textproduct: Raleigh

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

* Negligible changes.

KEY MESSAGES

As of 205 PM Monday...

1) Minimal rain for for the remainder of today. Areas of dense fog possible tonight/early Tuesday morning.

2) A chance of showers/isolated thunderstorms Wednesday afternoon and evening.

3) Hot and dry weather returns this weekend into next week.

DISCUSSION

As of 205 PM Monday...

KEY MESSAGE 1... Minimal rain for for the remainder of today. Areas of dense fog possible tonight/early Tuesday morning.

The sfc cold front has slid south of central NC this morning, with a surge of cool nely flow pushing south across the southern Piedmont, Sandhills, and southern Coastal Plain. Expect temperatures to continue to drop through the remainder of today and into this evening. Rain chances have come down considerably as the stratiform rain shield remains mostly up into VA. Can't rule out a few Trace to a few hundreds of an inch across the NC/VA border, but overall QPF will be quite limited. Any convection down in SC should remain south of central NC at this point.

The main concern is the potential for areas of dense fog tonight. The most consistent signal has been for areas in the northern Piedmont and Coastal Plain, but some guidance extends this down to RDU or even further south and east. Regardless, those across the NC/VA border should be prepared for possible slower travel for tomorrow's morning commute.

KEY MESSAGE 2... A chance of showers/isolated thunderstorms Wednesday afternoon and evening.

A weak cold front will move through the region Wednesday night. Ahead of the front, a band of showers and possibly a few embedded thunderstorms are expected. Rain is expected to start late Wednesday afternoon and last into Wednesday night. With most of the rain expected around or just after sunset, instability should be weak, which will lessen the risk of stronger or severe storms. However, adequate shear parameters may allow for a few embedded stronger cells. This will especially be true in the Triad where the front will approach first as there will be a better chance for more instability. In terms of rainfall, the latest LREF, which includes the European and Canadian ensembles and the GEFS, is suggesting around 0.25 to 0.5 in of rain over central NC. If any stronger storms develop, a few deterministic models are suggesting there could be a few swaths of up to 1 inch of rain.

KEY MESSAGE 3... Hot and dry weather returns this weekend into next week.

After Wednesday's frontal passage, surface high pressure will build into the region through the end of the week and then shift offshore on Saturday. At the same time, a mid-level ridge will be in place over the region. Once the high shifts off the southeast coast and the ridge is centered over the region, southerly flow will prevail and allow for increasing temperatures. Saturday, central NC will have maximum temperatures in the mid-to-upper 80s, increasing to the upper 80s to low 90s on Sunday and Monday. This pattern is expected to continue into at least mid-week, leading to an extended period of warm to hot temperatures expected.

AVIATION /18Z MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/

As of 200 PM Monday...

An area of MVFR to pockets of IFR have developed from the NC/VA border into the eastern Piedmont and Coastal Plain (affecting RDU and RWI). These should slowly sag southeast and scatter through the late afternoon/evening as very light rain and sprinkles shift across the region. Skies should clear across the northern Piedmont and northern Coastal Plain tonight as surface winds go calm to lightly stirred. This will favor the development of patchy to areas of fog development at INT, GSO, RDU and perhaps RWI (best chances around RDU vicinity). Any fog and very low stratus will quickly scatter/clear shortly after sunrise with light and variable winds through the afternoon.

Outlook: A broken pre-frontal band of showers and storms are possible late Wed evening into the early overnight hours. Low-lvl moisture return may result in low stratus ahead of the cold front, but better chance for flight restrictions will accompany the showers/storms. VFR conditions return behind the front with light northwest gusty conditions extending into Thurs.

RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

None.


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