Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Jacksonville, FL

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698
FXUS62 KJAX 160007
AFDJAX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Jacksonville FL
807 PM EDT Mon Jul 15 2024

...New AVIATION...

.SYNOPSIS...
Issued at 203 PM EDT Mon Jul 15 2024

Afternoon surface analysis depicts the axis of Atlantic high
pressure (1024 millibars) extending its axis across the FL
peninsula and into the southeastern Gulf of Mexico.
Aloft...ridging was centered off FL`s Atlantic coast, or just
north of the northwestern Bahamas, while troughing was progressing
eastward across the eastern Great Lakes, Ohio and Tennessee
Valleys. Meanwhile, a leftover Mesoscale Convective Vortex (MCV)
from widespread thunderstorm activity that occurred last evening
along the Interstate 4 corridor in central FL was spinning over
the Nature Coast, and this feature was activating scattered
convection along the Gulf coast sea breeze along the I-75 corridor
as the U.S. Highway 84 corridor across inland southeast GA,
especially between Waycross and Jesup. Isolated convection was
also developing early this afternoon along other mesoscale
boundaries such as the St. Johns River breeze. Latest GOES-East
derived Total Precipitable Water imagery indicates that deep
moisture remains in place throughout our region, with PWATS in the
1.9 - 2.2 inch range. Outside of thunderstorm activity, temperatures
at 18Z have soared to the low and mid 90s away from the immediate
coast, with dewpoints in the low to mid 70s creating heat index
values that generally ranged from the upper 90s to around Heat
Advisory criteria (108 degrees).

&&

.NEAR TERM...
Issued at 203 PM EDT Mon Jul 15 2024

For the latest NE FL and SE GA Daily Key Messages please visit:
https://www.weather.gov/media/jax/briefings/nws-jax-briefing.pdf

The presence of deep tropical moisture and the aforementioned MCV
feature will trigger scattered to numerous thunderstorms this
afternoon. Southwesterly low level flow will tend to slow the
inland progress of the Atlantic sea breeze this afternoon, setting
up a collision of outflow boundaries and eventually the Atlantic
and Gulf coast sea breezes for locations between U.S. Highway 301
and Interstate 95 during the late afternoon. Storms may pulse as
mesoscale boundaries collide, with stronger activity being capable of
producing downburst winds of 40-50 mph, frequent lightning
strikes, and locally heavy downpours. Steering flow will remain
light, resulting in slow moving storms that could result in
localized flooding, especially if activity moves slowly or
back-builds over urban or normally flood prone locations. Outflow
boundaries will also migrate northward across inland southeast GA
this afternoon, where convection may linger past sunset tonight.

Debris cloudiness from this afternoon and evening`s convection
will gradually thin out overnight, with lows mostly falling to the
mid 70s inland, ranging to around 80 at coastal locations.

&&

.SHORT TERM...
(Tuesday through Wednesday night)
Issued at 203 PM EDT Mon Jul 15 2024

The region will be between high pressure to the east, and troughing
to the northwest this period. This pattern will yield a prevailing
southwest flow. This flow will keep the east coast sea breeze pinned
close to shore through much of the afternoons. Convection will
initiate Tuesday and Wednesday early afternoon inland on the Gulf
sea breeze. This activity will then spread inland through the
afternoons, then interact with the east coast sea breeze near the
I95 corridor. Convection will dissipate during the evening hours
with loss of diurnal heating.

Temperatures will be above normal this period.

&&

.LONG TERM...
(Thursday through next Monday)
Issued at 203 PM EDT Mon Jul 15 2024

Early this period high pressure ridge will be centered to the east,
with  troughing to the northwest. This pattern will continue the
prevailing flow from the southwest, with storms initiating early in
the afternoon well inland on the Gulf sea breeze, then spreading
across area through the afternoon hours, with a collision with east
coast breeze around I95 mid to late afternoon. Convection will
dissipate each afternoon with loss of diurnal heating. Highs through
Friday will remain above normal.

The high will build more toward the east northeast over the weekend
into early next week. With the change in pattern, the flow will
transition from the south on Saturday to from the southeast Sunday
and Monday. With the flow more from the south then southeast, the
east coast sea breeze will active earlier in the afternoons, with
this activity pushing inland during the afternoons. So by Monday,
the mid to late afternoons over eastern zones will be largely dry.
Temperatures will be closer to seasonal levels from Saturday
through Monday.

&&

.AVIATION...
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 751 PM EDT Mon Jul 15 2024

After the thunderstorms that occurred early this afternoon and
early evening, some stratiform rainfall is occuring mainly across
SE GA and NE FL with some terminals getting light rainfall in the
wake of convection. Otherwise, the light rain will dissipate
gradually during the late evening. Otherwise some steady VFR
conditions through 18z Tuesday. Most of the afternoon and early
evening Tuesday will have mainly VFR candidness outside of
convective influences. Terminals Tuesday will have similar setup
as today with storms and thunderstorms possible between 19z and
23, with little sooner start at KGNV where convection may initiate
as early as 16z as storm move into the I-75 corridor. Concerns
with convection will be downburst/outflow winds and occasional
visibility restriction due to downpours. Light southwest winds
prevail at inland sites through the day. The easterly (Atlantic)
sea breeze around 6-10 kts will push into the KSSI/KSGJ/KCRG
terminals early as afternoon but will stall around I-95.

&&

.MARINE...
Issued at 203 PM EDT Mon Jul 15 2024

The axis of Atlantic high pressure will stretch across the Florida
peninsula through midweek, keeping a prevailing southerly wind
flow in place across our local waters. A few strong thunderstorms
will be possible late this afternoon and early this evening,
mainly over the near shore waters, with stronger storms being
capable of producing briefly strong wind gusts, heavy downpours,
and frequent lightning strikes. Outside of thunderstorm activity,
southerly winds will surge this evening before shifting to
southwesterly and weakening after midnight. A similar weather
pattern will prevail on Tuesday, followed by Atlantic high
pressure sinking southward later this week as a frontal boundary
enters the southeastern states. Seas of 3-5 feet will prevail both
near shore and offshore through Tuesday night. Mainly afternoon
and evening thunderstorms will increase in coverage throughout our
local waters later this week as this boundary stalls to the
northwest of our local waters. Seas will diminish to 2-4 feet
throughout our local waters towards midweek.

Rip Currents: A persistent east-southeasterly ocean swell will
combine with breezy onshore winds during the afternoon hours to
create a moderate rip current risk at all area beaches through at
least midweek.

&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
AMG  97  76  95  75 /  40  20  60  20
SSI  94  80  92  79 /  60  30  50  40
JAX  97  75  95  76 /  80  30  70  30
SGJ  94  77  94  77 /  80  30  70  30
GNV  95  74  94  73 /  60  20  80  20
OCF  93  74  95  75 /  60  20  90  30

&&

.JAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
FL...None.
GA...None.
AM...None.
&&

$$