000
FXUS61 KOKX 191947
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
347 PM EDT Thu Oct 19 2023

.SYNOPSIS...
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High pressure off the East Coast moves further out into the western Atlantic Ocean tonight as a frontal system approaches from the west. A secondary area of low pressure develops along the DelMarVa Friday into Friday night and deepens through Saturday night while tracking into New England. The low departs to the northeast Sunday as high pressure builds in from the west and settles over the region early next week. A frontal boundary approaches late next week.
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&& .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM FRIDAY MORNING/...
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Deepening H5 trough axis centered over the Midwest gradually tracks east as an associated northern stream frontal system tracks through the Great Lakes into tonight. This will push surface high pressure further out into the western Atlantic and allow for increasing cloud cover before rain develops overnight. Meanwhile, a convergent band of cloud cover and spotty showers that has stubbornly persisted across portions of eastern LI and into southern CT much of the day is finally beginning to dissipate. A dry evening is expected regionwide before the clouds thicken tonight. Rain chances increase overnight as moisture streams north ahead of the incoming trough. Showers should move in from south to north toward daybreak, overspreading much of the region into the morning. Temperatures bottom out in the 50s.
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&& .SHORT TERM /6 AM FRIDAY MORNING THROUGH SATURDAY/...
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As the trough swings east and the primary low moves through the Great Lakes, a secondary area of low pressure begins to develop off the Mid Atlantic coast, tracking north and east through Saturday. There remains some guidance differences as to the exact track of the associated features, and thus, coverage and placement of the rain. Occasional showers are likely much of Friday with large scale ascent ahead of the trough axis. BUFKIT soundings indicate the possibility of a few embedded thunderstorms, particularly in the afternoon through the evening with several hundred joules of elevated CAPE present. Periodic breaks in the rain are likely before a final round moves through Saturday morning and afternoon as the upper level low with the northern stream system tracks across the region and merges over New England. The bulk of the day may end up dry, or at least less wet than Friday, especially for western areas. Overall, QPF averages around an inch regionwide, with perhaps a few locales picking up closer to two. The rain should fall primarily light to moderate through the event, falling over a long enough period of time to mitigate most flooding concerns. The typical urban and poor drainage areas may experience minor issues should a thunderstorm or locally heavy rain moves through. Tight pressure gradient on the backside will increase surface flow. Westerly gusts 20 to 25 mph are likely by late Saturday. Followed a blend of CONSAll and NBM for this update.
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&& .LONG TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/...
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Sunday a large, broad upper-level trough is situated overhead with a possible mid-level shortwave tracking through as the trough exits on Sunday night/Monday morning. At the surface, a low-pressure system will continue to exit northeast towards the Canadian Maritimes. As high pressure inches in from the west. As the system exits and a shortwave tracks through, some lingering precip (mainly for interior areas) may still be possible on Sunday particularly for interior areas. Chances for now look low and mainly isolated or light. Cloud cover will remain partly to mostly cloudy on Sunday because of this, as well. A strong pressure gradient will exist for much of the day on Sunday as the system departs, leaving strong and gusty NW winds with peak gusts in the afternoon 25-30 mph. Winds will gradually subside as the pressure gradient weakens and high pressure builds overnight Sunday into Monday morning. The strong winds and a broad trough will help cooler air to filter into the region. Highs on Sunday will be in the low-50s for northwestern interior areas while south and southeastern coastal areas will reach the upper-50s. Surface high pressure builds Monday through Wednesday with a large ridge over much of the eastern United States. HIgh pressure will keep sunny skies around early next week. Temperatures will gradually increase each afternoon with heights rising. HIghs will be in the mid/upper-50s Monday, low-60s Tuesday, then into the mid/upper-60s on Wednesday. Clear skies and light winds may allow for strong radiational cooling Sunday and Monday night. Temperatures could drop into the upper-30s to mid-40s Sunday night. Monday night may see further cooling with coastal areas in the mid-40s and interior locations in the mid-30s. Patchy areas of frost will be possible Monday night for some interior locations.
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&& .AVIATION /20Z THURSDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
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High pres will continue to drift east of the region tngt. A low pres sys approaches on Fri. VFR thru this eve. CIGS lower aft 6Z, becoming MVFR or lower by 12Z most areas. Rain in the mrng, tapering of from S to N by 18Z. Additional shwrs possible aft 18Z, but coverage and exact timing/placement are uncertain attm. Regardless of shwrs, some -ra/dz may linger thru 00Z Sat. KGON may stay VFR thru the TAF period. S winds thru tngt, backing to the SE Fri mrng and remaining thru 00Z Sat. ....NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... Timing of MVFR CIGS may be a little later than fcst, closer to 10Z. OUTLOOK FOR 18Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY... Friday night through Saturday: MVFR or lower with rain. Improvement to VFR possible aft 18Z. Sunday: MVFR possible with CIGS around 3000 ft. W to NW wind gusts 25-30 kt. Monday: VFR with gusty NW flow. Tuesday: VFR. 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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A south to north oriented line of weak showers across portions of the ocean off Fire Island and Long Island`s south shore bays may produce a funnel cloud or weak waterspout. Marine Weather Statement is in effect for these areas for this potential into late afternoon. Otherwise, with a weak pressure gradient across the waters tonight, winds and seas remain below advisory levels across the forecast waters. Increasing flow into Saturday as low pressure approaches and moves through the waters. Westerly wind gusts begin to exceed 25 kts on all waters Saturday afternoon into evening, with ocean seas building to around 5 ft during this time as well. The pressure gradient over the area waters tightens on Sunday, bringing the best chance for gales to the ocean waters. While the chances for gales are lower on the non- ocean waters, can not rule out a few gust to gale force. Winds and seas will then gradually diminish Sunday night, with the non-ocean waters falling below SCA conditions, however the ocean will continue to see seas at or above 5ft through Sunday night. The seas on the ocean waters are forecast to fall below SCA levels Monday morning. By Monday afternoon or early evening, sub-SCA conditions are then expected on all the waters and should remain below SCA levels through Wednesday.
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&& .HYDROLOGY...
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Rainfall between 0.75 and 1.5 inches is expected from late tonight through Saturday, with most of the rainfall occurring Friday into Friday night. Locally heavy downpours with any embedded thunderstorms could produce nuisance flooding of urban and poor drainage areas. There are no hydrologic concerns Sunday through next week.
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&& .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...BR/DR NEAR TERM...DR SHORT TERM...DR LONG TERM...BR AVIATION...JMC MARINE...BR/DR HYDROLOGY...BR/DR