000
FXUS61 KOKX 101422
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
1022 AM EDT Wed Apr 10 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A stationary boundary will remain nearby through tonight and then
lift north as a warm front on Thursday. A strong low pressure system
lifts west of the area and lifts a complex frontal boundary through
Thursday night into Friday morning. A series of cold fronts will
follow into the early part of the weekend. High pressure will
then briefly nose in from the south into Sunday. Another frontal
system could move through on Monday.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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A bit more sun than advertised this morning, this has resulted in an upward bump of highs a bit in some spots. Expecting highs in the 50s along the coast, to the lower and mid 60s from NYC and points north and west. Adjusted rain chances down today, especially east of the Hudson. For this afternoon and this evening higher res guidance including HREF shows little in terms of QPF. In all likelihood it will be dry much of the time this afternoon and into this evening. Low end chance to slight chance PoPs should suffice for this time period. Later tonight with height falls ensuing and the frontal boundary just south of the area beginning to inch north closer to daybreak, look for a relatively higher chance of light shower activity late in the overnight / early Thu AM. Any precip will be light during this period with both instances on the order of a few hundredths. Cloud cover will keep temperatures above normal tonight by about 5 degrees or so. As the front begins to nudge north late at night some patchy fog may form, possibly areas of fog towards daybreak.
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&& .SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... The stationary boundary in place lifts north as a warm front Thursday morning. The higher res guidance is indicating some showers along and just ahead of the boundary, especially for western sections. Thus, chance to likely showers for Thursday morning, followed by a period of more overcast and predominantly dry conditions during the remainder of the day on Thursday as BUFKIT soundings indicate some mid level drying. With a wind mainly out of the south and a marine influence for a good 2/3rds of the area, the atmosphere down low should be relatively stable, with some elevated instability aloft as the area gets increasingly in the warm sector throughout the day. Due to cloud cover temperatures should be close to normal, even a few degrees below normal further east due to a wind off the colder ocean. Further west temperatures should get into the 60s, and if some sun can break through it would get even warmer but current thinking maintains cloud cover. The ECMWF and NAEFS SATs (Situational Awareness Tables) indicate an anomalously high plume of moisture working in from the south Thursday night. At 850 mb there are 3 to 4 Standardized Anomalies with respect to specific humidity / moisture values, and 3 Standardized Anomalies with respect to PWATs. PWAT values are expected to get to around 1.5 inches Thursday night. The NAM and GFS continue to indicate a 70 kt LLJ centered around the 2z to 12z timeframe, with a subtle timing difference between the two. As usual the NAM and GFS differ on inversion height and strength, which will be the deciding factor as to how much momentum can get down to the surface in terms of peak winds / wind gusts. Forecast wind gusts currently fall just below wind advisory criteria for all zones, although confidence in the wind / wind gust is below average due to uncertainty around inversion on how far down momentum transfer goes. Subsequent forecast packages may adjust this. Strong forcing will be in place with PVA and WAA with the strong LLJ, look for these ingredients to produce about a 9 hour period of moderate, to heavy rainfall at times. Three quarters of an inch to an inch and a half of rain is expected on average across the CWA. See the hydrology sections for further details. Temperatures Thursday will average near normal, perhaps a few degrees above for western most sections. For Thursday night look for temperatures to average well above normal with the surge of warmer air and higher moisture moving up from the south. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... Currently forecasting peak gusts of up to 45 mph or thereabouts early Friday morning along Long Island and other southern coastal areas as the front swings through. Showers become scattered and lighter Friday afternoon, then end for the most part Friday evening and Friday night as the low exits to the north with a second cold front on Saturday. Winds will remain breezy through early Sat afternoon as the pressure gradient gradually weakens. A deeper trough will center itself over the region during this time frame, becoming zonal and weakening Saturday into Sunday. At the same time, high pressure will briefly nose in from the south leading to dry conditions Saturday night through most of Sunday. Model guidance disagrees on Monday, but will likely see the trough to our north begin to drop with some mid-level energy swinging in on Monday which may provide a chance for scattered showers on Monday along with a cold front. High temperatures will be in the mid 60s to the west and in the mid 50s to the east on Thursday with temperatures more uniform on Friday near 60. Saturday will be cooler in the 50s due to a cold front then warm into the mid 60s to mid 70s by Monday. && .AVIATION /14Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
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A very slow moving/stalled frontal boundary remains south of the area this afternoon. VFR early this morning with E/SE winds increasing to 10kt or just below. MVFR cigs develop this afternoon with IFR for some, especially eastern terminals (KISP, KBDR and KGON). Any afternoon showers will be light and not significant enough to include in TAF. Low confidence in occurrence and coverage. More of a chance for IFR cigs tonight, along with MVFR vsby in BR. Included TEMPO groups mainly between 09z to 12z to capture this. Some locations could even briefly see LIFR cigs and IFR vsby, the best chance for this will again be for eastern terminals. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... Amendments possible this afternoon as cigs lower to MVFR and then potentially IFR. Higher confidence in cig forecast tonight. Cigs could lower to MVFR and then to IFR a few hours later than what is shown in current TAF. OUTLOOK FOR 12Z THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY... Thursday: MVFR to IFR with chance of showers AM, then showers likely with IFR/MVFR PM. SE winds G20-25kt. Thursday night: IFR with showers. SE winds G30-40kt with LLWS. Friday: IFR cond with showers and S winds G30-35kt AM. MVFR with chance of showers PM and SW winds G30-35kt. Saturday: Slight chance of showers mainly NW of the NYC metros, mainly VFR. W-NW winds G25-30kt. Sunday: Mainly VFR. Chance of MVFR and showers in the afternoon. SW-W winds G20-25kt. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
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&& .MARINE... An easterly flow takes shape today with sustained winds generally around 10 kt. Sub small craft conditions take place through tonight, and into the first half of Thursday. Out ahead of an approaching frontal boundary look for the winds and seas to increase Thursday afternoon as small craft conditions develop. SSE gales are then likely to develop Thursday evening and spread NE across the waters Thursday night. Gusts of storm force out on the ocean cannot be ruled out towards daybreak on Friday. Seas will build quickly Thursday night with 10 to 15 ft ocean seas by Friday morning. Gales conditions should give way to small craft conditions from west to east Friday afternoon and evening on a SW wind. Small craft conditions will linger through Saturday with a W wind. SCA cond will likely linger on all waters through Saturday as wind gusts remain around 25 kt. Sub-SCA conditions expected thereafter, except on the ocean waters where 5-7 ft seas could linger. && .HYDROLOGY...
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There are no hydrologic concerns through the day on Thursday. A period of moderate to heavy rain is expected Thursday night, and potentially lingering into a portion of Friday morning for eastern sections. At this time, the flooding risk from rainfall is limited despite the fact that antecedent conditions remain rather wet. Due to the progressive nature of the system it is likely that any flooding would be more of the minor, nuisance and urban-poor drainage variety. WPC maintains a marginal risk of excessive rainfall across the 2/3rds of the CWA, with a slight risk into western portions of the area (mainly west of NYC and the Hudson River).
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&& .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...
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Astronomical high tides remain elevated with the new moon / spring tide set up from early this week. An additional round of minor coastal flooding is expected tonight, with water levels likely coming in a few tenths short of last night`s high tide cycle. A Coastal Flood Advisory is in effect for southern Westchester, southern Fairfield and southern Nassau. A Coastal Flood Statement is in effect for Hudson, Staten Island, Brooklyn, Queens, northern Nassau and northwestern Suffolk. Strengthening SE-S flow with a storm system late Thursday into Friday morning will likely force more widespread minor to locally moderate coastal flooding.
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&& .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...Coastal Flood Advisory from 11 PM this evening to 3 AM EDT Thursday for CTZ009. NY...Coastal Flood Advisory from 11 PM this evening to 3 AM EDT Thursday for NYZ071. Coastal Flood Advisory from 8 PM this evening to midnight EDT tonight for NYZ179. NJ...None. MARINE...Gale Watch from Thursday evening through Friday afternoon for ANZ331-332-335-338-340-345-350-353-355. && $$ SYNOPSIS...JE/JT NEAR TERM...JE/DW SHORT TERM...JE LONG TERM...BR AVIATION...IRD/JT MARINE...JE/BR HYDROLOGY...JE TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...