CLE issues Area Forecast Discussion (AFD) at Jun 2, 4:13 AM EDT048
FXUS61 KCLE 020813
AFDCLE
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Cleveland OH
413 AM EDT Sun Jun 2 2024
.SYNOPSIS...
Weak low pressure moves through the southern Great Lakes today.
High pressure briefly returns tonight and Monday before a warm
front lifts north Monday night. Low pressure will cross the
Upper Great Lakes on Wednesday and push a cold front through the
local area Wednesday night or Thursday morning.
&&
.NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY/...
A shortwave trough axis and associated trough of surface low
pressure are approaching from the west early this morning. The
shortwave will cross this morning and exit to the east by the
mid-late afternoon hours. Modest ascent head of the shortwave
trough axis (largely in the form of isentropic lift/warm air
advection) is supporting fairly numerous light to briefly
moderate rain showers. While the system is on a slow weakening
trend and is battling dry air ahead of it, showers will be
fairly numerous ahead of the shortwave. A drying trend is
expected from west to east as the shortwave shifts east. While
this will lead to an increasingly drier forecast later this
morning into this afternoon from west to east, convergence
associated with the surface trough of low pressure will combine
with modest destabilization of a moist low-level airmass to
support isolated to scattered shower re-development across
Northwest and North Central Ohio this afternoon, with this pop-
up activity spreading into Northeast OH late this afternoon into
this evening. This is enough to keep low POPs going into early
this evening. Maintained a slight thunder mention generally west
of I-77 this afternoon, though thunder potential will be
limited by warming mid-levels and there's no severe wx concern.
Much of the area will see 0.10" or less of additional rainfall
today...though a few more moderate showers could produce highly
localized amounts up to 0.50". There will be some limited
breaks of sun by this afternoon, especially out west, with
highs ranging from the upper 60s across PA and far eastern Ohio
to the upper 70s along the I-75 corridor.
Lingering pop-up showers should fade fairly quickly with the
setting of the sun this evening. Weak ridging surface and aloft
will lead to a quiet forecast tonight and into Monday. With
plentiful low-level moisture and light winds tonight fog
development is a concern. There is some question over how
quickly a broken low cloud deck erodes this evening, though
where skies clear expect at least patchy fog to develop
overnight. More widespread and dense fog is possible...given a
radiation fog setup river valleys will be the greatest concern.
Otherwise, hi-res guidance generally likes the Mid Ohio region
for potentially more widespread / dense fog, with some potential
to leak into Northwest Ohio and interior portions of Northeast
Ohio and Northwest PA if clearing is more widespread. A weak
shortwave moves through Monday afternoon and some hi-res models
toy with popping a few showers along any lingering low-level
convergence zones during the afternoon. Forecast soundings
reveal warm and dry mid- levels on Monday and a majority of
models remain dry. Given the lack of stronger forcing and
arguments against rain held a dry forecast for the day. Lows
tonight will generally settle into the upper 50s and lower 60s.
Highs on Monday will range from the upper 70s to mid 80s.
&&
.SHORT TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/...
High pressure departs to the east coast Monday night with a weak
warm front lifting northeastward across the area on the backside of
the departing high. Southerly flow ensues, with temperatures rising
to the mid to upper 80s by Tuesday afternoon. Moisture content will
be on the rise as well with dew points into the low to mid 60s on
Tuesday. Some modest uncapped instability should develop Tuesday
afternoon in response to increasing surface T/Td, and some models
have convection developing to our west (i.e. Indiana) in advance of
a shortwave trough lifting northeast across the state. This is a low
predictability situation though because there is large spread in
model guidance prediction of the shortwave trough evolution, which
makes it uncertain when and where convection develops during the
afternoon. Additionally, shear is weak, and MLCIN develops during
the evening/overnight so even if convection develops out west,
there's no guarantee it continues eastward into our forecast area.
For now, have gradually increasing low PoPs from west to east
(generally in the 20-40% range) to account for this potential.
Meanwhile an upper-level negatively-tilted trough builds in from the
west, with the trough axis extending southeastward to just west of
the Great Lakes region Wednesday morning. Southerly flow continues
to build the moisture within the warm sector, with dew points likely
into the mid to upper 60s. As this trough approaches, this should
contribute to moderate instability and convection developing within
the warm sector during the afternoon/evening hours across the
forecast area. Confidence is high in the occurrence of showers and
thunderstorms areawide, so continued to gradually increased PoPs to
80-90%, primarily targeted towards a couple hours of showers and
storms during the afternoon/evening hours. Most model guidance have
25-40 knots of mid-level southwesterly flow, which should contribute
to a low-end severe weather threat.
&&
.LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
The upper-level low builds into the Great Lakes region on Thursday,
remaining there through Saturday. The actual evolution of the upper-
level has some spread but the overall trend and pattern of the
forecast is fairly consistent with cooler than normal temperatures
(talking highs around 70) and showery pattern. It's difficult to
pinpoint when exactly are the best chances for showers but that will
become more apparent as we get closer. GFS/CMC are cooler and more
showers, while the ECMWF has the low centered a bit farther north
with less precipitation.
&&
.AVIATION /06Z Sunday THROUGH Thursday/...
Rain showers ahead of a weak area of low pressure are spreading
across the area from west to east early this morning. VFR ahead
of the rain. Brief MVFR vsby is possible with more moderate rain
showers through this morning though expect VFR vsby to be most
common overall. This more widespread batch of light to briefly
moderate showers will exit east by late morning or early
afternoon. Isolated pop up showers are expected this afternoon,
especially across Northwest and North Central Ohio. The risk
for thunder is very low overall with just a slight chance for
an isolated storm from CLE and CAK points west this afternoon.
More widespread restrictions will come from ceilings. Widespread
IFR to low MVFR ceilings are in place upstream and have already
reached TOL. Expect lower ceilings to gradually spread east
through this morning, though a drier low-level air mass in
place ahead of the rain to the east and a downsloping south-
southeast flow makes IFR potential more uncertain the farther
east one goes. Maintained a period of IFR for at least a few
hours this morning at TOL, FDY and MFD. Can't rule it out at
CAK, YNG, and perhaps CLE, though confidence is lower and
ultimately kept them MVFR with this cycle. Ceilings should rise
slightly this afternoon with a bit of heating, though we may
hang on to MVFR at most sites. While we try to scatter out the
stratus this evening fog/mist may quickly replace it tonight.
Winds will be out of the south at 6 to 14 knots through Sunday,
becoming light and variable Sunday night.
Outlook...Thunderstorms and associated non-VFR possible at
times Tuesday through Thursday.
&&
.MARINE...
A weak low moving east across Lake Erie has resulted in brief 15-20
knot winds in the western basin early this morning, though this
should rapidly taper off though as this low dissipates and fills in,
being replaces by a high pressure ridge by tonight. Afternoon lake
breeze develops on Monday, with some locally enhanced onshore flow
likely in the immediate nearshore, especially in the western basin
with east to northeast flow. Southerly flow prevails on Tuesday and
Wednesday, with speeds possibly approaching 15-20 knots during the
day Wednesday before a cold front crosses the lake Wednesday
evening/night. West to southwest flow likely to develop behind the
front with periods of 15-20 knots possible. Some small craft
advisory and beach hazard statements may be needed at some points
Wednesday night onward.
&&
.CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OH...None.
PA...None.
NY...None.
MARINE...None.
&&
$$
SYNOPSIS...Sullivan
NEAR TERM...Sullivan
SHORT TERM...Saunders
LONG TERM...Saunders
AVIATION...Sullivan
MARINE...Saunders
Source:
CLE issues Area Forecast Discussion (AFD) at Jun 2, 4:13 AM EDT---------------
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