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FXUS61 KOKX 192020
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
320 PM EST Wed Feb 19 2025

.SYNOPSIS...
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Deepening low pressure near the southeast will move off the coast tonight and track well south and east of the area Thursday through Thursday night. Thereafter, sprawling high pressure over the mid section of the country builds in through the weekend, remaining in control through Monday. A weak low pressure system passes to our north on Tuesday. Weak high pressure then builds back on Wednesday.
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&& .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM THURSDAY MORNING/...
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A piece of high pressure originating from a larger high east of the Rockies will remain in place tonight as low pressure deepens along the southeast coast. High clouds to the north of the low as well as ahead of the large closed upper low will continue to stream overhead this evening. The thicker high clouds may briefly sag south of the area or remain closer to the coast for much of the the night. Winds should also be much lighter compared to the last few nights as the pressure gradient is much lighter. Some outlying areas may even decouple for a time late tonight. Low temperatures are a bit of a challenge due to the potential of the higher clouds ending up a bit thicker, preventing the most ideal radiational cooling conditions. Low temperatures are coldest inland where less clouds are expected and will generally be around 10 degrees. Elsewhere, lows look to range from the middle to upper teens.
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&& .SHORT TERM /6 AM THURSDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/...
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There has been very little change to the expected conditions for Thursday as the model guidance has continued to show the deepening low pressure tracking well south and east of the region. Several of the outlier members which were showing the northern edge of the precip shield scraping the eastern part of Long Island have also backed off, keeping any measurable precip offshore. Have trended the forecast in this direction with much of the daytime hours dry. The aforementioned closed upper low will slide across the region late Thursday afternoon into Thursday night. The upper low then pushes offshore towards early Friday morning. Energy associated with the upper low may be enough to develop isolated to scattered snow showers late in the afternoon and evening. The location of these is somewhat uncertain and can be difficult to predict under deep upper lows. However, the latest high res modeling is signaling the southern half of the area with a slightly higher probability for snow showers. The sub cloud layer remains dry, but any localized enhancement could put down a light accumulation in the evening. Have kept probabilities low for now given the uncertainty, but a coating to a few tenths of accumulation cannot be ruled out. It is also possible that some of this activity ends up being flurries. Any snow showers/flurries push offshore and diminish overnight with cold and blustery conditions returning. NW winds will likely gust 25-30 mph by day break Friday morning. Daytime highs on Thursday will range from the mid 20s inland to around 30 at the coast. Lows Thursday night will be in the upper teens to lower 20s. Wind chills to start the day Friday will likely be in the single digits to around 10 degrees. Sprawling high pressure across the mid section of the country builds into the area on Friday. NW winds will likely continue gusting 25 to 30 mph through the day with temperatures remaining below normal in the upper 20s to lower 30s. The high pressure settles across the Middle Atlantic and Southeast Friday night with any gusts diminishing. Winds look light under a mostly clear sky condition with temperatures mainly in the teens.
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&& .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
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The flow aloft during this weekend will be zonal for the most part although models indicate weak troughing Saturday night into Sunday. Models have trended a little flatter with this trough since 24 hours ago along with less moisture. A dry forecast has therefore been maintained for both Saturday and Sunday. Highs 35-40 for Saturday, then seasonable on Sunday in the lower 40s. Differences exist among the global models regarding the timing of upper and surface features from Monday night through Wednesday. There is however general agreement that a surface low shifting east from the vicinity of the northern Great Lakes Region passes well to our north at some point on Tuesday. An attendant warm front and cold front along with shortwaves aloft provide the lift for low chances of precip from Monday night through Tuesday night. Kept precip types simple with rain and/or snow. Coastal areas would see the precip all in the form of rain with the wintry mix potential inland. Weak ridging then follows for Wednesday with dry weather anticipated along with highs in the middle to upper 40s.
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&& .AVIATION /21Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... Low pressure passes well south and east of the area Thursday. An upper level low will cross the area Thursday evening and may bring scattered snow showers to the terminals. VFR through most of the TAF period as a mid level deck overspreads the region and lowers. Prob30 for light snow showers after 22z Thu. MVFR possible. WNW winds mostly left of 310 magnetic at 10-15 kt with gusts to around 20 kt will begin to diminish this evening. Winds then become NW-N tonight at less than 10 kt and around 10 kt on Thursday. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... No unscheduled amendments are expected. .OUTLOOK FOR 18Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY... 18Z Thursday: Chance MVFR or lower in light snow mainly for the terminals E of the NYC metros During the evening hours, otherwise VFR. NW winds G20-25kt at night. Friday: VFR. NW winds G20-25 kt. Saturday and Sunday: VFR. Monday...Mainly VFR...slight chance of MVFR in showers. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90 && .MARINE...
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Winds will continue to subside on the waters through this evening. Conditions will then remain below SCA levels through Thursday. SCA conditions will then return Thursday night and continue through Friday as high pressure builds behind a departing offshore low pressure. Have issued a new SCA from 6pm Thursday through 6pm Friday. SCA conditions may linger on the ocean Friday night, but winds and seas should be subsiding through the night. Sub advisory conditions then prevail through the upcoming weekend with the pressure gradient a little weaker as high pressure shifts off the Carolina coast. A WSW flow through much of the weekend becomes southerly during Monday, but winds and seas should remain below advisory thresholds.
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&& .HYDROLOGY...
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No hydrologic impacts are expected through the middle of next week.
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&& .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 6 PM Thursday to 6 PM EST Friday for ANZ331-332-335-338-340-345-350-353-355.
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&& $$ SYNOPSIS...JC/DS NEAR TERM...DS SHORT TERM...DS LONG TERM...JC AVIATION...IRD MARINE...JC/DS HYDROLOGY...JC/DS