372
FXUS61 KOKX 211452
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
1052 AM EDT Mon Oct 21 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
High pressure remains in control through Tuesday. A cold front
approaches on Wednesday, moving through Wednesday night into
early Thursday. High pressure builds on Thursday into Friday.
Another frontal system may move across the area this weekend.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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Forecast on track with mainly clear skies and temperatures in the hourly forecast database tracking very close and right at the obs. A large upper level ridge continues to build over the eastern United States into this afternoon. The core of the surface high will lie just to our south allowing for a W-SW flow in the middle levels and the continuation of an unseasonably warm air mass for the late October. In fact, today will likely end up the warmest day in the current warm pattern. The previous forecast went with the upper end of the NBM ensemble MaxT distribution (95th percentile) and see no reason to change from this thinking. Highs for today will likely reach the lower 80s in NE NJ and portions of NYC with middle to upper 70s elsewhere. A few record highs are possible. See climate section below for current record highs for October 21st. Another tranquil night is expected tonight with mostly clear skies. It will not be as cool as previous nights with lows only falling into the upper 40s for interior locations and lower to middle 50s elsewhere. The NYC metro may not fall below the lower 60s.
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&& .SHORT TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... The axis of the upper ridge will slide east on Tuesday and should be offshore Tuesday night. This will allow the surface high to move offshore as well. It will still be unseasonably warm on Tuesday, but highs should be a few degrees lower compared to Monday due to developing onshore flow as the high moves offshore. Highs look to be near 80 degrees in NE NJ with middle to upper 70s elsewhere. Heights will fall Tuesday night with a weak shortwave lifting across the northeast. A more organized shortwave will then pass through the Great Lakes on Wednesday and then lift across the region Wednesday night. A cold front will accompany the shortwave, which likely moves through the region late Wednesday night. The system will have little moisture to work with and any organized forcing looks to pass to our north. For these reasons, have removed PoPs Wednesday night consistent with the latest NBM deterministic. Unseasonably warm temperatures continue Tuesday night and Wednesday. A stronger southerly flow Wednesday will prevent temperatures from rising as much as Monday and Tuesday with highs generally in the lower to middle 70s. Temperatures start to come down Wednesday night, but any noticeable air mass change occurs after the front moves offshore around day break Thursday. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... Following the cold frontal passage from Wednesday night/early Thursday morning, surface high pressure will build in from the Great Lakes region through the day Thursday. This surface high will then remain over the area on Friday. This happens in tandem with a building ridge aloft that centers over us on Friday. A gusty NW is expected on Thursday before they gradually subside into Thursday night when the pressure gradient weakens. Dewpoints will drop on THursday with sunny skies expected. Highs on Thursday will be noticeably cooler compared to Wednesday. Highs will be in the mid-60s to upper-50s on Thursday followed by a cool night in the mid-30s to mid-40s. Some of the areas more susceptible to radiational cooling could drop lower than currently forecast, if the the winds weaken quicker than anticipated. Friday is much the same with highs in the upper-50s to lower-60s. Another frontal system looks to impact us Saturday morning into Saturday afternoon followed by high pressure for the rest of the weekend and to start next week. The upper-level trough associated with this system is expected to deepen over us into Saturday night before moving east into Sunday. We`ll be sandwiched between the deep trough to the east and a building ridge to the west on Sunday before the ridge centers closer to our area on Monday. We`ll still be too dry for rain to occur with this cold front, but do expect building cloud cover ahead of the front on Friday night before cloud cover moves out late on Saturday. This along with a returning southerly flow will lead to a slightly warmer night Friday night with lows in the low-50s to low-40s. A tightening pressure gradient between the low to our northeast and a high to our west on Saturday into early Sunday could lead to breezy NW flow before the pressure gradient relaxes into Sunday night. Given the front comes with a deep trough and persistent NW flow, we can expect colder temperatures to prevail this weekend. Highs on Saturday will be in the mid-60s to low-60s, dropping to the mid-40s to mid-30s Saturday night. Then Sunday afternoon will be noticeably colder with highs in the upper-50s to low-50s followed by near- freezing temperatures Sunday night in the interior and low-40s for the rest of the area. && .AVIATION /15Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/...
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VFR with high pressure in control through the TAF period. SW/W flow 5-10 kts late morning into early afternoon, a late day sea breeze is possible at KJFK. Light N/NW flow or variable flow follows tonight. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... No unscheduled amendments expected. A late day sea breeze possible at KJFK, with winds 200 around 9kt 20Z/21Z. OUTLOOK FOR 12Z TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY... Tuesday through Friday: VFR Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
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&& .MARINE... High pressure and a weak pressure gradient will lead to winds and seas below SCA levels through Tuesday night. A cold front approaches on Wednesday and moves across the waters Wednesday night. Conditions will remain below SCA levels, but wind gusts could approach 20 kt, especially the ocean, Wednesday night. SCA wind gusts are possible on ocean waters Thursday afternoon and evening. Ocean seas may also build to around either 4 or 5 ft during this timeframe. Winds and seas subside Thursday night, and sub small craft advisory conditions are then expected on all waters. && .FIRE WEATHER...
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Dry weather continues this afternoon with Minimum RH will be between 25 and 35% for most of the area leading to conditions conducive for fire development, should ignition occur. Winds will be light, lowering concerns of fire spread overall.
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&& .HYDROLOGY... There are no hydrologic concerns through the upcoming weekend. && .CLIMATE... Record highs are possible today. Here are the current record highs for October 21st. EWR: 84/1947 BDR: 78/1963 NYC: 84/1920 LGA: 82/1947 JFK: 81/1963 ISP: 76/2017* *Also in other years && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...BR/DS NEAR TERM...JE/DS SHORT TERM...DS LONG TERM...BR AVIATION...MET MARINE...BR/DS FIRE WEATHER... HYDROLOGY...BR CLIMATE...