146  
FXUS62 KRAH 052009  
AFDRAH  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE RALEIGH NC  
409 PM EDT THU JUN 5 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
A WEAK AREA OF LOW PRESSURE WILL TRACK SLOWLY EAST NORTHEAST ACROSS  
SOUTHERN AND EASTERN NC THROUGH FRIDAY MORNING. A SERIES OF MID AND  
UPPER-LEVEL DISTURBANCES WILL OVERSPREAD AND INTERACT WITH A FRONTAL  
ZONE THAT WILL SETTLE INTO AND STALL OVER NC THIS WEEKEND THROUGH  
EARLY TO MID NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/  
 
AS OF 405 PM THURSDAY...  
 
WEAK, 1015 MB LOW PRESSURE CENTERED OVER SCOTLAND CO. AT 20Z WILL  
MOVE VERY SLOWLY EWD TO THE OUTER BANKS VICINITY THROUGH 12Z FRI.  
THE THREAT OF BOTH HEAVY/FLOODING RAIN AND AN ISOLATED TORNADO WILL  
CONTINUE ALONG/NEAR THE TRACK OF THE LOW THROUGH THE SANDHILLS AND  
SRN-CNTL COASTAL PLAIN THROUGH EARLY THIS EVENING. AREAS OF MAINLY  
LIGHT, STRATIFORM RAIN OTHERWISE AND ELSEWHERE WILL GRADUALLY TAPER  
OFF THROUGH THE SAME TIME, AS THE FRONTAL LOW AND FORCING MOVE EWD.  
IN ITS WAKE, WIDESPREAD LOW OVERCAST, AND AREAS OF FOG OVER THE NW  
THROUGH SRN PIEDMONT, WILL PREVAIL OVERNIGHT, WITH LOW TEMPERATURES  
IN THE 60S.  
 
   
PREV DISCUSSION  
/ISSUED 1135 AM EDT THU JUN 05 2025/  
 
SENSIBLE WEATHER IMPACTS OF A WET AND COOLER THAN AVERAGE DAY  
REMAIN, ALONG WITH A RISK OF HEAVY RAIN AND ISOLATED FLOODING.  
 
THE GREATEST FLOODING RISK IN THE NEXT FEW HOURS WILL ACCOMPANY A  
925 MB LOW AND RELATED COMPACT, DEFORMATION BAND OF RAIN RESPONSIBLE  
FOR 1-1.25"/HR AMOUNTS NOW PIVOTING ACROSS ROWAN AND DAVIDSON CO.  
THIS AREA OF HEAVY RAIN WILL LIKELY CONTINUE TO AFFECT DAVIDSON CO.  
THEN DOWNSTREAM INTO RANDOLPH AND CHATHAM, AND POSSIBLY ADJACENT SRN  
PORTIONS OF GUILFORD AND ALAMANCE AND NRN STANLY, MONTGOMERY, AND  
MOORE. CO THROUGH ~19Z. ADDITIONAL, HEAVY AND CONVECTIVE RAIN MAY  
MATERIALIZE JUST DOWNSTREAM OF THE LOW THROUGH THE REST OF THE  
SANDHILLS, ERN PIEDMONT, AND SRN AND CNTL COASTAL PLAIN, WHERE  
SCATTERED TO LOCALLY NUMEROUS CONVECTION NOW DEVELOPING ACROSS NERN  
SC AND SERN NC MAY TEND TO SLOW AND CONVERGE THROUGH THE AFTERNOON.  
 
ISOLATED TORNADO POTENTIAL APPEARS MORE LIMITED IN THE LATEST MODEL  
GUIDANCE, MOSTLY RELATED TO A WEAKER AND SLIGHTLY FARTHER SWD TRACK  
OF A WEAK, 1017 MB SURFACE LOW OVER N-CNTL SC AT 15Z, WHICH WILL  
WILL MOVE VERY SLOWLY ENEWD AND PROBABLY ACROSS SRN THROUGH ERN NC  
THROUGH TONIGHT. THE RELATIVELY GREATEST, NON-ZERO RISK OF A QUICK  
SPIN-UP WILL EXIST IMMEDIATELY AHEAD OF THE SURFACE LOW, WHERE  
SURFACE WINDS WILL REMAIN BACKED WITH A SIGNIFICANT ELY COMPONENT  
AND WHERE EFFECTIVE SRH WILL BE MAXIMIZED PERHAPS AS HIGH AS 100-150  
M2/S2.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /FRIDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT/  
 
AS OF 350 PM THURSDAY...  
 
GENERALLY LOW AMPLITUDE, QUASI-ZONAL/WLY MID TO UPR-LEVEL FLOW WILL  
PREVAIL FROM THE SRN PLAINS TO THE SRN MIDDLE ATLANTIC. AN EMBEDDED,  
CONVECTIVELY-AMPLIFIED MID-LEVEL TROUGH WILL MOVE ENEWD AND ACROSS  
THE MID MS VALLEY EARLY FRI AND OH VALLEY AND CNTL APPALACHIANS FRI  
AFTERNOON AND NIGHT, WITH ASSOCIATED, WEAK 10-30 METER/12HR 500 MB  
HEIGHT FALLS THAT WILL GLANCE CNTL NC FRI NIGHT.  
 
AT THE SURFACE, WEAK, 1013 MB LOW PRESSURE OVER THE OUTER BANKS FRI  
MORNING WILL MOVE SLOWLY ENEWD AND OFFSHORE, WHILE DEEPENING BY  
SEVERAL MILLIBARS. A TRAILING, WEAK FRONTAL ZONE WILL LIKELY RETREAT  
SLOWLY NWD OVER NERN NC AND SRN VA, WHILE A LEE TROUGH WILL DEVELOP  
OVER THE SRN MIDDLE ATLANTIC WRN PIEDMONT.  
 
CLEARING BEHIND THE DEPARTING LOW, EXCEPT FOR SOME LINGERING LOW  
CLOUDS ON THE COOL SIDE OF THE AFOREMENTIONED FRONTAL ZONE OVER THE  
FAR NE PIEDMONT AND NRN COASTAL PLAIN WILL ALLOW FOR STRONG DIURNAL  
HEATING INTO THE MID 80S TO NEAR 90 F. THAT HEATING OF A SEASONABLY  
MOIST AIRMASS CHARACTERIZED BY SURFACE DEWPOINTS MOSTLY IN THE  
MID/UPR 60S WILL YIELD MODERATE DESTABILIZATION AND WEAKENING  
CONVECTIVE INHIBITION, SUCH THAT SCATTERED CONVECTION MAY DEVELOP  
INVOF THE LEE TROUGH (IE. NW PIEDMONT) AND OVER THE MOUNTAINS, AND  
POSSIBLY ALONG THE RETREATING FRONTAL ZONE, DESPITE GENERALLY  
NEUTRAL HEIGHT TENDENCY AND A LACK OF BACKGROUND FORCING FOR ASCENT.  
SOME OF THAT ACTIVITY MAY DRIFT SEWD ACROSS THE REMAINDER OF THE  
PIEDMONT AND SANDHILLS THROUGH THE EVENING, BEFORE DISSIPATING. SOME  
ADDITIONAL, WEAKENING UPSTREAM CONVECTION, INFLUENCED BY THE  
CONVECTIVELY-AMPLIFIED MID-LEVEL TROUGH, MAY SUBSEQUENTLY MOVE EAST  
OF THE MOUNTAINS AND INTO THE NRN PIEDMONT EARLY SAT MORNING. IT  
WILL OTHERWISE BE QUITE MILD AND HUMID, WITH LOWS WITHIN A FEW  
DEGREES EITHER SIDE OF 70 F.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/  
 
AS OF 240 PM THURSDAY...  
 
* GENERAL MID AND UPPER-LEVEL TROUGHING ACROSS THE EASTERN U.S.  
THROUGH MID WEEK ALONG WITH A MOIST AND UNSTABLE ENVIRONMENT WILL  
RESULT IN A PERIOD OF GREATER THAN AVERAGE PRECIPITATION CHANCES.  
* RAIN CHANCES WILL BE MAXIMIZED DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING,  
ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAY AND AGAIN TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY.  
* STRONGER DEEP LAYER FLOW SHOULD SUPPORT AN INCREASED RISK OF  
STRONGER STORMS ON SUNDAY AND PERHAPS TUESDAY OR WEDNESDAY.  
 
SATURDAY WILL LIKELY BE THE BETTER DAY FOR OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES THIS  
WEEKEND AS GUIDANCE SUGGESTS A LITTLE LESS CONVECTION THAN  
PREVIOUSLY EXPECTED. CONVECTION ACROSS THE TN VALLEY ON FRIDAY NIGHT  
WILL LIKELY WEAKEN AS IT MOVES EAST WITH THE REMNANTS MOVING INTO  
WESTERN AND NORTHERN NC ON SATURDAY MORNING AND DISSIPATING. WHILE  
CLOUD COVER MAY BE INCREASED, RAIN CHANCES WOULD APPEAR LIMITED  
THROUGH THE EARLY TO MID AFTERNOON HOURS. THE CONVECTIVE REMNANTS  
MAY BE A CONTRIBUTOR TO CONVECTIVE REDEVELOPMENT DURING THE  
AFTERNOON AND EVENING, LIKELY ACROSS EASTERN AND SOUTHERN AREAS.  
 
RAIN CHANCES INCREASE ON SUNDAY AS A SHORTWAVE TROUGH ACROSS THE OH  
VALLEY AND AN ASSOCIATED COLD FRONT DROP INTO THE REGION. WITH DEW  
POINTS IN THE UPPER 60S TO LOWER 70S, FAVORABLE LAPSE RATES,  
MODERATELY INSTABILITY AND ENHANCED FLOW, THERE IS A RISK OF STRONG  
TO SEVERE STORMS PRIMARILY DURING THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING.  
 
BRIEF SHORTWAVE RIDGING ON MONDAY AHEAD OF THE NEXT TROUGH SHOULD  
RESULT IN A BIT OF A LULL OR REDUCED THREAT OF SHOWERS AND STORMS. A  
STRONGER MID AND UPPER LEVEL TROUGH MOVES ACROSS THE GREAT LAKES AND  
THE NORTHEAST ON TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY WITH AN ASSOCIATED COLD FRONT  
AND ENHANCED FLOW SPREADING INTO OUR REGION. THIS WILL LIKELY RESULT  
IN ANOTHER PERIOD OF SHOWERS AND STORMS WITH HIGH POPS AND A THREAT  
OF STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS ON TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY. THE TROUGHING  
MOVES OFFSHORE AND SOME WEAK RIDGING BUILDS INTO THE SOUTHEAST ON  
THURSDAY RESULTING IN A DIMINISHED RISK OF SHOWERS AND STORMS ON  
THURSDAY.  
 
TEMPERATURES ARE LIKELY TO RANGE NEAR TO ABOVE NORMAL DURING THE  
PERIOD. HIGHS SHOULD BE THE WARMEST ON SATURDAY AND MONDAY WITH  
HIGHS IN THE UPPER 80S TO LOWER 90S AS THERE IS APT TO BE A LULL IN  
CONVECTION AND PERHAPS CLOUD COVER. HEAT INDEX VALUES THESE DAYS  
WILL RANGE IN THE 90S WITH SOME UPPER 90S POSSIBLE ACROSS THE  
SOUTHEAST AREAS. OTHERWISE HIGHS WILL RANGE IN THE 80S TO AROUND 90.  
-BLAES  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z THURSDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/  
 
AS OF 210 PM THURSDAY...  
 
IFR-MVFR RESTRICTIONS AND RAIN, AND CONVECTION (SHOWERS/STORMS)  
MAINLY AT FAY, WILL ACCOMPANY AN AREA OF LOW PRESSURE THAT WILL  
TRACK ACROSS CNTL AND ERN NC THROUGH EARLY TONIGHT. DEEP LAYER  
CLEARING BEHIND THE LOW LATER TONIGHT-FRI MORNING WILL RESULT IN THE  
DEVELOPMENT OF FOG AND LOW OVERCAST AT INT/GSO, AND PROBABLY AN  
OTHERWISE LOWERING OF EXISTING CEILINGS INTO LIFR RANGE ELSEWHERE,  
THROUGH FRI MORNING. LIFTING AND SCATTERING OF THAT SHALLOW LOW-  
LEVEL MOISTURE WILL FAVOR A RETURN TO VFR CONDITIONS BETWEEN 13-15Z  
FRI.  
 
OUTLOOK: A GOOD CHANCE OF MAINLY AFTERNOON AND EVENING SHOWERS/  
STORMS WILL ACCOMPANY A FRONTAL ZONE THAT WILL SETTLE INTO AND  
LINGER OVER NC THROUGH EARLY TO MID NEXT WEEK. AREAS OF MORNING  
FOG/STRATUS WILL ALSO BE POSSIBLE, PARTICULARLY WHERE RAIN OCCURS  
THE PREVIOUS AFTERNOON-EVENING.  
 
 
   
RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...MWS  
NEAR TERM...MWS  
SHORT TERM...MWS  
LONG TERM...BLAES  
AVIATION...MWS  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NC Page
Main Text Page