030
FXUS61 KOKX 300219
AFDOKX
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
1019 PM EDT Tue Oct 29 2024
.SYNOPSIS...
-- Changed Discussion --
A warm front will lift across the area late tonight. This will
then place the area between high pressure offshore and an
approaching cold front from the west. The cold front nears the
area Thursday night and moves through on Friday. High pressure
returns for the weekend. Another frontal boundary may be in the
vicinity early next week.-- End Changed Discussion --
&&
.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM WEDNESDAY MORNING/...
-- Changed Discussion --
Updated for current conditions. Showers ahead of a warm front
continue to track across southeastern Connecticut and into the
twin forks of Long Island at 02Z.
A warm front will lift across the area overnight, with sprinkles
and/or a shower with the primary forcing being low-level warm
advection. The better forcing will reside to the north across
update NY and central/northern New England. Some of this may
clip southeast CT with a better chance for seeing some rain.
That being the case, even those locations should be under a
tenth of an inch of rainfall with a few hundredths possible
elsewhere. The warm front clears far eastern LI and SE CT before
daybreak. S-SE winds the first half of the night may gusts up
to 20 kt along the coast, associated with a southerly low-level
jet preceding the warm front. Winds will then diminish and
become SW behind the warm front. Patchy fog will be a
possibility, especially inland as winds diminish and clear the
second half of the night.
For lows tonight, with an anomalously warm airmass moving into
the region from the SW, cloud cover, and a southerly flow, went
above MOS and NBM deterministic by a few degrees. Lows are
forecast to range from around 50 well north and west of NYC, to
the mid 50s at the coast. This about 10 degrees above normal.-- End Changed Discussion --
&&
.SHORT TERM /6 AM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH THURSDAY/...
Anomalously warm heights (+2SD) associated with an upper high
building along the eastern seaboard on Wednesday and then
offshore on Thursday, will allow a deep-layered SW flow to bring
potential record warmth into the area. The warmest day will
come on Thursday as the subsidence inversion weakens across the
area, thus allow deeper mixing. 85h temps get to around 14C.
Highs are forecast to generally be in the 70s for Wednesday with
the possible exception of the immediate south shore of LI and
the forks region. For Thursday, leaned toward the NBM 90th
percentile, although box and whisker plots are showing small
difference between this, the deterministic and median (50th).
Temperatures by Thursday will be about 15 to 20 degrees above
normal. It remains dry during this time.
&&
.LONG TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/...
Mainly dry conditions will continue across the Tri-State to
start November.
Upper ridging will continue to shift to the southeast coast
Thursday night in response to an approaching northern stream
shortwave. The shortwave then quickly passes across the
northeast on Friday, sending a cold front through the area. The
modeling is showing good overall agreement that the majority of
the energy and lift with the shortwave passes to our north,
which will limit potential for showers with the front. The most
likely timing for the cold front passage appears to be as early
as late Friday morning NW of NYC and early afternoon elsewhere.
There is still a chance for a shower with the front, but no
significant rainfall is expected and it is possible many areas
remain dry. Have continued to cap PoPs at 30-40 percent. The
slower timing of the front will likely lead to another
unseasonably warm day on Friday. The model consensus has trended
up with low to mid 70s now forecast. This is supported by
westerly flow ahead of the front and then modest downsloping
immediately behind the front Friday afternoon.
Much drier and cooler air moves in for Friday night as high
pressure builds over the region, remaining in control for the
upcoming weekend. Dry and seasonable conditions are forecast
with highs reaching the upper 50s Saturday and upper 50s to
around 60 on Sunday. Good radiational cooling conditions are
possible Saturday night with mostly clear skies and light winds.
This could lead to temperatures falling close to freezing
inland and the upper 30s to low 40s elsewhere.
The large scale pattern for early next week will be similar to
what has been occurring over the last few weeks. Large upper
level ridging will build along the eastern seaboard with a deep
trough out west. Temperatures will trend back above normal early
next week. There will likely be a frontal boundary in the
vicinity as well, but latest trends are indicating this may end
up to our north with the ridging aloft. Will hold onto a slight
chance PoP, similar to the NBM deterministic, since it is still
about a week out.
&&
.AVIATION /02Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
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A warm front passes through the region into late tonight,
followed by high pressure, remaining for Wednesday.
Mostly VFR, with MVFR ceilings east of the NYC terminals, as
light showers continue. Conditions improve to VFR late tonight,
after 04Z west and 08Z east.
SE winds 10-15kt. Winds become lighter and shift to the south
then southwest through 07Z, as the warm front passes through
the terminals. Winds remain SW Wednesday with occasional gusts
to around 15kt during the afternoon.
...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB)TAF Uncertainty...
Low chance of amendments for MVFR ceilings through 05Z.
Occasional gusts to around 15kt possible Wednesday afternoon.
OUTLOOK FOR 00Z THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY...
Wednesday night: VFR
Thursday: VFR. SW wind gusts 15-20 kt.
Friday: Mainly FR. Chance of MVFR and showers. W wind gusts
around 25kt, bcmg NW and diminishing at night.
Saturday and Sunday: VFR.
Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts,
can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90-- End Changed Discussion --
&&
.MARINE...
Updated the timing of showers through the forecast waters this
evening into late tonight. Winds and seas remain unchanged.
A strengthening southerly flow through this evening will allow
for gusts to around 25 kt with seas building to 3 to 6 ft on the
ocean waters. Elsewhere, marginal SCA gusts are possible for a
few hours this evening. Winds and seas subside below SCA
overnight into Wednesday morning. SW winds during this time will
begin to ramp back up on Thursday ahead of an approaching cold
front. SCA conditions are likely Thursday night into Friday,
especially on the ocean. Winds weaken and seas subside Friday
night as high pressure builds over the northeast. This will lead
to below SCA conditions for the upcoming weekend.
&&
.FIRE WEATHER...
The next couple of days expect minimum RH values 45 to 55
percent with SW winds 10 to 15 mph. There is the potential for
SW gusts 15-20 mph on Thursday.
A Special Weather Statement has been issued for southern
Connecticut to highlight existing fires and the continued risk
of spread Wednesday.
&&
.HYDROLOGY...
There are no hydrologic concerns through early next week.
&&
.CLIMATE...
Record high temperatures are possible on Thursday. Here are the
current records for October 31st.
EWR: 82/1946
BDR: 75/2004
NYC: 81/1946
LGA: 81/1946
JFK: 75/1950
ISP: 73/2004
&&
.OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
CT...None.
NY...None.
NJ...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 11 AM EDT Wednesday for ANZ350-353.
Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM EDT Wednesday for ANZ355.
&&
$$
SYNOPSIS...DS/DW
NEAR TERM...DS/MET/DW
SHORT TERM...DW
LONG TERM...DS
AVIATION...MET
MARINE...DS/MET/DW
FIRE WEATHER...
HYDROLOGY...DS/DW
CLIMATE...