


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC
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395 FXUS62 KRAH 020958 AFDRAH Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 555 AM EDT Tue Sep 2 2025 .SYNOPSIS... High pressure to our north will extend southward through the area through Wednesday. A weak cold front will approach from the west Wednesday night and early Thursday. This front will stall out and hold to our northwest through Saturday, allowing warmer air to flow into the region. The front will push into the area Saturday night, with cooler high pressure then returning for Sunday into Monday. && .NEAR TERM /TODAY THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 115 AM Tuesday... Expect minimal change to the weather over the next 24 hours. Surface high pressure remains centered over the northeast United States, maintaining northeast flow over central North Carolina. While there will be some diurnal cumulus, skies will be mostly clear overnight. With no change in airmass, there should be little change in the high and low temperatures compared to yesterday - upper 70s and lower 80s for highs, 50s for lows. && .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY AND WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... As of 115 AM Tuesday... The high pressure center over New England will begin to move east on Wednesday, and the center of the high may actually be over North Carolina around sunrise Wednesday. With the high directly overhead, that will decrease, but not completely eliminate, the diurnal cumulus clouds, With less cloud cover, expect highs to climb a few degrees on Wednesday compared to today, with nearly all locations rising into the 80s. With the warmer temperature during the daytime, overnight lows will be 3-5 degrees warmer, ranging from the mid 50s to the mid 60s. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 1230 AM Tuesday... * Near normal temperatures Thu will soar well above normal for Friday/Saturday, before cooling back off Sunday/Monday. * Scattered late-day storms are possible NW Thu, then additional chances for prefrontal showers and storms are expected over the weekend. Thu/Thu night: The column will remain relatively dry with near to just below normal PWs Thu, but passage of a weak perturbation northeastward through W and N NC late Thu, swinging through the base of the large longwave trough over central and E NOAM, will bring just enough forcing for ascent for isolated to scattered showers or storms in the NW CWA. The mid level flow won`t be particularly strong, though, as the low deepens over S Ontario, and CAPE will be small with high cloud bases from deep mixing, so coverage should be limited, and will have low pops NW into the evening. With narrow/weakening/exiting surface high pressure and near normal thicknesses, expect highs in the 80s, followed by lows in the 60s. Fri-Sat night: The deep mid level low will continue to wobble over S Ontario Fri/Fri night, with strong mid level flow over the Midwest and E Great Lakes, leaving lighter and loosely cyclonic flow from the SW over NC. Bermuda high pressure will build westward toward the Southeast coast Fri/Sat, allowing our thicknesses to climb to 10-15 m above normal by Sat as the departing surface high places us in a low level WAA pattern. Fri is likely to be mostly dry, with little to no CAPE, minimal shear, near normal PWs, and no mechanisms evident to force ascent. As the Ontario low shifts into Quebec with shortwaves swinging through its base from Ontario over the Great Lakes, the attendant surface front will approach our area from the NW, but the steering flow over our region will keep it to our NW through Sat night as we stay in the warm sector. Fri highs should be in the upper 80s to lower 90s, then Sat still looks to be the hottest day with upper 80s to mid 90s. With the greater heat and gradually increasing PW Sat, we`ll see an increase in SBCAPE, peaking near 1000 J/kg, and will carry a low chance for showers and storms Sat afternoon into the evening. Sun-Mon: Uncertainty continues regarding how quickly the broad mid level trough axis shifts E over the E CONUS, how amplified it will be when it arrives, and thus how quickly the corresponding surface cold front shifts SE into and through our area. Our mid level flow will remain broadly cyclonic, veering slightly with time, but will remain somewhat weak as the strongest flow around the E Canada low will be over New England. This reduces confidence that the cold front will make a clean and swift passage through the CWA. It appears that the most likely solution is that the front will at least edge into our NW Sun with increasing clouds overall, and will have chances for late-day prefrontal convection mainly S and E of the Triangle Sun. As the front should nudge further SE, expect precip chances in the extreme SE only Mon. Expect highs in the upper 70s to mid 80s Sun and mid 70s to low 80s Mon. -GIH && .AVIATION /10Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 555 AM Tuesday... TAF period: High confidence in VFR conditions through the next 24 hours. While there is some patchy fog this morning, none of it is currently near any TAF sites. The wind will be out of the northeast through the period, with speeds up to 10 kt during the afternoon. Outlook: There is a potential for restrictions in showers at INT/GSO Thursday and Thursday evening and at all sites Saturday night and Sunday. && .RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Hartfield NEAR TERM...Green SHORT TERM...Green LONG TERM...Hartfield AVIATION...Green