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Four Oaks, North Carolina Weather Forecast Discussion

608
FXUS62 KRAH 201143
AFDRAH

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 743 AM EDT Sat Sep 20 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A weak backdoor cold front will move south through NC later today and tonight. High pressure will follow and extend across the Middle Atlantic Sunday and Monday, then drift offshore.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 355 AM Saturday...

* Patchy fog still possible over the ne Piedmont and Coastal Plain this morning but with lesser probability of occurrence than previously forecast

* Continued unseasonably warm today, with isolated showers/storms primarily over both the far srn Piedmont and Sandhills and northeast Piedmont and nrn Coastal Plain

* Low stratus likely to develop overnight-Sunday morning over at least the nern half of NC

Shortwave perturbations spanning multiple branches of the mid- latitude and sub-tropical westerlies have carved a mean, negatively- tilted trough from the upr MS Valley to the Carolinas this morning. A pocket of modestly cool mid-level temperatures, minus 9C to minus 14C and coolest over the MS and TN Valleys, were evident within the trough axis in 00Z upr air charts. NWP guidance suggests the upstream portion of the trough axis will dig slightly while pivoting from the OH/TN Valleys early today to the Carolinas and srn Middle Atlantic this afternoon through tonight. Associated, mid/upr-level Q- vector convergence will become centered over cntl VA/NC between approximately 18Z-00Z, coincident with the aforementioned cool pocket aloft that will be characterized by minus 10-12C 500 mb temperatures and 6-7 C/km 850-500 lapse rates.

At the surface, a backdoor cold front was evident in surface observational and KDOX and KLWX radar data from the Lower Eastern Shore nwwd across nrn VA, from near WAL to FRR at 0745Z and moving sswd around 8-10 kts. The front has been accompanied by isolated, nocturnal convection over nrn VA. Extrapolation of the current movement of the front, it will likely settle into the far ne Piedmont and nrn Coastal Plain around midday, then continue to drift swwd across the remainder of cntl NC through this evening. NWP guidance suggests the front will focus low-level moisture convergence and pooling of generally lwr-mid 60s F surface dewpoints along and immediately behind it, while the pre-frontal airmass over srn and cntl NC will be characterized by deeper and stronger boundary layer mixing and "mixing out"/vertical advection of drier air, with associated mid 50s to lwr 60s F surface dewpoints this afternoon. HREF instability fields indicate a narrow and relatively uniform corridor of weak to moderate instability will result and maximize across the Piedmont of VA and the Carolinas with diurnal heating, with warmer surface temperature in the mid 80s to near 90 F likely to offset the aforementioned drier low-levels there.

Sharply drier air just above seasonably moist air at the surface, evident on observed soundings last evening at MHX and WAL, will probably favor more dew than fog this morning; and areas of altocumulus bubbling along the I-95 corridor will also limit radiational cooling and associated widespread radiation fog formation. As such, fog, or lack thereof, in the Dense Fog Advisory area may necessitate early cancellation. Observational trends will be monitored for another few hours before making that decision, however.

Thereafter, the aforementioned weak, large-scale forcing for ascent accompanying the negatively-tilted shortwave perturbation, and thermodynamics from the surface through the mid-levels, will probably support the development of at least isolated convection from cntl VA swwd through the cntl and wrn Carolinas. Despite generally limited instability and updraft strength, a deeply-mixed and dry boundary layer, with characteristic inverted-V shapes in point forecast soundings from CLT to FAY, suggest there will be a conditional risk of strong wind gusts to perhaps ~35-45 kts.

Areas of post-frontal stratus and fog will likely develop late tonight-Sunday morning, especially over the nern half of cntl NC, with low temperatures mostly upr 50s to lwr 60s.

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.SHORT TERM /SUNDAY AND SUNDAY NIGHT/... As of 410 AM Saturday...

In the wake of the shortwave trough that will pivot across the srn Middle Atlantic later today-tonight, shortwave ridging will expand from the swrn N. Atlantic to the Carolinas. Underlying surface high pressure will ridge from the Middle Atlantic to the Carolinas, with associated nely flow and slightly lower temperatures (ie. upr 70s to mid 80s Sun and mid 50s to lwr 60s Sun night). It will otherwise be dry, with areas of low overcast and fog both mornings.

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.LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 308 AM Saturday...

There is good ensemble consensus that an upper low will form over the central Plains on Tuesday before cutting off and lingering over the mid-Mississippi to Ohio Valleys Wednesday into Friday. This will initially focus the deeper moisture and precipitation over the Mississippi Valley Monday through early Wednesday before shifting over our area more-so late Wednesday into Saturday.

At the sfc, high pressure will shift away from New England on Monday. The persistent nely flow we`ve seen the past week will turn more esely by Monday afternoon. As mentioned above, anomalous moisture and sfc/upper forcing will remain to our west on Monday and as such expect a dry day with highs similar to Sunday in the upper 70s to mid 80s.

By Tuesday, sly flow will develop over central NC and as such expect highs to peak a bit higher in the mid to upper 80s. Some deeper moisture may spill into our northern areas late in the day, but overall forcing should focus precipitation again to our west and north leaving us dry Tuesday.

As the upper cut off low slowly drifts north-northeast Wednesday into the weekend ripples of mid-level perturbations will drift across central NC. With anomalous moisture in place, we`ll see periods of pre-frontal showers and storms during this stretch. Its a bit too far out to get too into specifics. However, it`s worth noting that ensembles do show periods of low Cape/high shear environments Thursday and Friday. With the slow movement of the cutoff upper low, hard to imagine we would be outlooked in anything beyond Marginal at this point. Further, a few of the machine learning severe outlook analogs are hinting at marginal-level probabilities over our area during that time period (Pangu, FengWu, CSU-mlp). Something to watch for sure as we progress through early next week.

After a hot Wednesday (highs in the upper 80s to lower 90s), cloudy skies and periods of rain may damped highs into the upper 70s/lower 80s a bit Thursday into the weekend.

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.AVIATION /06Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... As of 740 AM Saturday...

LIFR-IFR restrictions will linger at RWI and FAY through 13-14Z, after which time VFR conditions and light nely surface winds are expected. Otherwise, an isolated shower/storm will be possible (~15- 20% probability of occurrence) this afternoon from near AFP to MEB and FAY, and also from near HNZ to IXA and RWI. Stratus and fog will likely develop behind a backdoor cold front late tonight-Sunday morning, most likely before 12Z at RWI and RDU and around or just after 12Z at each of the other TAF sites.

Outlook: Areas of stratus and fog will be possible again late Sunday night-Monday morning. Showers/storms and flight restrictions are expected mid to late this upcoming week.

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.RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Dense Fog Advisory from 4 AM to 10 AM EDT Saturday for NCZ028- 043-078-089.

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SYNOPSIS...MWS NEAR TERM...MWS SHORT TERM...MWS LONG TERM...Luchetti AVIATION...MWS

NWS RAH Office Area Forecast Discussion

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