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This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.
WHAT HAS CHANGED
Little change in the expectation of weak wedge conditions developing early next week followed by a significant warm up and unsettled weather late in the week. Updated 18z TAF discussion.
KEY MESSAGES
1. Significant temperature drop from Sunday to Monday as wedge conditions develop.
2. Well above normal temperatures and unsettled weather late week.
DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE #1: Significant temperature drop from Sunday to Monday as wedge conditions develop.
Southwesterly surface flow on Sunday will help contribute to well above normal daytime temperatures, particularly with the assistance of northwesterly downsloping at 850 mb. Temperature anomalies of 10- 15 degrees F above normal will not be out of the question, bringing highs in the mid to upper 70s and perhaps a few spots touching 80 degrees. As high pressure shifts over New England on Monday, 850 mb flow becomes southwesterly with westerly flow above. A backdoor front is progged to slide across the area from the north, setting up favorable conditions for weak CAD. While PW will increase slightly to around 0.75-1", it appears most precip will remain to our north outside of a few stray showers possible Monday afternoon across the northern Midlands. Still, cloud cover and northeast cold advection will drop temperatures by 15 to 20 degrees Monday compared to Sunday, with highs ranging from the low to mid 50s northern and western Midlands to low to mid 60s southern Midlands and CSRA. Some improvement is expected on Tuesday with the wedge breaking by Wednesday as heights increase and high pressure shifts offshore. Notably, the NBM temperature interquartile range for Monday and Tuesday remain quite large (8-10 degrees), so overall confidence in the high temperature forecast is lower than normal at this forecast range.
KEY MESSAGE #2: Well above normal temperatures and unsettled weather late week.
Forecast confidence is slightly higher for late in the week as the southeast region settles under broad upper ridging. This will push most of the storm track north of us, though a shortwave may track close to the SC/NC border by Thursday or Friday. With surface high pressure consolidating offshore, temperatures will rebound back to well above normal levels, generally topping out in the upper 70s to low 80s Thursday into the weekend. This is further evident when looking at the NAEFS temperature anomalies, with values above the 90th percentile at all levels from 500mb to 1000mb and values up to the 97th percentile at 850mb by Friday. In addition to the warm temperatures, unsettled weather is possible with moisture advection on deep southwest flow, pushing specific humidity values above the 97th percentile at 850 and 925 mb Friday into Saturday. Instability will also increase, with the potential for 500-1000 J/kg of CAPE developing Thursday through Saturday pointing to the possibility of diurnally-driven showers and thunderstorms. At this time however, the severe threat appears low with a lack of upper support or wind shear.
AVIATION /18Z SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/
IFR/MVFR Ceilings in place as of 18z will continue to gradually improve through the afternoon. Widespread ifr/lifr fog likely late tonight and Sunday morning.
Satellite and observations showing widespread stratus continues across the region early this afternoon. There has been some erosion of the stratus edges in portions of the upstate of SC/GS, along with some thinning and lifting across the central Midlands of SC. This trend will continue through the afternoon hours, with ceilings finally lifting into mvfr by 20-21z, and then eventually breaking up and scattering out to vfr by 00z. VFR conditions will then last several hours into the overnight hours before additional restrictions become possible after 06z tonight. Guidance is still somewhat split on visibility restrictions tonight, but trend has been to show widespread fog development after 06z, with ifr/lifr restrictions becoming likely after that time period. With light winds, plenty of low- level moisture, and clear skies early in the night expected, confidence in the formation of fog is rather high at this time. Have kept with at least 1sm visibility after 07z, with a tempo group to 1/2sm fg and vv002 at this time. Would not be surprised to see conditions lower than that by sunrise on Sunday though at all terminals. Improvement back to vfr should slowly occur Sunday by late morning.
EXTENDED AVIATION OUTLOOK...Nightly low ceiling or visibility restrictions will remain possible over the weekend through midweek.
CAE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
SC...None. GA...None.
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