Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Blacksburg, VA
Issued by NWS Blacksburg, VA
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293 FXUS61 KRNK 142315 AFDRNK Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Blacksburg VA 715 PM EDT Sun Jul 14 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Well above normal to near record warm temperatures will be found across the region through Tuesday. A front approaches midweek with the best chance for showers and storms. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 700 PM EDT Sunday... 1. High confidence for well above normal temperatures through the period with near record high minimum temperatures possible Monday morning at Roanoke. 2. Mainly dry but could see some gusty showers across the Greenbrier Valley early this evening. Watching a broken line of showers/storms around Charleston, WV. DCAPEs ahead of this line are 1000-1500 J/kg and seeing base velocity of 40kts with some of the cells, but ground obs mainly showing gusts around 35-40 mph. Models are not handling this line well, but some show a weakening trend as it moves to the Greenbrier Valley area by 8-9pm. Could see some gusty showers, so will keep an eye on that. Further east just isolated showers across the Piedmont. Should be dry areawide by late evening, with patchy fog possible in the mountain valleys toward morning, and moreso if showers make it to the SE WV mountains. Previous discussion... Much of the eastern CONUS was in full sunshine today, with some daytime cumulus forming over our Blue Ridge. Otherwise, it was hot, with much of the area in the upper 80s to low/mid 90s. Organized convection was ongoing over the Midwest, in response to mid level energy near Chicago. A few isolated showers and a rumble of thunder may be possible this afternoon and early evening along our higher terrain initially, and may drift SE towards the Piedmont before weakening. Deep westerly flow was keeping plenty of dry air in our vicinity, as seen on mid level water vapor and BUFKIT. This, along with moist adiabatic profiles and weak capping have led to low instability and suggest any convection that forms will be brief and have a hard time reaching glaciation level to produce lightning. Brief heavy rain will continue to be a localized concern. Tonight, lows will be in the 60s to low 70s. 850mb temperatures remain around 20-21C over the southern Appalachians through Monday, and along with westerly downsloping winds and at least partly sunny skies, will result in high temperatures a couple degrees warmer than today. That will put Roanoke and parts of the Piedmont of VA and NC around 100F for highs, with heat index values just a degree or 2 higher. GEFS probability of heat index over 105F is very spotty and under 15% for most of the Mid Atlantic, therefore a heat advisory is not needed at this time. A couple sites come with a degree or two for record high minimums. Record highs will be harder to break. See Climate section below. Tomorrow, a weak ripple in the flow aloft will arrive for the afternoon, and should create scattered convection in the vicinity of lee troughing. Instability looks slightly higher tomorrow than today, and forecast soundings show plenty of dry air in the lower levels for downbursts. Shear remains weak, with less than 10 kts up through 15 kft/500mb. Isolated instances of damaging winds along with heavy rain will be possible for a few hours. SPC only has us in general thunder, likely because we will have debris clouds in the morning which will lower available instability. && .SHORT TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... As of 1215 PM EDT Sunday... Key Points: 1. Hot on Tuesday with Heat Index values potentially surpassing 105F across portions of the Piedmont. 2. Cold front arrives Wednesday into Wednesday night providing for abundant showers and storms with locally heavy rainfall possible. A look at the 14 July 00Z NCEP Ensemble Mean 500 mb Geopotential heights shows a persistent latitudinal upper ridge axis across the southern half of the US. A shortwave trough over the Upper Mississippi Valley on Tuesday is expected to shift east into the Great Lakes and Lower Ohio Valley by Wednesday. On Tuesday, a cold front will extend from the eastern Great Lakes region southwest into the mid-Mississippi River region and then into central Kansas. By Wednesday, this front will pass through our region, and curve into the Tennessee and farther west into the Arklatex area. Output from the 14 July 00Z Ensemble Situational Awareness Table shows 850mb temperatures around +22C for much of the area on Tuesday. This corresponds to the entire area being within the 97.5+ percentile of the 30-year climatology with over half within the 99+ percentile. On Wednesday, numbers dip a little, with the region averaging about +19C to +21C in the southeast. Areas at or a little above +20C fall within the 90 to 97.5 percentile range. Precipitable Water (PW) on Tuesday are expected to average around 1.50 to 1.75 inches. For Wednesday, higher values in the 1.75 to 2.00 inch range are expected. Those locations that do touch 2.00 inches will reach the low end of the 90 to 97.5 percentile of the 30-year climatology. The above weather pattern will mean a continuation of well above normal temperatures on Tuesday. Our forecast will continue with some locations across the Piedmont touching the century mark for high temperatures and portions of the NC/VA Piedmont potentially seeing Heat Index values surpass 105F. With the approach of a cold front, however not the actual arrival, shower and thunderstorm chances will increase a little bit as compared to Monday. Come Wednesday into Wednesday night, shower and storms chances notably increase with the arrival of a cold front. More cloud cover and better chances of precipitation will allow for cooler temperatures as compared to Tuesday. However, values will still be above normal. With PW values on the high end of normal, any shower or thunderstorm that develops will have the potential of producing some locally heavy rainfall. Confidence in the above weather scenario is high. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 1215 PM EDT Sunday... Key Points: 1. A potentially wavering frontal boundary over or just south of the area will keep showers/storms in the forecast each day. 2. Temperatures will trend to readings around or slightly below normal for this time of year. A look at the 14 July 00Z NCEP Ensemble Mean 500 mb Geopotential heights shows the western extent southern US ridge axis buckling north across the Rockies on Thursday. In response, a Great Lakes/Ohio Valley trough slows its eastward momentum heading into Friday. Over the weekend, the upper synoptic pattern shows little signs of change, keeping our region on the southeast side of an upper trough with southwest aloft over the region. At the surface, Thursday into Friday, the front that crossed the region on Wednesday, will take up residency just south of the area as high pressure builds into the Great Lakes region. Saturday into Sunday, the ensemble averaging washed out any indications of a cold front to the south while maintain some suggestion of high pressure to our north. A look at various deterministic guidance and forecast WPC frontal positions, suggest the front to the south will either remain just to our south or inch back north across our region. Output from the 14 July 00z Ensemble Situational Awareness Table shows 850mb temperatures on Thursday averaging +16C to +18C over the region. For Friday, these numbers cool slightly to an average of +16c. For Saturday, numbers creep a little higher to around +17C to +18C with similar numbers for Sunday. PW values on Thursday will fall along and nw-se gradient across the region with values slightly over 1.25 inches in southeast West Virginia to values just shy of 2.00 inches over Southside Virginia. This configuration and range hold nearly steady through Sunday. With a cold front slow to head south of the region, and then potentially stalling to our south and/or heading back north across the region, the latter half of the week and the weekend will have daily chances of showers and storms. The highest probabilities will continue to be advertised across the southern half of the region. As the upper level flow trends into a stagnant pattern with ridging in the west, and troughing in the east confidence is moderate in this forecast from the synoptic scale. However, at the local level, confidence is more on the low side regarding where the best chances will be given the notable uncertainty in the daily position of the front. Although, in general terms, southern sections should have greater chances than northern sections. Temperatures are expected to take a downward trend with values on Friday and Saturday potentially slightly below normal, only to be closer to normal again by Sunday. && .AVIATION /23Z SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 710 PM EDT Sunday... VFR conditions will persist through the TAF period. Cannot rule out a shower near LWB but leaning toward a weakening trend to the line moving across CRW at 23z. Will amend as necessary. Fog may be an issue at LWB late tonight, but was only there for one observation this morning. Rain at/near LWB could help fog develop later so backed off on dense fog from earlier and tempo IFR 2sm. Just isolated coverage of showers/storms Monday so not enough to mention in the tafs. AVIATION OUTLOOK... Better chance SHRA/TSRA chances arrive Wednesday along with potential sub-VFR, with shower/storm chances lingering into Friday as the front slows/stalls. && .CLIMATE... As of 215 PM EDT Sunday... Temperatures may come close to record high temperatures and/or record maximum low temperatures Monday, July 15, and Tuesday, July 16. Below you will find a table that lists these values for different locations in our region and the years those records were set. ************* RECORDS FOR July 15 ************* +=============================================+ | LOCATION | RECORD HIGH | RECORD MAX LOW | | Blacksburg | 99 in 1954 | 72 in 1954 | | Bluefield | 91 in 1951 | 72 in 1942 | | Danville | 104 in 1936 | 79 in 1922 | | Lynchburg | 101 in 1936 | 77 in 1988 | | Roanoke | 103 in 1936 | 74 in 1995 | +=============================================+ ************* RECORDS FOR July 16 ************* +=============================================+ | LOCATION | RECORD HIGH | RECORD MAX LOW | | Blacksburg | 93 in 1983 | 70 in 2020 | | Bluefield | 96 in 1988 | 71 in 1980 | | Danville | 102 in 1934 | 77 in 1920 | | Lynchburg | 103 in 1934 | 76 in 1937 | | Roanoke | 100 in 1988 | 74 in 2020 | +=============================================+ && .RNK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VA...None. NC...None. WV...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...SH/WP NEAR TERM...SH/WP SHORT TERM...DS LONG TERM...DS AVIATION...SH/WP CLIMATE...DS