Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH

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593
FXUS61 KCLE 111025
AFDCLE

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Cleveland OH
625 AM EDT Thu Jul 11 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A trough will linger near Lake Erie this morning before high
pressure builds into the southern Great Lakes this afternoon and
persists through tonight. A weak trough will cross the region
Friday into Friday night followed by high pressure returning
Saturday. A warm front will approaching from the west Sunday.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/...
6:30 AM Update...

Increased PoPs over NE Ohio and NW PA over the next few hours to
account for the lingering surface trough and light lake
enhanced showers. Otherwise, the forecast remains on track.

Original Discussion...

Light showers and drizzle continue early this morning from north
central Ohio into NE Ohio and NW PA. They are not amounting to much
more than a trace to up to a tenth of an inch, but they are keeping
things wet with a muggy feel to the air. The light rain is being
driven by wraparound moisture on the backside of the remnant surface
low from Beryl, currently centered near Lake Ontario, a weak surface
trough near the south shore of Lake Erie, and weak lake induced
instability given an 8-10 C lake to 850 mb delta T and
northwesterly boundary layer flow. The old surface low will
continue to fill and move across New England today allowing
surface high pressure centered over the western Great Lakes this
morning to build over the southern Great Lakes this afternoon
and tonight. This will bring a gradual end to the showers this
morning along with clearing skies from west to east, but
lingering moisture and the surface trough will make it a very
slow process in far NE Ohio and NW PA, so held onto slight
chance to chance PoPs into the early afternoon. Even NE Ohio and
NW PA should see sunshine by late afternoon as the drier air
finally wins out. The clearing skies and lower dew points will
allow for a cooler night tonight, so the air conditioners can
get a break.

For Friday, a stubborn mid/upper closed low over the Upper
Mississippi Valley will open up into more of a shortwave trough and
finally swing into the central Great Lakes, with an associated
surface trough moving into western Ohio. Weak warm air advection
ahead of this feature combined with mid/upper subtropical ridging
over the Mid Atlantic coast building slightly westward will bring a
quick return to warmer and more humid conditions Friday. Strong
boundary layer heating of the increasingly moist low-level airmass
will generate weak to moderate instability (500-1000 joules of
MLCAPE), so expect a few widely scattered showers and thunderstorms
to develop in NW and north central Ohio near the surface trough,
especially from mid morning into the afternoon. Shear will be very
weak, generally under 20 knots in the 0-6 Km layer, so any
convection is not expected to be severe or very organized. It will
be pulse-type convection that will move slowly and be relatively
short-lived. Any convection will dissipate Friday evening.

Highs in the mid 70s to low 80s today will warm into the mid to
upper 80s Friday. Lows will fall into the low 60s tonight, with a
few upper 50s in interior NW PA.

&&

.SHORT TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/...
High pressure overhead on Friday night gradually drifts east to the
mid-Atlantic region by Saturday, which should result in largely
quiet conditions through at least Saturday night. There is a low
chance for isolated showers and thunderstorms but confidence wasn`t
high enough to quite put it in the forecast. Southwest flow behind
the departing high will result in gradually increasing temperatures
and moisture with mid to upper 80s expected on Saturday.

Northwest flow aloft develops on Sunday with subtle shortwave
troughs expected to traverse the Great Lakes region Sunday onward.
Heat and humidity continue to build with temperatures touching 90 by
Sunday afternoon. PoPs increase to the 20-40% range Sunday and
Sunday night with timing greatly depending on shortwave timing.
Thunderstorms that occur in the afternoon/evening would likely pose
at least a low severe weather threat as most models have pretty
decent instability with low but sufficient deep layer shear.

&&

.LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
Northwest flow pattern continues through the long term with several
shortwaves expected. Heat and humidity remains relatively unchanged
with temperatures in the low 90s and dew points in the low 70s,
combining for max heat indices in the mid 90s to around 100.
Thunderstorms are expected, though timing and coverage are extremely
uncertain, so held with a broad 20-50% PoPs through every period in
the long term. Details will become more apparent as we get closer.
Severe thunderstorms will be possible as high dew points contributes
to potentially substantial instability (alongside low to moderate
deep layer shear). Previously most models had an upper-level trough
swinging down crossing the Great Lakes by Wednesday, but there are
now a few more solutions starting to slow this trough down, which
would add another day of heat, humidity and thunderstorm chances.
However, ensemble average favors lower temperatures and
precipitation chances for Wednesday.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z Thursday THROUGH Monday/...
Showers and IFR to LIFR conditions will continue in NE Ohio and
NW PA early this morning as lingering moisture combines with a
surface trough and NW flow across the lake. This will mainly
affect KCLE, KCAK, KYNG, and KERI. Farther west, KTOL, KFDY, and
KMFD have already cleared out, and expect the drier air to very
slowly work eastward through mid morning with cigs improving to
MVFR and eventually VFR by this afternoon. This will take the
longest to occur at KERI.

WNW winds will continue to gust to 20-25 knots at times near the
lakeshore early this morning before turning more NW and
decreasing to 5-10 knots by late morning into this afternoon.

Outlook...Isolated showers/thunderstorms with non-VFR possible
in NW Ohio Friday. Periodic showers/thunderstorms with non-VFR
also possible this Saturday night through Monday.

&&

.MARINE...
Northwest winds are past their peak and should gradually diminish
through the day today as high pressure gradually builds in from the
west. As such, we should be able to gradually chip away at the small
craft advisories and beach hazard statements, with all marine
headlines gone by 20Z. High pressure lingers through Friday before
departing to the east coast Friday night. Southwest flow develops by
Sunday which is expected to last through midweek. There is a low
chance that periods of 20 knots winds within this southwest flow,
though uncertain when the best chance for this to occur.

&&

.CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OH...Beach Hazards Statement until 8 AM EDT this morning for OHZ009.
     Beach Hazards Statement until 4 PM EDT this afternoon for
     OHZ010>012-089.
PA...Beach Hazards Statement until 4 PM EDT this afternoon for
     PAZ001.
NY...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 8 AM EDT this morning for
     LEZ142>144.
     Small Craft Advisory until 4 PM EDT this afternoon for
     LEZ145>149.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...Garuckas
NEAR TERM...Garuckas
SHORT TERM...Saunders
LONG TERM...Saunders
AVIATION...Garuckas
MARINE...Saunders