Author Topic: [Alert]PBZ issues Area Forecast Discussion (AFD) at Sep 29, 7:55 PM EDT  (Read 26 times)

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PBZ issues Area Forecast Discussion (AFD) at Sep 29, 7:55 PM EDT

779 
FXUS61 KPBZ 292355
AFDPBZ

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Pittsburgh PA
755 PM EDT Sun Sep 29 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
An upper level low will drift northeastward from Kentucky to the
Atlantic coast through early week, keeping unsettled weather and
near to just above normal temperatures. A frontal passage by
Wednesday will bring drier weather and seasonable temperatures
to close out the week.

&&

.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM MONDAY MORNING/...
KEY MESSAGES:

- Mostly light rain continues tonight, primarily south of
  Pittsburgh.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Daytime convection continues to gradually fizzle through the
overnight hours with a loss of instability. This will result in
rain rates dropping off, minimizing additional flooding risks. The
best PoPs overnight near and south of Pittsburgh as the best
convergence shifts to this region. The abundant cloud cover will
help keep diurnal ranges small, with lows some 10 to 15 degrees
above climatology.

&&

.SHORT TERM /6 AM MONDAY MORNING THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/...
KEY MESSAGES:

- Continued rain chances with seasonably warm lows and
  seasonable highs.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

The upper low starts to make some eastward progress on Monday as an
upstream shortwave trough over the northern Plains starts to nudge a
Great Lakes ridge axis eastward, causing the upper low to start to
eject. PoPs will show a north-to-south positive gradient into Monday
night, following the pattern of best moisture and low-level
convergence. Instability gets shunted south of the region per the
HREF, and thus thunder is less likely. The lack of convection will
create a more uniform QPF pattern. Chances of exceeding 0.25" over
the Monday/Monday night period are maximized at 60-70% along the
southeast ridges.

The Tuesday/Tuesday night period will be a transition period.  The
upper low will slowly degrade as it lifts to the northeast,
eventually reaching the Atlantic Coast by 00Z Wednesday as an open
trough.  Meanwhile, the northern stream shortwave will be crossing
the Great Lakes, pushing a cold front in our direction.  The most
likely time for FROPA appears to be Tuesday night, with a slight
delay into Wednesday possible. Showers are most likely Tuesday to
the southeast of Pittsburgh in the path of the upper low, but cannot
be totally ruled out anywhere.  Much of the region can expect a
mostly cloudy sky for a good portion of the day though. PoPs Tuesday
night with the front will be highest north of Pittsburgh, with left
exit region jet dynamics potentially playing a role. Fast movement
overall should keep rain totals in check.

With a few cloud breaks possible, and with the departure of the
upper low, Tuesday highs may tick up a couple degrees as compared to
Monday, with lower but still warmer-than-normal lows at night with
the frontal passage.

&&

.LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
KEY MESSAGES:

- A cold front passage is expected by early Wednesday, bringing
  an end to rain chances.
- An overall drier and less cloudy pattern is expected into next
  weekend.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

The cold front will complete its passage on Wednesday if it has not
already done so by Tuesday night. Behind this front, a more quasi-
zonal flow pattern takes hold through next weekend.  Overall, this
appears to be a fairly dry period as access to southern moisture
remains mostly cut off. Still, some model solutions suggest that a
weak front may provide isolated showers around Friday night.

Temperatures are showing more uncertainty, as 500mb heights over our
region will ultimately depends on upstream developments over the
western CONUS.  Model clusters are showing various ridge/trough
scenarios that could cause highs/lows to stray a bit further from
climatology than the current forecast.  However, given the overall
zonal pattern and until a more clear signal emerges, will keep
temperatures not too far from normal values overall.

&&

.AVIATION /00Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/...
Low confidence forecast on placement of IFR/MVFR ceiling
heights through the TAF period. Low pressure continues to spin
across the Tennessee Valley region. Waves of light rain
rotating around the low will continue to affect airports across
the Upper Ohio Valley region through the TAF period. A wide
range in cig heights were observed this afternoon and evening,
with VFR to LIFR. Airports along and north of an HLG-PIT-LBE
have been mainly IFR, with VFR to the south.

Would expect conditions to deteriorate to IFR for most airports
tonight with low level moisture in place, and additional light
rainfall. Probabilistic guidance indicates a relatively low
probability of this occuring, with deterministic guidance siding
toward the IFR solution. Will maintain the restricted cigs
overnight in the TAF, with some improvement later Monday as
the low begins to shift eastward.

.Outlook...
Restrictions are possible through Tuesday as the upper low
continues to drift eastward, and a cold front crosses the region
late Tuesday. High pressure then returns VFR to the region
through Friday.

&&

.PBZ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
PA...None.
OH...None.
WV...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...CL
NEAR TERM...CL/Milcarek
SHORT TERM...CL
LONG TERM...CL
AVIATION...WM

Source: PBZ issues Area Forecast Discussion (AFD) at Sep 29, 7:55 PM EDT

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