#988 Postby weatherdude1108 » Mon Nov 28, 2016 3:55 pm
000
FXUS64 KEWX 282040
AFDEWX
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Austin/San Antonio TX
240 PM CST Mon Nov 28 2016
.SHORT TERM (Tonight through Tuesday Night)...
The frontal boundary has pushed through the CWA with breezy
west-northwest winds in place behind the front. Temperatures have
warmed into the 70s and lower 80s with dewpoints down into the
30s and 40s. These values are combining to create relative
humidity values in the 18-25 percent range across much of the
area. This in combination with the breezy winds are creating
elevated fire weather conditions, but fuels remain pretty moist
and am not anticipating any products needed. Temperatures tonight
will fall into the 40s and 50s with the dry air in place and wind
speeds diminishing.
For tomorrow, warm conditions are expected once again with
temperatures in the middle to upper 70s. There should be some
moisture return in the eastern zones and some of the high-res
guidance is showing some isolated activity. Think some of this is
over done, as the current atmosphere is pretty dry but will only
mention isolated showers with a 10 PoP. Another trough will pass
through the central plains Tuesday night and will send a
reinforcing cold front with a trajectory more from the north which
should mean even cooler air. The front should push through the
area by sunrise Wednesday.
&&
.LONG TERM (Wednesday through Monday)...
Conditions behind the front should be dry with highs only in the
60s. Lows Thursday morning will be in the 30s across much of the
region with a light freeze possible for the northern Hill Country.
Not anticipating any locations reaching the freezing mark which
did not get a freeze last week and thus no Freeze Warnings are
expected. Another day in the 60s is expected Thursday afternoon
before moisture rapidly returns ahead of the next storm system.
Models are in good agreement that on Friday morning a strong
trough will be over the western conus moving east and will remain
to our west through at least Saturday. With a surface high to our
northeast, northeast winds are expected across the area. This
setup will create a overrunning rain event beginning Friday
afternoon and will overspread much if not all the area on
Saturday. Highs Friday will be in the 60s but will then struggle
to get out of the 40s on Saturday with a cold rain expected.
Models then diverge with the handling of the trough beyond
Saturday with the GFS keeping the trough to our west through
Monday which would keep high PoPs in the forecast through early
next week. The ECMWF on the other hand brings the trough through
the area by Sunday morning, ending rain chances. Looking into the
individual ensemble members of the GFS and ECMWF provide no
clarity as most if not all those individual solutions supports the
corresponding deterministic model. Will continue to side with a
consensus forecast Sunday and Monday until there is more
confidence in one particular solution between the guidance.
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