textproduct: Newport/Morehead City
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
Increased PoPs Wednesday afternoon/evening
Increased pre-frontal winds on Thursday
Updated Aviation Discussion
KEY MESSAGES
1) Mostly quiet weather with steadily increasing moisture to start the week. Sea breeze worth monitoring on Wednesday.
2) A cold front will move through on Thursday, bringing gusty winds and increasing chances for showers and thunderstorms, some of which could be strong to severe.
DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE 1..High pressure will expand across the SE today and winds will shift back to the southwest. This will increase moisture and temperatures with highs reaching nearly 80 inland and the low/mid 70s along the coast.
If we're able to overcome the dry layer between 700-850 mb, Wednesday's seabreeze could be active. Machine learning guidance shows low severe probs (10% or less), but decent bulk shear and a LLJ could help produce a few robust gusts within convection. PoPs will continue to increase into the night as a cold front approaches from the west.
KEY MESSAGE 2...A positively tilted upper-level trough will move across the Midwest on Thursday, becoming neutral to negatively tilted over the eastern US Thursday night. At the surface, a cold front will cross into ENC Thursday afternoon but isn't expected to make it to the western edge of the CWA until Thursday evening. A low will develop along this front, but guidance still differs on the speed of the front and the strength and track of the low.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms are expected throughout the day, and there's a non-zero chance for some storms to be strong to severe. Forcing will be lacking in the morning, and depending on the coverage of showers and thunderstorms ahead of the evening front, destabilization may be dampened. So although ample bulk shear will be present throughout the day, there are several factors that could weaken the severe threat.
In addition to showers and storms, Thursday will bring strong SW winds with gusts to approximately 30 mph inland and 35-40 mph along the coast.
A secondary low may develop along the offshore front on Friday, which could support a few showers brushing the coast.
AVIATION /12Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/
Some patchy ground fog is noted this morning mainly relegated to mainland Dare and Hyde Counties. But, recently some ground fog has developed around EWN with the ASOS reporting 4SM vis. Latest webcam images around EWN show a clear runway, so as expected this ground fog has minimal impact to operations. Any leftover ground fog is forecast to quickly dissipate by 12/13Z with VFR conditions then forecast for the rest of the period, as dry air and a well mixed boundary layer should limit any fog or low cloud development today. Could see a diurnal Cu field develop later this morning at about 5 kft but little in the way of impact is forecast from this Cu field.
High pressure has moved offshore bringing increasing S'rly winds to ENC today, becoming gusty at times (around 15-20 kts) primarily behind the seabreeze that develops this afternoon. Winds then become light once again after sunset.
Outlook: Our next notable chance at sub-VFR conditions looks to be around Wednesday/Thursday with the approach of a low pressure system and its associated fronts. This is forecast to bring showers and thunderstorms to ENC and thus potential for reduced ceilings and visibilities.
MARINE
Winds will return to the SW later this morning and increase to 15-20 kt by this afternoon. Marginal SCA winds are possible across the Pamlico and Albemarle Sounds and the coastal waters north of Cape Hatteras from this afternoon through this evening, but the current forecast has few and infrequent 25 kt gusts, so no headlines have been issued at this time. Seas will generally be 3-4 ft.
Outlook: 10-20 kt SW winds will continue through Wednesday with SCA gusts possible Wednesday night as the gradient tightens ahead of an approaching cold front. On Thursday, prefrontal SW winds will increase to 20-30 kt with gusts to 25-40 kt. Winds will veer to the NW Thursday night and seas will peak at 5-10 ft. Winds will decrease to 15-25 kt with gusts to 20-30 kt by Friday morning with good boating conditions returning by the afternoon.
Thunderstorms, some of which could produce strong gusts, will be possible on Thursday as well.
MHX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
NC...None. MARINE...None.
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