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FXUS61 KOKX 102018
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
418 PM EDT Wed Apr 10 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
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A stationary boundary will remain south of the area tonight and then lift north as a warm front on Thursday. A strong low pressure system lifts west of the area and sends a strong frontal system through the area Thursday night into Friday. A second cold front moves through Saturday. A weak low moves through on Sunday. High pressure takes over Monday with a warm front front moving in late Tuesday into Wednesday.
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&& .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM THURSDAY MORNING/...
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A southern branch storm system over the Lower Mississippi Valley will lift northeast tonight ahead of a digging northern branch shortwave trough. The latter of which will phase the two steams with a rapidly deepening low that lifts up into the Tennessee and Ohio Valleys overnight. Upper level ridging along the eastern seaboard will continue to gradually translate east. A stationary front will also remain poised to the the south overnight as low-level ridging maintains its last gasp across the area. A light easterly flow and weak warm advection will continue to gradually moisten the airmass. Areas of fog will likely develop overnight. Any showers will be spotty overnight with the best chance toward daybreak. Latest CAMs show a band of warm advection showers approaching from the SW toward 12Z Thursday, with the best chance being across the western third of the forecast area (NE NJ, Lower Hudson Valley, NYC metro). Overnight lows will be mild in the mid 40s to lower 50s. This is about 7 to 10 degrees above normal.
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&& .SHORT TERM /6 AM THURSDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY/...
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Deepening low pressure tracks up through the Tennessee and Ohio Valleys Thursday and into the lower Great Lakes region by evening, then north of the Lakes on Friday. This will send a stationary front to the south of the area north across the region Thursday afternoon, aided by a strengthening LLJ working up the Mid Atlantic coast. Some warm advection showers will be possible, mainly in the morning Thursday before more widespread showers move in from the south during the evening hours. Warm conveyor belt processes in the warm sector will be the primary lifting mechanism Thursday night. Showers will be of moderate to occasionally heavy intensity. In addition, highly anomalous precipitable water values will be available for the system increasing to around 1.50 inches. Fortunately, this is not a deeply convective system with only marginal instability and the surface boundary to the north. Hourly rates during the heaviest rain look to be between 0.25 to 0.50 inches. SPC HREF shows PMM of 0.75 to 1" 3hr QPF across interior southern CT. This location looks to be the most favored for the highest rainfall amounts due to the orientation of the LLJ and orographics. Storm total rainfall amounts range from 0.75 to 1" along the coast and far western sections of the Lower Hudson Valley, to 1-1.50" across interior southern CT. Localized higher amounts are possible in any thunderstorms. These rainfall amounts and rates should mainly confine flooding to the minor nuisance variety. WPC has most of the area in marginal risk for isolated flash flooding, with a slight risk across interior NE NJ and western Orange County in NY. We would need to see amounts closer to 2 inches in 3-6hr across NE NJ to see minor flooding on the Saddle River at Lodi, but some of the quicker responding streams, like the Ho-Ho-kus Brook need less to exceed bankfull. As for the wind forecast, there is a fair amount of uncertainty with how much of the southerly LLJ is mixed down to the surface Thursday night with a strong low-level inversion developing. The base of the inversion will have winds in the 40-50kt range, so currently expect surface winds to be in the 25-35 kt range, highest at the coast. A few 40-kt gusts are possible along the coast, but confidence is too low at this time for wind advisory headlines. This will continue to be evaluated as we draw closer to the event. The showers become more scattered in coverage on Friday with the cold front moving through during the late morning/early afternoon hours. Wind gusts diminish a bit as winds veer to the SW, but still expect gusts to around 30 kt through the day. Temperatures will remain on the mild side with highs in the 50s to lower 60s on Thursday, warmest away from south facing coastal locations. Friday will be even a few degrees warmer as the flow becomes SW and cold air advection lags behind the cold front. Lows Thursday night likely stay in the 50s, which is well above normal.
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&& .LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
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An impactful low pressure system exits into New England on Friday night. Light, spotty showers (mainly for northern zones) may still linger in the vicinity through Friday night, clearing by Saturday afternoon. Winds will continue to diminish into Friday night and Saturday morning as the pressure gradient weakens. A second cold front on Saturday will aid in clearing clouds and any lingering precip, as well as usher in cooler air with highs on Saturday in the 50s. This will be supported by a strong trough centering itself over the region. A trough over the region exits to the east Saturday night into Sunday morning with the upper-level pattern becoming zonal on Sunday. The zonal west to east flow helps advect in higher moisture, leftovers from a weak low that moved into the Great Lakes. At the same time, some models indicated mid-level energy being ejected through our area from the trough as it rises into Canada and the weak low over the Great Lakes. Not all models agree on this solution, but odds are we should see some scattered showers as this moves through on Sunday. Isolated thunderstorms are also possible as there could be some elevated instability, weak as it may be. The trough exits east Sunday night with a strong ridge building over the northeastern US and Canada Monday and Tuesday. This will lead to sunnier weather on Monday and temperatures warming into the mid-70s to upper-60s, supported by warm air advection aloft. Its important to note that not all models agree with the ridge building on Monday, with some guidance not showing a building ridge until Tuesday. The ridge remains in place on Tuesday, though a strong upper-level jet develops aloft with a stalled/warm front placing itself over the area from a low in the northern Great Plains/Western Great Lakes. These will act together to increase cloud cover through the day on Tuesday, which will keep high temperatures a few degrees cooler on Tuesday compared to Monday, but still reaching the 70s. This front may lead to rain chances Tuesday night into Wednesday.
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&& .AVIATION /20Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
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Mostly VFR then MVFR cigs develop with IFR for some this evening especially eastern terminals (KISP, KBDR and KGON). 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. Some light showers or drizzle possible for coastal areas. On THU...some periodic improvements possible mid-morning but conditions go downhill again Thu afternoon. While some light rain is possible, widespread rain develops toward evening. Regarding wind, E/SE winds around 10 kt continue tonight. Isolated gusts possible. Winds pick up Thu afternoon and increased gusts to 25 kt are possible especially along the coast. LLWS is also being added to TAF for some as strong low- level jet develops along with a weak inversion. ...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 18Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY... 18Z Thursday: MVFR to IFR with chance of showers AM, then showers likely with IFR/MVFR PM. SE winds G20-25kt LLWS developing. 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. Monday: 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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Sub-SCA conditions are on tap overnight and through much of the daytime hours on Thursday. However, SSE winds will steadily ramp Thursday afternoon and evening ahead of low pressure deepening to the west of the area. Gale force gusts are likely across all waters overnight with gusts up to 40kt. Winds will then veer to the SW on Friday with marginal gale gusts still possible. Seas on the ocean build to 10 to 13 ft during this time, with 3 to 6 ft on LI Sound. SCA conditions will likely linger on all waters through Saturday as wind gusts remain around 25 kt. Sub-SCA conditions are expected thereafter, except on the ocean waters where 5-7 ft seas could linger through Monday.
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&& .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 most of the area with western sections of NE NJ and the Lower Hudson Valley under a slight risk.
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&& .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... 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. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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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 Warning from 6 PM Thursday to 6 PM EDT Friday for ANZ331- 332-335-338-340-345-350-353-355.
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&& $$ SYNOPSIS...BR/DW NEAR TERM...DW SHORT TERM...DW LONG TERM...BR AVIATION...IRD MARINE...BR/DW HYDROLOGY...BR/DW TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...//