Here is the latest Area Forecast Discussion for Central PA
This text statement is the latest forecast reasoning from the NWS in State College, PA
See the links at the bottom of the page for previous issuances/versions of the statement as well as our other text statements.
378 FXUS61 KCTP 011024 AFDCTP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service State College PA 624 AM EDT Thu May 1 2025 .SYNOPSIS... * Scattered to numerous thunderstorms with localized gusty/potentially damaging winds and heavy downpours expected across the Western third to half of Central PA this afternoon into early tonight. * Periods of showers and isolated afternoon and evening thunderstorms on Friday will be followed by growing confidence in an increasingly wet pattern through the first week of May && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... Mainly clear skies with areas of cirrus clouds will cover the region through much of the morning today. Min temps around sunrise will vary from the mid 30s across the high terrain of Sullivan County in the Northeast to the mid 50s and upper 50s on the ridge tops in Southern PA. The main weather feature today will come in the form of a warm front currently located across the far SW corner of PA. This boundary divided sfc dewpoints in the 30s across the Northern half of PA from the mid and upper 50s across West VA. The warm front will lift north and buckle to a more north/south orientation extending from near KERI to KFIG and KAOO later this afternoon and early this evening. 0-1KM storm relative helicity will be AOA 200 m2/s2 along and to the east of this boundary, which will just nudge to the east (over the Central Mtns) by around midnight before heading across the Ncent Mtns and Susq Valley late tonight. A southwesterly mid-level jet of 45 and 55 kts respectively at 700 and 500 mb will move over this llvl warm front late this afternoon and evening, providing the necessary large scale lift and shear needed to form periods of showers and scattered to numerous strong to potentially severe TSRA across the Western 1/3 of PA (and at least as far east as the RT 219/I-99 corridor) this afternoon and evening (at the eastern edge of 750-1000 j/kg MU CAPE via the latest HREF) . Significant MU CAPE will be lacking across the NE half of the CWA later today and tonight, but the "sweet spot" for organized/rotating and potentially training TSRA (with locally heavy rain and the potential for isolated weak tornadoes in some supercells) will be near and just to the east of the aforementioned slow-moving warm front with the HREF`s 4 hour max 2-5 KM updraft helicity exceeding 150 m2/s2 in select storms. The storms moving NE over this llvl boundary will need to be monitored closely, especially early this evening when DCAPE will decrease and LCLs likely lowering well below 1 KM AGL immediately on the cool side of the front. SPC covers our NW zones with a DY 1 SLGT risk with a MRGL extending from the RT 219/I-99 corridor in SW PA to the RT 15 corridor near the PA/NY border. High temps today will range from near 70F across the NE mtns to around 80F in the southern Valleys. && .SHORT TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/... The area will be between frontal waves later tonight into friday with with some passing showers through Friday night and isolated afternoon and evening TSRA. Temps will peak tonight and Friday with the largest departures from climo (+15-25F) on low temps for the first night of May. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... Confidence in a wetter than not period for the long range is building. PoPs generally rising across the board for the entire long range period. Many 60 PoPs in the Sun-Tues time frame, and 30-40s thru Day8. Seems reasonable. Repeated rainfall won`t be unwelcome, especially by those in the SE where they have been in drought status for quite a while. No deviations from NBM are necessary at this point. The latest guidance continues to signal a wet pattern setting up this weekend which appears to continue into next week. The next frontal wave drives widespread rain on Saturday before slowing down as the upper trough cuts off and forms a closed low in the Ohio Valley. The 500mb cut off low meanders over the Ohio Valley into early next week then slowly drifts to the east by the end of the period. There is still some uncertainty on how the pattern will evolve, but the key takeaway is a bullish trend for largely beneficial rainfall with 7-day WPC QPF printing 1-2+ inches over most of central PA. && .AVIATION /10Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... For most of the day, expect VFR conditions with mid level clouds. Toward late afternoon across the west, a chance of showers and storms. Have used a TEMPO group for this. Activity forms with afternoon heating and the increase in moisture. The activity should weaken later this evening, as the activity moves to the northast of the more unstable air. The increase in moisture will result in lower CIGS later tonight. With the higher moisture as well, there will be a daily chance of showers and perhaps a storm into the upcoming weekend. Also patchy fog at night as well. Earlier discussion below. Showers and storms will push eastward through the evening, though the threat for thunder will rapidly drop off as the showers enter a much more stable environment from east of AOO and UNV. Fri...Scattered showers with some restrictions possible. Sat-Mon...Periods of rain and sub-VFR conditions likely. && .CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Lambert NEAR TERM...Lambert SHORT TERM...Lambert/Steinbugl LONG TERM...Dangelo/Steinbugl AVIATION...Martin |
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