000
FXUS61 KOKX 011508
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
1108 AM EDT Tue Aug 1 2023

.SYNOPSIS...
High pressure builds in today, becomes centered over the area
on Wednesday and then shifts offshore Wednesday night. A warm
front pushes through late Thursday night, followed by a cold
front Friday night into early Saturday. High pressure returns
late Saturday through early Monday. A frontal system then
approaches and may push through the area on Monday.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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A full latitude trough along the east coast will gradually translate east today, while high pressure builds in from the Great Lakes. It will be another dry day with below normal temperatures. Dewpoints will drop to the upper 40s and highs will be in the upper 70s to low 80s. This will give min RH values this afternoon between 30 and 40 percent. With daytime heating and cyclonic flow aloft, scattered to broken stratocu is likely again. Great radiational cooling conditions are expected tonight. Blended in the MOS guidance to lower temperatures in the normal cool spots. The interior and Long Island Pine Barrens should see lows in the upper 40s to low 50s.
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&& .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... High pressure becomes centered over the area on Wednesday as shortwave ridging takes place aloft. Conditions will be similar to Tuesday, with more sunshine and one final day of low humidity. The high shifts offshore Wednesday night and a return flow sets up. Wednesday night will be cool, but warmer than Tuesday night due to a light S/SW flow and mid to upper level clouds moving in with an approaching frontal system. This frontal system will bring the next chance of rain to the area. The first half of Thursday will likely be dry, but by the afternoon PoPs increase for the western half of the area. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/... 500mb ensemble means show a weakening upper low across northern Quebec and attendant trough across the northeast. The trough axis swings through the local area by 00Z Saturday, with mean upper ridging building in behind it, from Saturday into early next week. At the surface, occluding low pressure over southern Quebec brings a warm front through the area late Thursday into early Friday. The global ensemble systems (ECE, CMC, GEFS) are a bit divergent in their handling of this system with respect to timing and magnitude of precipitation locally for the Friday timeframe. The CMC and EC have trended on the earlier side with heavier precipitation overall, while the GEFS members are later and weaker with the precipitation. Have maintained the chance to slight chance PoPs from west to east early Friday in association with the warm front moving through. Cannot rule out some thunder given elevated instability in BUFKIT soundings late Thursday night as well. The area is solidly warm sectored on Friday, as a pre-frontal trough, followed by a cold front, approach from the west Friday afternoon and evening. Dewpoints rise into the low 70s under the southerly flow, and precipitation chances increase by the afternoon. The airmass looks to destabilize by early afternoon, with a bit of a cap in place per model soundings, but with 1000-1500 J/kg of SBCAPE and bulk shear in the 30-40 kt range supportive of conditional deep moist convection. With PWAT values near 2 inches, heavy rainfall is possible with any storm, though this looks most probable east of NYC later on Friday afternoon with a pronounced 850mb jet. NBM probabilities of >1" on Friday are now up to 30% across much of the area, up from 10% from previous cycles. WPC maintains a marginal risk of excessive rainfall for eastern parts of the area on Friday, as a result. The front looks to move offshore by early Saturday, and surface high pressure building in through Sunday. Dewpoints drop back into the upper 50s and low 60s by Sunday, making it feel more comfortable out. High pressure slides offshore by early Monday, as the next system approaches from the west. Temperatures over this period will be near, or slightly below normal in the low to mid 80s. && .AVIATION /15Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
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VFR. High pressure builds over the terminals today and into tomorrow. North to NE winds generally around 10 kt into this afternoon, become more N to NW during the afternoon. Winds may vary for a time from NE to NW before becoming NW. Gusts are possible at EWR for a period during the afternoon. Winds will stay northerly this evening, and weaken into the overnight. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... No unscheduled AMD expected. Can`t rule out a SE-S late day sea breeze at KJFK. OUTLOOK FOR 12Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY... Wednesday through Wednesday night: VFR. Thursday: Mainly VFR. Chance of showers, mainly NW of the NYC metros in the afternoon, then throughout the area at night. Friday: Chance of MVFR or lower cond in showers/tstms. Saturday: Chance of MVFR cond in showers. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
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&& .MARINE... With a weak pressure gradient in place due to high pressure over the area, winds and waves will remain below SCA criteria through early Friday. Wind gusts over the ocean begin to increase early Friday and by Friday afternoon, waves increase to 5 ft over the ocean making SCA conditions likely until early Saturday, when the the pressure gradient weakens with a lighter wind and 3 to 4 ft seas on the ocean. && .HYDROLOGY... There are no hydrologic concerns through early Friday. Heavy rainfall is possible with any thunderstorms on Friday afternoon and evening, which may result in localized nuisance flooding across urban and poor drainage areas, particularly east of NYC. Otherwise, no significant widespread rainfall is expected from Saturday through early next week. && .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... There is a low risk of rip currents today. There is a moderate risk of rip currents on Wednesday with 1 ft 11-12s southeasterly swells. Astronomical tides continue to increase with the full moon tonight. Based on several sites achieving minor flooding last evening and surge values of 0.5 to 0.8ft, have opted to issue an advisory for the south shore back bays of Queens and Nassau for tonight. Expecting minor flood benchmarks to be exceeded by only 0.3 or 0.4ft or so during high tide. A statement was issued for southern Fairfield county, with minor benchmarks expected to just be reached. Additional minor flooding is possible during Wednesday evenings high tide cycles, and statements and/or advisories may be needed. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...Coastal Flood Advisory from 6 PM to 9 PM EDT this evening for NYZ178-179. NJ...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...DBR/JT NEAR TERM...JT/DW SHORT TERM...JT LONG TERM...DBR AVIATION...DBR/MET MARINE...DBR/JT HYDROLOGY...DBR/JT TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...