492
FXUS61 KOKX 031523
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
1023 AM EST Tue Dec 3 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
High pressure building into the Tennessee Valley will be in control
through tonight and early Wednesday. Low pressure moves north of the
area and drags a warm front through Wednesday night, followed by a
pair of cold fronts into Thursday. High pressure builds back in from
the west Friday and into the weekend, sliding offshore Sunday. An
area of low pressure may then approach the region early next week.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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Brisk conditions with winds out of the NW resume today. Temperatures will be similar to Monday with mainly upper 30s to lower 40s under partly sunny skies, with some scattered clouds at times further northwest. Bumped up sky cover a bit with the latest update due to current obs. Towards late in the day and early this evening some of the higher res guidance is suggestive of some moisture at around the 800 mb level streaking in from the WNW downwind of the Great Lakes. Any clouds that survive into the area may produce a few flurries, especially for northern and northeastern portions of the area. The HRRR has been suggestive of this on some of its recent runs. No sensible weather impacts are expected with only a few flakes at most. For tonight expect similar conditions compared to the previous night with lows mainly in the 20s region wide, with a few upper teens draped across the northern tier of the CWA. Dew points will remain primarily in the upper teens to around 20 as dry and brisk conditions will continue to prevail under mainly clear skies.
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&& .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... During Wednesday morning high pressure to the southwest of the area gets further to the east. Towards late morning and the early afternoon a return flow starts to get established, especially further east. This will result in a SW flow picking up during the afternoon, especially for southern coastal sections. Temperatures for the afternoon likely reach close to 50 across far eastern portions of the area, with some colder upper 30s and lower 40s further to the northwest. Clouds will increase quickly during the late morning and afternoon in advance of the next storm system which approaches from the west. The system actually will eventually move north of the area Wednesday night into Thursday morning as the system tracks across the Northern Great Lakes and moves into Southern Canada towards early Thursday morning. A potent mid level shortwave will swing through as a warm front will emanate from the low and moves across Wednesday night. This will provide much of the lift in tandem with a spoke of mid level energy with a potent vort max swinging through. Precipitation breaks out from west to east Wednesday evening / night with mainly snow across northern and northwestern sections, with a wintry mix getting closer to NYC and NE NJ, with mostly rain across south central / southeastern CT, and LI. A few hundredths further west, to as much as a half inch of liquid is expected across eastern most sections towards sunrise Thursday morning. By early Thursday morning a coating to an inch of snow is a possibility for northern and northwestern portions of the area, with mainly wet conditions further south and east. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
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Key Points: * A clipper low will bring rain and snow showers, along with gusty winds, to the area Thursday through early Friday. Light snow accumulations are expected across the interior. * Temperatures run below normal through the weekend, with highs likely not climbing out of the 30s on Friday and Saturday for most. The parent low works through northern New England during the day as an attendant cold front pushes through the local area. The rain and snow showers largely wind down by late Thursday morning. A few showers could linger into late day or early evening, but coverage looks isolated to scattered at best. Perhaps more impactful than the precipitation, colder air and gusty winds develop on the backside of the system. With the region between a 1035 mb high to the west and a deepening 990 mb low to the northeast, these winds likely persist into Friday. Soundings prog deep mixing above 850 mb Thursday, and winds aloft there as high as 50 kt. Closer to the surface, sustained winds likely peak 20 to 25 mph, with gusts up to 40 or 45 mph, mainly Thursday and Thursday evening. Slightly higher gusts are possible along the immediate coast, but as of now, appears shy in strength and coverage to reach advisory criteria. Temperatures likely fall Thursday afternoon as colder air quickly begins to advect in behind the front. Coupled with the blustery conditions, wind chill values may be in the 20s region wide by late day. A few flurries or snow showers are possible even down to the coast late into early evening Thursday as the colder air mass begins to work in, but no additional accumulation is expected. The first push of cold air comes behind the cold front, but there looks to be a secondary on Friday. 850 mb temps fall to -12 to -15C, which should yield highs Friday and Saturday only in the 30s, with overnight lows in the teens and 20s. NW flow on Friday should continue to gust 30 to 35 mph, and will keep wind chills in the 20s much of the day, if not lower. High pressure returns from the west into the weekend and winds lighten, with the high shifting over the Southeast and offshore by Sunday. This should allow a WSW or SW flow to develop and begin a gradual warm up into early next week. Still model differences with northern stream energy passing through the Great Lakes, and any potential interaction with a shortwave swinging through the South. For now, capped PoPs on Monday and thereafter at 50% given the varying solutions.
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&& .AVIATION /15Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
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VFR with NW winds either side of 10 kt. With BKN cigs persisting do not see much in the way of gust potential this afternoon or evening except at KSWF. Wind should stay up into at least part of the evening push, then diminish late this evening and overnight, and become W late tonight into Wed morning. Flow backs SW into early Wed afternoon as speeds begin to quickly increase to 10-15G20kt. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB)TAF Uncertainty... At KEWR direction more likely to be WNW. Otherwise, NW winds should prevail mostly on or just south of 310 mag. OUTLOOK FOR 12Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY... Wednesday: VFR during the day. Chance of MVFR in snow and/or rain showers at night. SW winds G20-25 kt developing by late day. Thursday: Mainly VFR. Chance of a rain and/or snow shower. W-NW winds 15-30G35-40 kt. Friday: VFR. NW winds 15-20G25-35kt. Saturday: VFR. W winds 10-15G20kt. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
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&& .MARINE... A NW flow regimes continues today into tonight. For later this afternoon into a portion of tonight a few gusts get to around 20 kt or thereabouts for a portion of the nearshore and ocean waters. Otherwise sub advisory conditions should prevail through tonight and into a good portion of Wednesday. During Wednesday the winds switch around to more of a SW direction. By the afternoon small craft conditions develop on the ocean waters and potentially for the south shore bays of LI by late in the day. Gale conditions then take shape on the ocean and extreme eastern portions of LI Sound during Wednesday night, with small craft conditions for the majority of the non-ocean waters going over to gales by Thursday morning. The winds will peak Thursday afternoon behind another cold frontal passage. At that time, sustained winds are forecast to be between 30 and 35 knots with gusts up to 40 knots. Seas peak on the ocean Thursday afternoon 12 to 14 feet. Waves across the central Sound likely reach 5 to 7 feet and a few feet higher for the eastern Sound. Conditions lower to Small Craft Advisory level by Friday afternoon and then below SCA level by early Saturday. Sub-SCA conditions then expected through early next week. && .HYDROLOGY... No hydrologic impacts are anticipated through early next week. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 6 PM Wednesday to 6 AM EST Thursday for ANZ331-335-338-340-345. Gale Watch from Thursday morning through late Thursday night for ANZ331-335-338-340-345. Gale Watch from Wednesday evening through late Thursday night for ANZ332-350-353-355. Small Craft Advisory from 1 PM to 6 PM EST Wednesday for ANZ350-353-355. && $$ SYNOPSIS...JE/DR NEAR TERM...JE/JT SHORT TERM...JE LONG TERM...DR AVIATION...BG/DR MARINE...JE/DR HYDROLOGY...JE/DR