000
FXUS61 KOKX 051529
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
1129 AM EDT Wed Apr 5 2023

.SYNOPSIS...
-- Changed Discussion --
A stationary front south of Long Island will will return northward as a warm front tonight, eventually moving north of the region by early Thursday. A cold front will approach on Thursday and move through late Thursday afternoon into Thursday night. High pressure will then gradually build from the northwest late Thursday night through the weekend, and slide offshore by early next week.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 PM THIS EVENING/...
-- Changed Discussion --
Made some slight adjustments to temperatures and dewpoints to better match observed trends. Decreased chances of light rain and made areas of very light drizzle the main weather parameter for many coastal locations going through this morning. Forecast soundings show most moisture only up through first 2 kft above ground with relatively drier air above that. A very cool and increasingly damp day is expected across the coastal and eastern sections of the region as surface flow from the east advects in a cooler maritime airmass across the region. Locations in Northeast NJ and the Lower Hudson Valley are forecast to be relatively warmer compared to farther east in the area so not nearly as damp in Northeast NJ and the Lower Hudson Valley. Looking for temperatures to stay mostly in the 50s for the high temperature forecast today. Models are coherent on depicting a few hundredths of an inch of rainfall across coastal Connecticut and Long Island. This is where temperatures will be relatively the coolest and where more of the light rain and drizzle will be located. Both light rain and drizzle are mentioned this afternoon with the variance of vertical depth of moisture indicated in the forecast soundings between saturation of just a few thousand feet to near saturation of up to 3 to 5 kft. Mesoscale models also depict for eastern parts of the area, more larger discrete areas of rain in their reflectivity fields for this afternoon. With the increasing moisture, there will be fog especially along the coast but more patchy away from the coast. Along the coast, some patchy dense fog is possible this morning. As moisture increases with any light rain or drizzle today, would expect this fog to form farther inland this afternoon.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .SHORT TERM /6 PM THIS EVENING THROUGH FRIDAY/... For tonight, the front south of Long Island gradually returns north as a warm front. The surface flow transitions from easterly to more southerly. There will be continuing chances of light rain or drizzle, but would expect a more expansive fog as well due to low level warm and moist air advection occurring with the more southerly flow. The fog could once again be potentially dense. The warm front is expected to move north of the region early Thursday and that will place the area in the warm sector. There will be an increasing chance of showers and thunderstorms as a cold front approaches and moves into the area due to growing instability. Temperature rebound substantially on Thursday with increasing SW flow and increased warm air advection ahead of an approaching cold front. This will be most pronounced across the interior sections of the region in Southwest Connecticut, the Lower Hudson Valley, and Northeast NJ as well as some northern and western parts of NYC where more vertical mixing is expected. High temperatures forecast for these aforementioned locations are in the mid to upper 70s with some locations in Northeast NJ reaching near 80. Meanwhile, farther east and along the coast, more of a marine influence will be seen with forecast high temperatures staying mostly in the 60s but a little cooler for the Twin Forks of Long Island. Another factor leading to the cooler temperatures farther east for the coastal sections will also be the lingering low clouds and fog. The cold front moves across late Thursday afternoon into Thursday evening and will push farther offshore late Thursday night. Showers will taper off from northwest to southeast along with any thunder. The forcing with the cold front has increasing bulk shear between 0 and 6 km above the ground to near 50 kt but the instability will be quite limited. This is also related to the moisture content of the atmosphere as diagnosed from the precipitable water. Both the precipitable water and instability are higher to the south and west of the area. Model BUFKIT wind profiles also indicate shear that is not consistent in the way of wind direction and speed. Less organized convection may very well be the result which is indicated by some mesoscale models. So, some strong thunderstorms will be possible with higher potential for severe to the southwest of the forecast region. For Friday, high pressure gradually builds in from the north and west. Dry conditions will remain across the region but there will be lingering clouds as a mid level trough remains in the Northeast but will not be that amplified. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/... The weekend will be dry as a 1035 mb surface high pressure builds in from the Great Lakes. Gusty NW winds lower over the weekend. With the northwest flow, temperatures will be cooler during this time, generally 50s and lower 60s, with increasing sun through Sunday. The evolution of the large scale pattern becomes more uncertain to start next week. The latest model consensus has the surface high starting to move offshore, but lingering ridging may hold on during Monday. There may be an approaching upper trough, but the timing and amplitude continue to have little consistency. Generally stuck close to national blended guidance for this update. && .AVIATION /16Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... Stationary front to the south lifts north as a warm front late tonight into Thursday, followed by a cold front Thursday afternoon into evening. IFR/MVFR through this afternoon, lowering to IFR everywhere tonight. Some drizzle mainly east of the city terminals. Improvement to VFR generally west to east on Thursday, but with a chance of showers and a thunderstorm in the afternoon/early evening. E or ENE winds around 15 kt with gusts around 20 kt for KJFK/KLGA/KHPN and points east through at least part of the afternoon. Other terminals will be closer to 10 kt. Winds shift SE-S tonight. LLWS possible for easternmost terminals, mainly KGON and KISP, for a few hours overnight. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... KEWR cigs possibly prevail at 300-400ft through 16z. Conds for all terminals might not improve to MVFR this aftn. Occasional gusts around 20 kt possible at KLGA through this afternoon. Chance that gusts at KJFK are only occasional. The afternoon KJFK haze potential forecast is YELLOW...which implies slant range visibility 4-6SM outside of cloud. The afternoon KLGA haze potential forecast is YELLOW...which implies slant range visibility 4-6SM outside of cloud. The afternoon KEWR haze potential forecast is YELLOW...which implies slant range visibility 4-6SM outside of cloud. ...OUTLOOK FOR 06Z THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY... Wednesday Late Night-Thursday Night: IFR (possibly MVFR) Late tonight into Thursday morning. MVFR-VFR Thursday afternoon and night. Showers likely with a chance thunderstorms Thursday afternoon and evening. SW gusts 15-20kt, becoming W-NW Thursday night. LLWS possible late tonight. Friday-Sunday: VFR. W-NW G20-25kt Friday morning. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90. && .MARINE...
-- Changed Discussion --
Trimmed back marine dense fog advy to the western ocean waters per beach cams. Also issued SCA for this afternoon for all by NY Harbor as low level inversion breaks and E flow gusts up to 25-30 kt, highest on the eastern ocean/Sound waters, with ocean seas E of Fire Island Inlet as high as 5 ft. Dense fog will be possible once again tonight for all the forecast waters. This could expand from the ocean waters to the non-ocean waters. After a short lull late today, SCA conditions should redevelop tonight on the ocean and continue into Thursday. The non ocean waters should remain below SCA thresholds through Thursday. SCA conditions for wind gusts could spread to most waters Thursday night with ocean SCA seas probably continuing. SCA conditions are then possible on all waters Friday into Friday night as high pressure builds in, potentially bringing NW flow gusting up to 25 kt. Sub-SCA conditions are expected on all waters through the weekend with high pressure in control.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .HYDROLOGY... No hydrologic concerns expected through early next week. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
-- Changed Discussion --
CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 4 PM EDT this afternoon for ANZ331- 332-335-340-345. Small Craft Advisory until 6 PM EDT Thursday for ANZ350-353- 355. Dense Fog Advisory until 6 PM EDT this evening for ANZ353-355.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& $$ SYNOPSIS...BG/JM/DR NEAR TERM...BG/JM SHORT TERM...JM LONG TERM...DR AVIATION...MW MARINE...BG/JM/DR HYDROLOGY...JM