Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC

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186 FXUS62 KRAH 120709 AFDRAH Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 305 AM EDT Sun May 12 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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High pressure will build across the southeastern United States today before moving offshore Monday. Expect an unsettled weather pattern starting Tuesday and continuing through the rest of the week.
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&& .NEAR TERM /TONIGHT/... As of 925 PM Saturday... The gridded evening forecast updates were sent primarily with adjustments to hourly temperatures, which will be slower to decrease than previously forecast owing to the 60-100 mile band of altocumulus and embedded, scattered showers now moving across the nrn Piedmont and nrn Coastal Plain. .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 330 PM EDT Sat May 11 2024/ Through tonight: Still expect a brief window of isolated to scattered showers this evening, mainly across the Piedmont and N Coastal Plain. The potent mid-upper low now over S Lk Huron has a trailing shortwave trough don through E OH into KY. The upper jet streak diving into the trough base from IN continues to generate strong forcing for ascent to the east of the low, contributing to a band of showers with embedded isolated stronger convection from SE Ontario through PA/WV. Sufficient recovery has occurred west of this band within 1000 J/kg SBCAPE amidst 7+ C/km mid level lapse rates and 8-9 C/km low level lapse rates to contribute to a secondary band of strong to severe convection in E OH. We shouldn`t see these kinds of steep lapse rates by the time the shortwave trough shifts E into and through the Mid Atlantic region, as nocturnal stabilization will be starting by then with CINH developing, but we are likely to see the tail end of the shower band, now over WV into E KY swinging through our area this evening, just ahead of the mid level trough axis. The scattered to occasionally broken high-base convective cu now over central NC (esp E half) will dissipate a bit toward sunset, then clouds will quickly increase anew from the NW as the pre-trough moisture plume spreads in. The best chance of showers should be 22z- 03z in the NW trending to 01z-06z further SE, although our far SE sections are likely to stay dry as the trough dampens upon approach with our SE farthest removed from the forcing for ascent and potential weak elevated CAPE. Any one location should see little more than a few hundredths falling over an hour or less, and we could see a few gusts ahead of and with these showers. Skies will then clear out NW-SE behind the showers. Expect lows in the upper 40s to mid 50s. && .SHORT TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/... As of 120 PM Saturday... Sunday/Sunday night: With overall very low PW moving in as surface high pressure builds overhead, quiet and dry conditions are likely, with little more than a period of scattered to broken high-base flat cu in the afternoon and increasing high clouds from the NW late Sun night within predominant NW steering flow. Low level thicknesses will have recovered a bit from this morning but will still be 15 to perhaps 20 m below normal, and this balanced with decent insolation favors highs in the mid 70s to around 80, near to slightly below normal. Lows in the mid 40s to mid 50s Sun night with good radiational cooling conditions expected. Monday/Monday night: A shortwave trough presently located near the Four Corners region is forecast in most of the guidance to reach central/eastern MO by Tue morning. Before that happens, we will see shortwave ridging most of Mon. Some subtle waves of energy will stream in during the day but would only lead to some increased mid/high clouds. Warm advection in return southerly flow from a high shifting offshore should allow highs rise near or a few degrees above normal in the upper 70s to low 80s. As the aforementioned trough shifts into the MS Valley overnight into Tue, low-level WAA and moisture transport will increase from the southwest as a warm front lifts north into the SE US. Precipitable water will increase some 150-percent of normal to 1.4-1.5 inches as isentropic ascent increases. Most guidance holds off on showers toward the late- evening and overnight period, spreading across the west/southern Piedmont earliest. Have kept high chance to likely showers overnight into Tue morning as a result. Showers may not reach the Coastal Plain until sunrise Tue. Lows are forecast in the upper 50s to low 60s. && .LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
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As of 305 AM Sunday... Surface low pressure should be over southern Illinois at the beginning of the extended forecast and precipitation will extend well to the east, with rain increasing in coverage through the day. Models begin to diverge with the surface feature Tuesday night, with the 00Z GFS showing two low centers by Wednesday morning (over KY/TN and DE) while the 00Z ECMWF has one broad center over OH. Regardless of which scenario plays out, think that a bit of a dry slot will develop over the Carolinas Tuesday night and there should be a bit of a lull in shower coverage. The last two runs of the ECMWF are suggesting that the upper trough helping to support the surface low could close off into an upper low over the mid-Atlantic on Wednesday, helping to intensify the surface low as it passes to the north. While some rain could linger Wednesday evening, conditions should then dry out as high pressure settles over Quebec and a ridge extends along the eastern seaboard on Thursday. Meanwhile, the next system will be developing in the Plains, and with models indicating it may move east a little more slowly, have removed all pops from the forecast Thursday night. Had enough confidence to add likely pops across western counties Friday, but the models diverge too much after this to go with anything higher than chance pops through Saturday. Tuesday remains the coolest day in the forecast with widespread highs in the 70s and possibly even upper 60s near the Virginia border, otherwise temperatures should be near climatology, around 80 and 60 degrees.
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&& .AVIATION /06Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 150 AM Sunday... VFR conditions will prevail through the next 24 hours. A band of cloud ceilings around 7-10 kft and weakening sprinkles/showers is currently moving south across the southern Piedmont and Sandhills (including FAY). The precipitation will be south of FAY in the next half hour or so and completely out of central NC or dissipated within the next hour or two at most. They are so light that visibilities will remain VFR wherever it does rain. The band of clouds will push SE of the entire area by 09z, with clear skies behind it. More scattered cumulus are possible during the day today, but they will stay above the VFR threshold. NW winds will pick up by mid morning, gusting up to 15-20 kts, which will last into the afternoon before diminishing in the evening. Looking beyond 06z Mon: VFR conditions and dry weather are expected through at least Mon. Rain and isolated storms, with a high chance of sub-VFR conditions and increasing winds aloft, are expected to overspread the area starting Mon night, with sub-VFR conditions lasting through Wed morning, although shower chances will persist through Wed. Dry VFR conditions should return for Thu. && .RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Green NEAR TERM...MWS/Hartfield SHORT TERM...Hartfield/Kren LONG TERM...Green AVIATION...Danco/Hartfield