Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Wilmington NC 942 am EDT Thursday may 23 2013 Synopsis... showers and thunderstorms will precede a cold front today. The front will move through early Friday and usher cooler air into the Carolinas over the weekend. Next week will bring a gradual warmup. && Near term /through tonight/... as of 9:30 am Thursday...plume of moisture and associated precipitation now offshore although some light rain or drizzle may scrape the coast north of Cape Fear this morning. Have adjusted forecast accordingly. No other changes anticipated...previous discussion from earlier this morning follows: Vapor analysis shows one short-wave moving off the Georgia/SC coast early this morning...tripping off nocturnal ocean convection from Cape Fear south through east. Areas of low-level moisture convergence offshore was additionally helpful in blossoming showers with embedded thunderstorms over the waters. The Bermuda high circulation over our locality is marked by deep southerly flow that will guide the ocean convection onshore this morning...generally east of a kmyr to kcpc to keyf line. This activity will begin to wane in the middle morning as buoyancy over the water decreases with diurnal warming. The convective focus will shift from water to land by midday and low-level wind convergence will spread inland along a resultant sea breeze boundary helping to produce lift. Short-wave energy will approach from the west in the afternoon to provide upper support. The inland advancing marine layer will shift the highest pop values inland away from the coast through the afternoon. Forecast soundings indicate 1100-1700 j/kg of cape at 18z inland with precipitable water values around 1.6 inches. Projected storm motion 210/10 knots. Light environmental winds and bulk shear parameters will limit strength of convection...but certainly some strong wet down-bursts can be expected. Loss of heating will take a toll on convection this evening and drying in the middle levels of the atmosphere after 6z tonight should begin to curtail shower activity. Middle-level drying will out-pace the surface front. The front will bring a wind-shift to the coast around 12z Friday. && Short term /Friday through Friday night/... as of 3 am Thursday...strong upper trough especially for late may swings across on Friday. The cold front and deep moisture will be offshore before the start of the period but if the trough axis lags enough to prevent downsloping/drying then there could be enough SW flow and positive vorticity advection for some instability sprinkles. Forecast soundings show enough middle level dry air to preclude measurable precipitation at this time so the forecast will remain dry. Otherwise Friday looks increasingly breezy with plummeting dewpoints and perhaps even strong enough late day cold air advection to make for a rather flat diurnal temperature curve. Cold air advection sufficient to bring a downright cool Friday night. Wind stays up to preclude rad cooling but lows could still dip down close to records. Northerly flow and cold advection continues into Saturday keeping temperatures a solid category or more below climatology despite full sunshine. As the trough deepens and cuts off off the New England coast by Saturday night the cold advection will be maintained into the period. With the solar modification fighting the process the whole time Sat night lows may end up very near those of Friday night. && Long term /Saturday through Wednesday/... as of 3 am Thursday...large vortex more typical of cooler season weather to only very slowly lift out of New England states Monday through Wednesday. Local result will be an abating of the surface high pressure that until then will have been pushing in from points north. The speed at which this happens is still up for debate but the trend will be one of gradually increasing warmth and moisture. At some point moisture may be sufficient to support isolated or scattered convection or there could even be an actual surface warm front that develops in the return flow...which could add to coverage a little bit. Either way both scenarios seem to offer little in the way of rain chances area-wide. By the end of the period the surface high will be off the coast and an upper level ridge building so temperatures should end up near or above climatology. && Aviation /14z Thursday through Monday/... as of 12z...most of the convection is offshore...associated with a weak short wave rotating around a shallow longwave trough. Ilm will see a shower or two...with the other terminals remaining rain free until this afternoon...as heating and sea breeze resultant will combine to fire off some low topped stuff. Ceilings this morning will be IFR inland...and mainly MVFR along the coast...becoming VFR at all terminals by late morning. Light southwest flow will continue throughout the day...a bit more south southeast along the coast this afternoon. Extended outlook...showers and thunderstorms possible Thursday through early Friday. Otherwise VFR. && Marine... near term/through tonight/... as of 9:30 am Thursday...no changes to the forecast with the latest update. Previous discussion follows: South winds will increase today into this evening ahead of an approaching cold front. The winds will remain below advisory levels...but gusts to 20 knots can be expected this afternoon and tonight. South-southwest winds will shift to west-northwest after daybreak on Friday. Seas may reach 5 feet outer portion later today and tonight...and 3-4 feet most location. Showers and thunderstorms will impact the waters this morning and moving from south to north but decreasing by late morning. Seas will be composed of a mix...south-southeast waves of 3 feet every 7 second and south-southwest waves of 1-2 feet every 4-5 seconds. Winds and seas will be locally high in and near thunderstorms. Short term /Friday through Saturday night/... as of 3 am Thursday...the period begins with a cold front moving off to the east of the waters. The sharp veer associated with frontal passage will give way to a more gradual veering of wind direction as high pressure/cool air spills southward across the eastern U.S. Friday night will also bring a category of speed increase in the cool surge. Too early to tell whether or not any headlines will be needed as model guidance wind speeds seems to have decreased slightly resulting in slightly lower seas in Swan output. Even so expect steep and choppy waves from all of the changing wind direction. High pressure continues to build in from the north on Saturday keeping the winds northerly but there should be a relaxation by Saturday night as ridge center draws closer. Long term /Sunday through Monday/... as of 3 am Thursday...high that builds in behind Friday cold front weakens as low pressure deepens and occludes New England coast. As the low becomes the dominant wind maker locally a northwest to west flow will be established but wind speeds may stay capped at 10 feet. Wind waves fairly diminutive with a little backswell developing from the storm. As this system pulls away to the NE and fills the gradient locally will start to be most defined by weak high developing over the west Atlantic and a light and more typical southerly component gets re-established. && Ilm watches/warnings/advisories... SC...none. NC...none. Marine...none. && $$ Near term...mjc/rek