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FXUS61 KOKX 081941
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
341 PM EDT Thu Jun 8 2023

.SYNOPSIS...
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Weak low pressure will meander over New England through Friday night. The low pressure shifts away from the area on Saturday with high pressure building in through the weekend. The high pushes offshore late Sunday into Monday. A frontal system impacts the area from the beginning into the middle of next week.
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&& .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM FRIDAY MORNING/...
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Conditions continue to slowly improve this evening, with the thickest smoke to our south and east. There still potential to see areas of smoke closer to the coast this evening which the HRRR has been showing occurring, but do not anticipate it being as thick or dense as what has been observed the last few nights. Haze remains in the forecast across the region as some smoke aloft is still possible. Air quality alerts remain in effect for Orange and Putnam counties until midnight and for the NYC metro, Long Island, Rockland, Westchester, NE NJ and S CT through midnight Friday night. Otherwise, closed upper low and associated surface low meanders over New England into tonight. There is still a chance for showers this evening, mainly across the Lower Hudson Valley and southern Connecticut. The HRRR has been indicated an isolated shower developing along the sea breeze near Long Island, so will have a slight chance mentioned closer to the coast. Loss of heating should diminish any shower activity and have gone with a dry forecast after 11pm. Middle level clouds are likely to increase creating mostly cloudy conditions overnight. Lows look to fall into the upper 40s and lower 50s inland and the middle to upper 50s elsewhere.
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&& .SHORT TERM /6 AM FRIDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/...
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The upper low continues to meander over New England on Friday. The main difference between Thursday and Friday will be a much more defined shortwave that rotates around the upper low. This will help keep weak low pressure at the surface. Winds in the morning look to be light NE but will gradually see a surface trough set up aiding in convergence. There will be scattered to broken clouds through the day, but the upper low will aid in fairly steep lapse rates. There are differences among the modeling with amount of instability by afternoon with the several CAMs (NAM3-km, WRF-ARW, NSSL-WRF, and HRRR) showing an average of about 500 J/kg. The FV3-WRF and the GFS are indicating less CAPE. However, the cold pocket aloft from the upper low and decent forcing should be enough to initiate at least scattered convection in the afternoon and evening. CSU machine learning probabilities for severe are less than 5 percent and SPC Day 2 is currently just for general thunderstorms. Any shower/storm could contain small hail given freezing levels are on average around 7-8 kft. The colder thermal profiles aloft may coincide with enough CAPE and marginal shear to support hail development. Cannot completely rule out an isolated large hail occurrence as well. Gusty winds are also possible in heavier downpours. Scattered convection may continue into the early evening before diminishing Friday night with loss of heating. The lingering surface trough and energy aloft may support shower activity into the first half of the night. Mostly cloudy conditions to start Friday night will start to become partly cloudy to mostly clear early Saturday morning as the shortwave and upper low begin to slide to our east. Hazy conditions are otherwise possible on Friday as there is still enough concentration aloft per HRRR vertically integrated smoke. Included patchy smoke across southeastern Long Island based on the latest HRRR low level smoke fields which show slightly higher values there. Highs on Friday will be below average in the upper 60s to lower 70s. Lows Friday night range from the upper 40s and low 50s inland to the middle and upper 50s close to the coast.
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&& .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
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Low pressure to our east will continue to exit the region on Saturday, losing its influence as surface high pressure builds in briefly from the SE with a weak ridging aloft. This will lead to less cloud cover through the weekend, allowing highs back into seasonal to slightly above seasonal values, particularly on Sunday. NBM was mostly used for temperatures. However, I did blend in some MOS consensus for nights I expected to have less cloud cover, particularly Saturday night, to account for any radiational cooling which MOS seems to handle better than NBM in some spots. Rain chances appear to be trending on the low side of things for Saturday, before high pressure completely completely takes over. I kept slight chances mainly just for interior areas. Winds will return from a southerly direction on Monday which should provide relief for any areas still being impacted by reduced air quality at that time. Next week a deepening low with build over the Great Lakes before tracking east just to our north on Tuesday, bringing with it an associated warm and cold front, then track to our northeast by Wednesday. Plenty of PVA with this system and dewpoints increasing with a southerly flow. Monday, in particular, looks like a decent chance for widespread precip. PWATs from the 12Z GFS are bringing in around 1.6-1.85" which approaches the max moving average for June 13th from SPC`s Sounding Climatology page of 1.89". The rain likely build Monday and clear Tuesday morning with a cold front, before more rain chances late Tuesday into Wednesday. As far as thunderstorm chances go, it looks like marginal instability will be present next week, so kept some slight chances for thunderstorms in the forecast for most afternoons next week. Temperatures look close to seasonal averages next week.
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&& .AVIATION /20Z THURSDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
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Smoke remains over the entire region with general MVFR conditions. Conditions have been slowly improving to VFR in some spots this afternoon, especially for western and northern areas. Maintained MVFR visibilities through tonight as FU/HZ may cause visibilities to drop again with any sea breeze influence as thicker smoke remains south of the area. FU/HZ may linger over the area tonight with MVFR visibilities expected, gradually improving to more widespread VFR as smoke continues to thin out toward 12Z Friday. Showers are possible into this evening for inland terminals, mainly SWF. Too low of a chance to include elsewhere. Better chance for SHRA and TSRA for all terminals after 18Z Friday. NW winds are slowly shifting to W this afternoon. Sea breeze influence for coastal terminals this afternoon, allowing winds to shift to the SW/SE at around 10 kt. Winds become light and variable for most, if not all terminals this evening. Those that do not become light and variable will see NW winds of 5 to 10 kt. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... The haze potential forecast is RED, which implies slant range visibility less than 4SM outside of cloud. However, there is large uncertainty with how restricted the visibility becomes at the surface and aloft. Amendments likely through the TAF period for fluctuation of categories from visibility changes due to smoke. Uncertain in the timing of improvement of visibilities from smoke. Timing of the sea breeze may be +/- an hour. Sea breeze may bring reduced visibilities due to smoke. OUTLOOK FOR 18Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY... Friday: Mainly VFR. Some improvement in FU/HZ. Chance of showers with scattered thunderstorms in the afternoon. Saturday: Mainly VFR. Chance of MVFR conditions late in shra or tsra, mainly for northern terminals. Sunday: Mainly VFR. Chance of MVFR conditions towards evening and at night in shra. Monday: Mainly VFR with a chance of MVFR or lower in the afternoon and evening with showers. SE gusts 20-25 kt. Tuesday: MVFR with SHRA mainly in the morning. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
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&& .MARINE...
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Some smoke may linger over the waters, specifically the ocean, this evening through Friday morning. Visibilities should remain above 2-3 nm during this time period. Otherwise, winds and seas will remain below SCA levels into Monday. An increasing southerly flow ahead of a frontal system could bring a period of SCA winds on the ocean waters Monday night into Tuesday.
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&& .HYDROLOGY... No hydrologic impacts expected through the end of next week. && .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...
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Water levels continue to gradually fall in conjunction with astronomical tides. A few spots may still touch minor benchmarks across the south shore bays of southern Queens and southern Nassau with tonights high tide. A coastal flood statement remains from 10pm to 2am. Water levels look to remain below minor benchmarks on Friday has astronomical tides continue to fall. There is a moderate risk for the development of rip currents at the ocean beaches today for NYC and Nassau ocean beaches and low risk for rip currents for Suffolk ocean beaches. On Friday due to a diminishing swell and weak winds, all ocean beaches will have a low risk of rip currents.
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&& .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...BR/DS NEAR TERM...DS SHORT TERM...DS LONG TERM...BR AVIATION...MW MARINE...BR/DS HYDROLOGY...BR/DS TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...