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.
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839 FXUS61 KCTP 282325 AFDCTP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service State College PA 625 PM EST Wed Jan 28 2026 .WHAT HAS CHANGED... * Cold Weather Advisory in effect tonight into Thursday morning. && .KEY MESSAGES... 1) Prolonged Extreme Cold/Wind Chills through the end of January. 2) Low risk of plowable snow/minor winter weather impacts this weekend. Highest chance far SE part of the CWA. 3) Extreme cold retreats early next week but temperatures remain below the historical average into February. && .DISCUSSION... KEY MESSAGE 1: Prolonged Extreme Cold/Wind Chills through the end of January. Minimum wind chills across the whole area are still expected to persist through the remainder of this week and into this weekend. Widespread minimum wind chills of 10 to 15 degrees below zero are forecast for tonight into Thursday morning. A cold weather advisory remains in effect for tonight through tomorrow morning. Gusty winds could keep these deeply cold wind chills into the negative double digits into the early afternoon. The coldest period is yet to come with record challenging minimum temps fcst later this week from Friday night through AM Saturday. Additional cold wx headlines are likely to be issued to highlight this period of coldest/lowest minimum temps and wind chills. The cold pattern continues into February with max temps projected to remain below the freezing mark through Groundhog Day. While it appears the extreme cold will retreat, odds continue to favor below normal temperatures through early February. KEY MESSAGE 2: Minor to plowable snowfall accumulation possible this weekend. There is still plenty of uncertainty with the weekend coastal storm track which directly impacts the location and magnitude of onshore snow potential. The latest NBM probs along with WPC WSSI-P continues to highlight a low risk 10-20% for plowable >2" snow and minor winter wx impacts near and to the east of the I-81 corridor. Odds for heavier amounts remain confined along the Carolina/Delmarva/NJ/New England coast. Stark disagreements between the GFS and ECMWF continue to prolong the low confidence in this forecast. KEY MESSAGE 3: Extreme cold retreats but temperatures remain below the historical average into February. After this weekend cold temperatures will moderate somewhat to bring the area out of risk for cold weather headlines. Temperatures are still expected to remain mainly below freezing however. Portions of the Lower Susquehanna Valley could see highs reach the mid 30s, but this still would put the entire state at 10 to 15 degrees below climatological normals for this time of year. This warm up may be short lived with long range models painting the possibility for reinforcing cold fronts to arrive by late next week. Looking at the 12Z GFS and EC show a large spread in the large scale flow by 240 hours, with the EC more of a split flow. Additional forecast information: The seemingly endless cold cyclonic flow aloft with reinforced shots of arctic air (850mb temps -18 to -24C are below the 10th climatological percentile) will allow for periods of terrain enhanced snow showers with minor snow accums focused across the Laurel Highlands and NW Alleghenies. Flurries will also extend into the central ridge/valley region through late week. Recent Great Lakes ice cover analysis from GLERL/NIC shows 100% concentration on Lake Erie, so available moisture will be limited to upstream connections as mean llvl flow shifts from WNW to NNW by Friday. && .AVIATION /00Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... MVFR ceilings persist at BFD and JST through the 18Z TAF period while the rest of the region sees mainly VFR conditions. Widely scattered snow showers will continue into the evening, especially west of UNV and AOO. These snow showers will produce brief periods of IFR vsby as they move through. Low clouds may expand slightly overnight, potentially leading to a few hours of MVFR ceilings at UNV and AOO towards 12Z. Isolated wind gusts of 20 to 25 knots will continue through the afternoon and early evening before decreasing overnight. Some guidance suggests the potential for LLWS across south-central PA overnight, but confidence is too low to include it in the TAFs for now. Expect winds to pick back up again during the late morning/early afternoon on Thursday. Outlook... Thu Night-Sat...Periods of lake effect and upslope snow showers remain possible across N/W PA, with restrictions possible; otherwise, chilly and breezy areawide. Sun...Light snow possible in southeast PA. Breezy with gusts between 20 and 30 knots. && .CLIMATE... Daily record minimum temperatures possible to close out January: 01/30 MDT: 2 in 1934 IPT: -6 in 1948 AOO: -3 in 2019 BFD: -14 in 1965 STC: -10 in 1977 01/31 MDT: 2 in 1948 IPT: -14 in 1948 AOO: -4 in 2019 BFD: -13 in 2019 STC: -9 in 1948 State College has a very good shot of tying the second longest run (7) of consecutive days with max temp <= 20F (1/25-1/31). The last time this occurred was post-Christmas 2017 (12-28-2017 to 01-03-2018). The longest run of 10 days occurred in January 1893 from the 11th-20th. && .CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Cold Weather Advisory from 1 AM to 10 AM EST Thursday for PAZ004>006-010>012-018-019-025>028-034>037-041-042-045-046- 049>053-056>059-063>066. Cold Weather Advisory until 10 AM EST Thursday for PAZ017-024- 033. && $$ WHAT HAS CHANGED...Steinbugl/Martin/Bowen KEY MESSAGES...Steinbugl/Martin DISCUSSION...Steinbugl/Martin/Bowen AVIATION...Bauco CLIMATE...Steinbugl |
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