Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH

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906 FXUS61 KCLE 140139 AFDCLE Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 939 PM EDT Mon May 13 2024 .SYNOPSIS... A cold front will slowly sag across the region tonight through early Wednesday as low pressure slowly tracks from the Mississippi Valley tonight to the Ohio Valley by Wednesday. High pressure will finally build in by Thursday before low pressure moves into the northern Great Lakes Friday and drags another cold front into the region. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/...
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Will continue a dry forecast for the first half of the overnight. The main concern for rain will be the batch along the Ohio River in southern Indiana and northern Kentucky that will lift north and enter the region late tonight. Low confidence in the coverage and will keep the iso/sct wording in the forecast. Most of Previous Discussion... By tonight, the broad shortwave will start to cross the Mid Mississippi Valley with an associated surface low moving through southern Missouri into southern Illinois. This will be a slow process however since this shortwave will continue to be fairly closed off and separated from the polar and subtropical branches of the jet, causing the nearly vertically stacked low to not make much eastward progress through the period. The center of the system only looks to reach the vicinity of southern Indiana, southern Ohio, and northern Kentucky by early Wednesday. As this shortwave/vertically stacked low migrates slowly eastward tonight through Tuesday night, a cold frontal boundary will slowly sag through the region from NW to SE. This all points to increasing chances for showers and a few pockets of convection tonight and Tuesday, with the rain chances only slowly tapering off from NW to SE Tuesday night into Wednesday. Despite the elevated rain chances through the period, coverage does not appear to be overly widespread (more scattered in nature). This is due to weak overall forcing with this system being displaced from the jet dynamics. However, persistent moisture advection and weak isentropic ascent as the center of circulation slowly progresses east combined with some mid-level PVA supports high chance to likely PoPs, with the greatest coverage coinciding with the diurnal maximum Tuesday afternoon. Most of the rain will be light, but locally higher amounts will occur with any convection. The best opportunity for convection/thunder will be Tuesday afternoon when HREF guidance projects a few hundred joules of surface based CAPE. Lows tonight will range from the upper 50s to low 60s. Highs Tuesday will stay in the low/mid 70s due to the increased clouds and precip. Lows Tuesday night will average mid/upper 50s as cooler air gradually filters in.
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&& .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... Surface low pressure will be tracking through the Ohio Valley Wednesday morning as an upper trough and embedded closed upper low trail just behind it. Guidance has been trending gradually slower over the last few runs with the departure of this system and the area will still be along or just ahead of the upper trough axis Wednesday morning. It`s looking increasingly likely that showers and perhaps some thunder will be around on Wednesday, taking longest to exit our eastern/southeastern counties. This has led to POPs for Wednesday trending a bit higher with further room to trend up if the recent trends prove to be correct. We should dry out later Wednesday afternoon through Wednesday night. Thursday looks to be mainly dry as an upper-level ridge axis slides through, though a combination of some weak instability developing with heating and the next shortwave approaching from the southwest late in the day may lead to at least isolated to widely scattered shower/thunder chances late in the day...especially across far eastern OH and PA, and from the west into the I-75 corridor. POPs spread east Thursday night as the shortwave slides through, though we`ll be fighting nocturnal stabilization and the forcing should be modest well ahead of the next front, so generally have chance POPs for Thursday night. Highs on Wednesday are expected to range from the mid 60s to lower 70s, warming into the low to mid 70s for Thursday. Nighttime lows settle well into the low to mid 50s Wednesday night, trending a bit milder (from the mid 50s to near 60 for most) Thursday night. Not expecting any severe weather this period. Slow cell motions could lead to locally heavy rain on Wednesday, though any flooding potential should be quite isolated and may depend on if any heavier rain amounts occur in the near term and saturate the ground more. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... A warm and somewhat unsettled long term forecast period is on tap. For Friday, a trough and associated cold front will be approaching from the west with ridging along the East Coast. Expect sufficient moisture return and instability ahead of the front for decent shower and storm chances Friday afternoon and evening. Agreement on timing of the trough and frontal passage for Friday has improved enough to introduce likely (60-70%) POPs. We should dry out Friday night into Saturday as the trough and cold front exit east, though there is still enough uncertainty regarding how quickly the system exits to linger low POPs through Saturday, especially farther east/southeast. Saturday night and Sunday should be mainly dry as ridging builds in from the southwest. We may need to monitor for a decaying cluster of showers/storms to ride overtop the ridge and bring some clouds and rain potential, especially on Sunday as a warm front lifts through. Confidence in the timing / placement of such a feature this far out is quite low. Overall it should be a mainly dry weekend, though with some uncertainty revolving around if it does rain a bit at some point. Greater shower and storm potential is possible Sunday night or Monday as the next shortwave and cold front approach from the west/northwest, though confidence in details that far out is low. Temperatures will be slightly above normal (generally in the 70s) Friday and Saturday. While the exact values may depend on the timing and coverage of any rain, much of the area has the potential to surge into the 80s both Sunday and Monday. && .AVIATION /00Z Tuesday THROUGH Saturday/... Return flow across the region has allowed for some mid-level cumulus to enter the airspace and will be the only obstruction to what will likely be a VFR evening and night. A surface front will slide southeast and allow for isolated to scattered rain showers overnight, but confidence in rain getting to a terminal until closer to daybreak is low. The front will enter during the day on Tuesday and allow for showers and some storms to develop especially during the late morning and afternoon hours as the diurnal cycle progresses. Some non-VFR conditions will be possible with convection and behind the front as it sags southeast. Haven`t hit the non-VFR with the convection hard at this point as precise timing is low confidence but do have low VFR and some higher MVFR in the TAFs for late in the period behind the front. Winds will start southerly ahead of the front and then shift to the east then northeast behind the front. A form of a lake breeze may impact KERI Tuesday afternoon. Outlook...Non-VFR possible in showers and thunderstorms Tuesday night through Wednesday and again on Friday through Saturday. && .MARINE... Generally light (15 knot or less) southerly flow continues through Tuesday morning ahead of a cold front. The cold front will sink south across the lake Tuesday afternoon, flipping winds around to the north-northeast. These north-northeast winds do pick up to around 15 knots Tuesday night into Wednesday as weak low pressure tracks across the Ohio Valley. This will build some 2 to 4 footers west of Cleveland Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. The wind and wave forecast remains below small craft criteria for this period, though it does get fairly close for a time late Tuesday night or Wednesday morning. Will continue to monitor trends in the forecast given the notoriously annoying northeast wind direction. Winds become generally east-northeast through Thursday and should subside enough by Wednesday afternoon to allow waves to diminish more into a 1 to 3 foot range, if not simply 2 or less Wednesday night and Thursday. Winds flip around to the south-southwest Thursday night into Friday ahead of a cold front. Winds will vary some through the weekend as fronts glance the lake but generally look to remain out of a west to south direction with headlines appearing unlikely. A few thunderstorms are possible over the lake Tuesday into Tuesday evening with a cold front, and may again be possible late Thursday night and Friday ahead of a cold front. Additional thunderstorm chances are possible Sunday and Monday but with low confidence. && .CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...None. PA...None. NY...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Garuckas NEAR TERM...Garuckas/Sefcovic SHORT TERM...Sullivan LONG TERM...Sullivan AVIATION...Sefcovic MARINE...Sullivan