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FXUS61 KOKX 051517
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
1017 AM EST Fri Jan 5 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
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High pressure builds in from the southwest today, across the area tonight, then offshore Saturday morning. Low pressure passes to the south and east of the area Saturday night through Sunday, bringing rain and snow to the region. High pressure builds in on Monday and stays in control through early Tuesday. A strong low pressure system will track to our west and impact the area late Tuesday through Wednesday. High pressure then slowly builds in from the south on Thursday.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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A ridge of high pressure builds in through tonight, then offshore by daybreak. This will maintain dry conditions and mostly clear skies. NW winds will veer to the W around 10 mph. While cold advection wanes, highs will only rise into the middle to upper 30s. Radiational cooling of interior locations tonight may allow temperatures to drop into the teens with much of the rest of the area having lows in the middle 20s.
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&& .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/... High pressure gives way to an approaching and strengthening low pressure system late Saturday and into Saturday night. The shield of precipitation begins to overspread the area Saturday afternoon and into the evening from southwest to northeast. Marginal temperatures over the southern tier of the area may allow for a mix of rain and snow at the onset. As the low approaches and strengthens to the south of the area, an increasing easterly flow will advect in warmer air over the ocean to allow for a boundary layer to remain in the middle 30s, likely transitioning any mix of rain and snow to mostly rain for Long Island and the NYC metro. Meanwhile, steady snow which may become heavy at times for portions of the interior is expected through the evening and overnight. As such, Winter Storm Watches remain in effect for interior portions of the Lower Hudson Valley, NE NJ, and Southern Connecticut. There remains a fair amount of uncertainty as to how far north the rain/snow line moves. A stronger system may bring heavier mesoscale banding and a more northerly component of the wind which may allow for enhanced snow totals for the immediate CT coastline and southern Westchester County, where a weaker system may allow for warmer air to infiltrate further inland and provide for more rain than snow. These details may not be known until the storm is underway. Models have recently hinted at a secondary piece of mid-level energy phasing with the low and causing a further strengthening of the system as it pushes to the east into Sunday morning which may result in an expansion of the precipitation shield to the northwest of the low into Sunday. This would both prolong the precipitation into much of the day on Sunday and also provide for more opportunity for cold air to infiltrate areas closer to the coast with a N to NW wind. This may allow for a changeover back to a rain/snow mix or all snow as the precipitation is coming to an end on Sunday, but at which point is expected to be fairly light in intensity. This may allow for some minor accumulations of an inch of less for Long Island and the NYC metro. Overall a widespread 1 - 1.25" of liquid equivalent is expected over the area with coastal areas, such as Long Island and the NYC metro, to be in the form of mostly rain. Total snowfall accumulations for the watch areas are a widespread 6-10" of snow with some localized elevated areas in the interior Lower Hudson Valley possibly seeing 12-15", but this will depend highly on any heavy mesoscale snow bands that develop. A sharp gradient of snowfall is expected somewhere closer to the immediate coast with around an inch forecast for the NYC metro. Winds during the event will be initially easterly Saturday evening and strengthening to be 15-25 mph with gusts upwards of 35-40 mph along the coast as winds become more NE overnight. Highest wind gusts will be for extreme eastern coastal locations, namely the east end of Long Island. Any precipitation comes to an end by Sunday evening with winds diminishing and skies becoming gradually clearer through the night. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... *Key Points* * A strong low pressure system will impact the area late Tuesday through Wednesday, with the potential for wind and flooding impacts. Quiet weather is expected Monday and Monday night as high pressure shifts through the area. Attention then turns to a strong low pressure system that will bring the potential for strong winds and flooding impacts. Deterministic and ensemble guidance continues to be in great agreement with little change from run to run over the past several days. This is leading to unusually higher than normal forecast confidence this far out. A shortwave trough will enter the northwest CONUS Saturday morning and dig down to the Southern Plains before closing off and lifting northeast. The associated surface low will track west of our area, with all of the latest deterministic guidance showing a sub 980mb low by the time it reaches the Great Lakes. The latest LREF run has about a 60% chance of a 980mb low or lower over the Great Lakes. This will place the area under a very tight pressure gradient as a ~1030mb high will be departing to our east. Confidence continues to increase in strong winds, with the potential for damaging winds (mainly across Long Island and the southeast CT coast). The heavy rain is the other hazard as flooding impacts are expected (see hydrology section below). This storm will bring mainly plain rain to the area. However, with cold air in place across the interior, a wintry mix is possible at the start of the event. This includes the potential for a brief period of freezing rain as warm air moves in aloft, but the surface remains cold, before warm air take over the entire area. Confidence is low at this point and this will also depend on timing of precip moving in. No mention in forecast yet. By Tuesday night, heavy rain is expected and have mentioned in the forecast in collaboration with neighboring offices. Rain chances end Wednesday night and although the guidance starts to diverge a bit, it looks like high pressure will gradually start to build in from the south and west on Thursday. && .AVIATION /15Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
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VFR through the TAF period as high pressure builds into the area today. NW flow around 10 kt backs toward the W during the afternoon. Winds remain out of the W, but lighten overnight, becoming light and variable toward Saturday morning. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... No unscheduled amendments expected. The afternoon KJFK and KLGA haze potential is yellow...which implies slant range visibility 4-6SM outside of cloud. OUTLOOK FOR 12Z SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY... Saturday: VFR early, then MVFR or lower late. Chance rain/snow late afternoon. Saturday Night: IFR or lower. Snow inland with a rain/snow mix closer to the coast. NYC metro and coast could be mainly rain. NE winds 15-20kt gusting 25-35 kt. Sunday: IFR or lower with snow inland and rain/snow mix near coast. NYC metro and coast may end as snow late morning and early afternoon. Winds becoming N 10-15 kt gusting 20-30 kt. Monday: VFR. Tuesday: VFR early becoming MVFR or lower. Rain in the afternoon at the coast with rain/snow mix inland in the afternoon. E winds 15-20 kt with gusts 25-30 kt in the afternoon. LLWS possible at night. 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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With high pressure building in from the SW through tonight, winds will diminish tonight. Sub-SCA conditions persist through Saturday afternoon with high pressure overhead. An approaching low pressure will quickly allow widespread SCA conditions for all waters by late Saturday afternoon. A Gale Watch is now in effect for all waters except the NY Harbor from Saturday night through Sunday afternoon for gusts of 35-45 kt as a strengthening low pressure system moves by to the south and east. Winds gradually subside Sunday night below SCA levels but elevated waves on the ocean will allow for SCA to persist through at least Sunday night. Lingering 5 to 6 ft waves are expected on the ocean waters on Monday. Otherwise, quiet conditions on the waters expected until late Tuesday. Strong low pressure will then track to the west and impact the area through Wednesday. Gale force wind gusts look likely on all waters, as well as the potential for storm force gusts. Waves on the ocean waters look to reach 15 to 20 ft. Continued mention of gales and storm force gusts in the HWO.
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&& .HYDROLOGY... Hydrologic impacts, including river flooding, are possible late Tuesday into Wednesday as strong low pressure passes west of the area. The NBM currently has a 70 to 80% chance across much of the area for seeing 2 inches in 24 hours and a 50 to 60% chance of 3 inches. This would be on top of whatever snow pack there is from this weekend`s storm. The Weather Prediction Center has placed the entire area in a Day 5 "slight risk" for excessive rainfall. && .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... Widespread minor coastal flooding possible with the Sunday morning high tide, especially along the southern and eastern bays of LI and LI Sound. Isolated dune erosion expected during the Sunday morning high tide, overwashes not expected. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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CT...Winter Storm Watch from Saturday evening through Sunday afternoon for CTZ005>008. NY...Winter Storm Watch from Saturday evening through Sunday afternoon for NYZ067>070. NJ...Winter Storm Watch from Saturday evening through Sunday afternoon for NJZ002-004-103. MARINE...Gale Watch from Saturday evening through Sunday morning for ANZ331-335. Gale Watch from Saturday evening through Sunday afternoon for ANZ332-340-345-350-353-355.
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&& $$ SYNOPSIS...JT/MW/DW NEAR TERM...DW/MW SHORT TERM...MW LONG TERM...JT AVIATION...MET/JT MARINE...JT/MW/DW HYDROLOGY...JT/MW TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...//