000
FXUS61 KOKX 100011
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
711 PM EST Fri Feb 9 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A warm front pushes to the northeast tonight. A cold front pushes
through late Saturday into Saturday night. The front settles south
of the area Sunday as weak high pressure builds. Low pressure
approaches from the southwest Monday into Monday night and deepens
as it tracks south and east of Long Island Tuesday. Brief high
pressure builds in before a wave of low pressure passes through
sometime Thursday night into Friday. High pressure then builds
in thereafter.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/...
-- Changed Discussion --
A warm front pushes through tonight, with a weak pressure gradient in place behind the boundary. A couple of tricky details with respect to the forecast tonight. The amount of cloud cover will prove difficult to pin down, with forecast sounding and current satellite imagery showing some high clouds. This will impact where low clouds, mainly some fog can form later at night as it tries to radiate. However, with light winds and some clouds fog may not be able to form. But where clouds do not form expect some fog to develop. Chose to split the difference and put in some patchy fog in the more typical rural locations that typically experience such. A mild night for this time of year with mainly middle and upper 30s, although where middle 30s can get reached where dew points will reside is where some fog may develop. Saturday will feature more mild conditions as the area will be more or less in the warm sector with a cold front approaching from the northwest. The day will feature a good deal of clouds as mid level moisture streaks in from the SW. This however will not prevent temperatures from getting well into the 50s in most places, although it will be a bit cooler across eastern sections. As the front approaches later in the day cannot totally rule out a few showers across W and NW zones, however PoPs on Saturday were lowered to slight chance for late in the day, except NW sections where chance PoPs were kept for very late in the day and early evening. Used consensus temps and dew points.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/... As the cold front pivots through Saturday evening and with that the slight chance of a few showers, or perhaps just a few sprinkles. Went below NBM PoPs. The cold front won`t exactly blast through and should slow a bit. Have maintained mostly cloudy skies for the most part, although some brief partial clearing can occur late. The cold front will settle nearby to the south on Sunday. A fair amount of cloud cover is still anticipated, however some partial clearing should filter into northern and northwestern sections. Despite some clouds it will remain relatively mild for this time of year with Pacific air still in place, even behind the cold front. Most places will get into the upper 40s and lower 50s before turning cooler later towards evening. Temperatures will once again average above normal for Saturday night into Sunday. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/... *Low pressure will pass to our south and east impacting the area Monday night into Tuesday. *Temperatures will be right around normal the entire long term period. The main story of the long term period is the increasing confidence in a coastal low that will approach from the southwest Monday into Monday night and deepen as it tracks south and east of Long Island Tuesday. There continues to be differences in surface low strength, timing and track across the latest guidance, as well as key differences aloft that will have to monitored. A closed upper low and associated surface low will lift northeast out of the Southern Plains on Monday, with the upper low opening as it does so. Low pressure then deepens off the coast and passes to our south and east. At the surface, the latest GFS, GEFS and ECMWF have trended slightly farther north. The Canadian remains the weakest and farthest south. Aloft, the GFS has trended stronger, and is currently the strongest, with a northern stream shortwave approaching from the west that will have some interaction with the shortwave lifting up from the south. The Canadian is showing this feature much farther west, less amplified and not interacting with the shortwave lifting from the south. This is causing the Canadian to show a weaker and quicker moving system. Given the model spread, continued to stay close to the NBM for now. With no real cold air in place, this will likely be a mixed ptype event. Current thinking is slight chance PoPs start Monday afternoon as all rain, with some snow mixing across the far northern interior. PoPs become likely Monday night, with more snow starting to mix in across the interior. Heading into Tuesday, as colder air gets wrapped up behind the system, we likely see all snow across the northern half of the area and ending as a snow and/or rain mix across the southern half of the area. The greatest chances for accumulating snow are across the interior as of right now. The WPC Day 4 probability of 0.25 inches of melted snow/sleet include most of the interior in a 30 to 50 percent chance and the rest of the area in a 10 to 30 percent chance. Thereafter, model spread increases. Weak high pressure may build in followed by another weak low later in the week. Stuck with NBM slight chance PoPs late in the week. && .AVIATION /00Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
-- Changed Discussion --
A warm front lifts north of the terminals through tonight. A cold front passes across late Saturday. Mainly VFR conditions prevail through the TAF period. There may be some IFR fog at outlying terminals tonight. There is also a low chance for IFR-LIFR ceilings, with higher chances of these conditions occurring for eastern terminals, such as KGON, KISP, and KBDR. S-SE flow will diminish overnight, become light and/or variable. A light S-SW flow develops Saturday and should remain below 10 kt into the afternoon. A sprinkle or light rain shower is possible Saturday afternoon and evening, mainly across NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... Very low chance of IFR fog overnight. OUTLOOK FOR 00Z SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY... Sunday: VFR. Monday...MVFR or lower possible late. Monday Night-Tuesday...IFR or lower possible. Rain likely near coast with rain/snow mix inland, becoming all snow inland late Monday night into Tuesday morning. A rain/snow mix is likely down to the coast Tuesday morning. Becoming VFR Tuesday afternoon/evening. N-NW wind gusts 25-30 kt Tuesday. Wednesday...VFR...NW wind gusts 25-30 kt. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .MARINE... There will be a weak pressure gradient tonight into Saturday morning. The pressure gradient increase Saturday afternoon and evening as a cold front approaches. At this time it appears small craft criteria will not be met with seas averaging closer to 4 ft and any small craft gusts being closer to 20 kt, although an occasional gust to around 25 kt cannot be ruled out late Saturday and through the first half of Saturday night. The WNW flow should yield sub small craft conditions into Sunday as well. With an easterly swell component lingering, ocean seas should remain close to 4 ft throughout the weekend. Sub-SCA conditions are expected Sunday night through most of Monday night. Low pressure then passes to our south and east and will bring impacts to the area. 25 to 30 kt wind gusts look likely late Monday night through Tuesday and then again on Wednesday. There is also a period on Tuesday where wind gusts on the ocean could approach gale criteria, 30 to 35 kt. Wave heights likely builds to 5 ft early Tuesday and then remain at 5 to 8 ft through Wednesday. With the pressure gradient never really relaxing, and a wave of low pressure expected late week, conditions will be in and out of SCA criteria through the rest of the week. && .HYDROLOGY... There are no hydrologic issues expected at this time. && .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... Look for minor coastal flooding to continue for the Saturday morning high tide cycle for the south shore bays of Nassau where advisories remain in effect, and statements have been issued for Queens, Brooklyn, Staten Island, and Hudson in Lower NE NJ. Also, an advisory is in place for the late morning/ early afternoon cycle on Saturday for Westchester and Fairfield, and the statement has been discontinued for New Haven as a persistence tidal forecast has been applied with New Haven falling short of minor thresholds with the previous cycles. The tide levels will remain elevated over the course of the weekend after just coming off the astronomical peak with the recent new moon. A storm passing nearby early next week has potential to produce widespread minor to locally moderate flooding from Mon night into Tue night. The outcome will be highly dependent on storm track; and thus the specific wind direction, timing, and intensity, which remain too uncertain to offer details at this time. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...Coastal Flood Advisory from 10 AM to 1 PM EST Saturday for CTZ009. NY...Coastal Flood Advisory from 10 AM to 1 PM EST Saturday for NYZ071. Coastal Flood Advisory from 6 AM to 9 AM EST Saturday for NYZ179. NJ...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...JE/JT NEAR TERM...JE/JT SHORT TERM...JE LONG TERM...JT AVIATION...JP MARINE...JE/JT HYDROLOGY...JE/JT TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...