorms. && .MARINE... Conditions will remain fairly stead state through tonight. ENE winds remaining near 10-20 kts. Seas around 3-6 feet, greatest near and north of Atlantic City through this morning. Seas should gradually diminish into the afternoon. The Small Craft Advisory remains in effect through noon today north of Great Egg Inlet. Periods of showers, drizzle, and fog could cause visibility reduction at times. Outlook... Sunday night through Thursday...No marine headlines are expected. Winds will generally remain below 20 kt with seas of 2-4 feet. Several rounds of rain showers and thunderstorms are expected through Thursday. Rip Currents... For today and Monday, winds will be out of the northeast and nearly perpendicular to shore around 10-20 MPH, with 2 to 4 foot waves within the surf zone. Multiple swell groups are expected as well, with the longest period being around 8 to 9 seconds. This will result in a MODERATE risk for the development of rip currents for all beaches both days. For specific beach forecasts, visit weather.gov/beach/phi && .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... With onshore flow continuing over multiple tide cycles, water will pile up within back bays and inlets. This will result in some spotty minor tidal flooding along the Atlantic coastline for areas in Atlantic and Cape May County, New Jersey and Sussex County in Delaware. Cannot rule out some spotty minor tidal flooding within the Delaware Bay and tidal Delaware River. The overnight high tide cycle tonight looks to bring the highest tides, with slowing declining water levels getting into next week. && .CLIMATE... Near record breaking coldest high temperatures are forecast for today. Records for our climate sites are listed below: Record Coldest High Temperatures June 15 Site Record/Year Allentown (ABE) 57/1971 AC Airport (ACY) 63/1965 AC Marina (55N) 61/1884 & 1916 Georgetown (GED) 69/2007 Mount Pocono (MPO) 55/1971 Philadelphia (PHL) 64/1912 Reading (RDG) 61/1912 Trenton (TTN) 60/1971 Wilmington (ILG) 67/1933 & 1950 && .PHI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... PA...None. NJ...None. DE...None. MD...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until noon EDT today for ANZ450>452. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Deal/DeSilva NEAR TERM...Staarmann SHORT TERM...Deal/DeSilva LONG TERM...Deal/DeSilva AVIATION...Deal/Staarmann MARINE...Deal/Staarmann TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...Hoeflich CLIMATE...Staarmann