000
FXUS61 KOKX 251032
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
532 AM EST Thu Jan 25 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A warm front has lifted to the north of the area this morning
and will drop south through our area as a cold front this
afternoon/evening. The front lingers over/near the area Thursday
night. A wave of low pressure and a cold front move east of the
area during Friday. The region is in between systems to start
the weekend. Low pressure approaches for the latter half of the
weekend. The low is forecast to strengthen southeast of Long
Island Sunday night into Monday. High pressure returns
thereafter for early to the middle of next week.

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.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 PM THIS EVENING/...
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For the 530AM update, temperatures and dewpoints were adjusted to account for current observations and trends, with many areas trending warmer. 2 mile visibilities were extended across the area a few hours earlier than forecast to account for observations. The front has sagged a little south in the last few hours, allowing for more steady rainfall for southern locations. Previous discussion as follows... A warm front has lifted north of the area this morning aided by a strong SW LLJ. GOES-16 Longwave IR channel shows the boundary very well associated with the colder cloud tops where most precipitation is currently concentrated. Most of the current rain in our area is light for northern areas near the warm front and more like on-and-off drizzle for southern locations. This will change as the warm front starts to advance southward helped by an exiting low over the Canadian Maritimes and strengthening high pressure to our north in the low`s wake. The warm front will push back over the area this afternoon/evening as a cold front, bringing more consistent light rainfall in the afternoon. As the front situates itself south of us in the evening and early night, much of the rainfall will be concentrated offshore to the south, with more spotty, isolated rain chances, mostly for southern areas closer to the boundary while northern areas remain drier. Areas of fog will continue to persist and may even redevelop until the front clears to the south of the area Thursday afternoon and evening. Before doing so, warm air will continue to filter in with the warm front still situated to the north, leading to highs today in the low-50s across the area.
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&& .SHORT TERM /6 PM THIS EVENING THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/... The front will stall and situate itself over our area yet again Thursday night. Another wave of low pressure will track along this frontal boundary from the southwest bringing more rainfall through the night on Thursday. Areas of fog will redevelop Thursday night and early Friday morning with this wave of low pressure as dewpoint depressions will be very low and rainfall may not be heavy enough to mix it out. A second area of low pressure to our west with a cold front will approach us Friday afternoon clearing any lingering rain and allow drier air to filter in. In total, Thursday morning through Friday afternoon, about 0.5-1.0 inches of rainfall is expected with higher totals south and lower totals north. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... * Turning colder Sunday into early next week. Potential for another snow event Sunday night into Monday. * Forecast highs only in the 30s for Monday and Tuesday. Model uncertainty likely with wavering positions of low pressure southeast of Long Island and varying magnitude of low pressure. So, this will make for wide ranges of precipitation forecasts and how much of the region will get snow versus rain or a mix of the two. Also, this will make for wide ranges of snowfall in the forecast. For Saturday, the local region will be in between low pressure well out in the Atlantic and another one developing in the SE United States. This low to our south and west will be the main player in terms of the weather forecast and for potentially the impactful weather of the long term. The low is forecast to move northeast along the Appalachians Saturday night into Sunday. Then, on Sunday, the low moves east to the mid-Atlantic coast and eventually offshore for early Sunday evening. The low thereafter deepens as it continues to move in a general eastward direction Sunday night through Monday. High pressure builds in from the north for Monday night. However, this high quickly weakens Tuesday into mid week. Mainly dry and cold conditions with airmass moderating by midweek with temperatures trending warmer. && .AVIATION /12Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
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Frontal boundary eventually moves farther south across the region today and then returns back north tonight. Conditions vary mainly MVFR to VFR initially with some localized IFR. Expecting a deterioration of conditions to IFR during the day today with more rain in the forecast. Conditions could fluctuate between MVFR and IFR this afternoon. More fog possible late today and into tonight with IFR and potentially lower conditions again. Winds relatively light through the period, near 10 kts or less. LLWS with SW winds near 50 kt at 2kft until about mid morning. NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... Amendments expected for flight category changes through the TAF period. There could be fluctuations between IFR, MVFR and VFR throughout the TAF period. LIFR will be possible at times. LLWS may end a few hours earlier than shown in the TAF. OUTLOOK FOR 09Z FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY... Friday...Chance of MVFR/IFR/rain AM. Improvement to VFR by afternoon. Saturday...Mainly VFR. MVFR or lower developing in rain at night. Sunday...MVFR or lower in rain. Potential for snow late Sunday night. E-NE G20-30kt. Monday...MVFR or lower. NE G20-30 kt early. Chance of snow. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
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&& .MARINE... SCA conditions were originally expected this morning along ocean waters, but the latest guidance and observations no longer support the issuance of a Small Craft Advisory. Waves will reach 4 feet on ocean waters with wind gusts SW 20-24 kts. Thursday afternoon through Friday night SCA conditions are not expected. Sub-SCA conditions expected Saturday through Saturday night. SCA conditions become more likely Sunday and Sunday night. Potential for gales on Eastern LI Sound and Eastern LI Bays Sunday night into Monday with otherwise SCA conditions. Monday night forecast to have more SCA conditions as gales diminish. Ocean seas build to 5 to 10 ft Sunday night into Monday. && .HYDROLOGY... In total, Thursday morning through Friday afternoon, about 0.5-1.0 inches of rainfall is expected with higher totals south and lower totals north. There are no significant hydrologic concerns at this time. No hydrologic impacts are currently expected Friday through early next week. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...JM/BR NEAR TERM...BR SHORT TERM...BR LONG TERM...JM AVIATION...JM MARINE...JM/BR HYDROLOGY...JM/BR