549 FXUS61 KCTP 041809 AFDCTPArea Forecast Discussion National Weather Service State College PA 209 PM EDT Sat Oct 4 2025
.SYNOPSIS... * Dry, pleasant early Autumn weather continue over this weekend and into early next week with well-above normal temperatures. * A cold front will push east across Pennsylvania late Tuesday into Wednesday morning bringing a few periods of showers. * Dry and cooler conditions return for the second half of next week with overnight low temperatures approaching the freezing mark in the northern tier and colder valleys of central PA.
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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... Dewpoints a few degs higher than fcst right now, but we are getting a little deeper mixed layer, seeing cu over South Mountain. Thus, they could drop rather quickly for late aftn. Otherwise, the main challenge tonight is just how much fog will form. Dewpoints will be higher by a little vs Sat AM, but so will be the temps. It won`t hurt to add a little fog in for the valleys of the N and Confluence since they have been fogging up the past few nights. Center of the sfc high slides east a little more overnight. Mins of 45-55F with 50F being most the common number.
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.SHORT TERM /SUNDAY/... Sfc high will continue to slide east a few furlongs and the sfc wind flow will be a little more consistently S during the daylight. Any morning fog will burn off even quicker than Sat AM. The upper ridge axis will be centered overhead on Sun, allowing for very little cirrus. The NAM mixed layer is very shallow right now and may be too shallow again Sun, so that explains the very much lower MOS guidance on MaxT vs the GFS/MAV guidance. The current GFS is closer to the current RAP mixed depth, so it may be handling the mixing better today/Sat. We are expecting that more-consistent S wind, too. So, we will be following mid-pack NBM maxes plus 1F.
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.LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/... The dry and warm pattern Sunday night through Monday night will give way to the next opportunity for rain by Tue-Wed as surface low pressure from the central US tracks northeastward into Ontario. The low will drag a cold front through the area, bringing some rainfall to central Pennsylvania.
While there should be decent moisture return ahead of the front, with PWAT values rising to the 1.25-1.4 inch range (~90th percentile for this time of year), there is still some uncertainty as to just how much rain will fall. Ensemble mean QPF is generally around 0.50-0.70 inches in northwest PA, with lesser amounts as you move south and east, but some of the deterministic guidance, namely the past few runs of the GFS, continue to show the potential for over an inch of rain over parts of central PA. This does not appear to be the most likely solution at this point, however, as most guidance shows the best synoptic scale forcing passing well to our north and more detached from the tropical moisture stream. Additionally, weak instability should help to limit rainfall rates.
All guidance shows high pressure building into the region at the surface and aloft in the wake of the cold front. This setup would allow for another spell of dry weather into the latter half of the week. With a 1030 mb surface high expected to be centered over the region Wednesday and Thursday nights, ideal radiational cooling conditions are anticipated with mainly clear skies and light winds. Temperatures will fall into the 30s and 40s both nights and frost formation is likely over the north and west. There is also some potential for temperatures to drop below freezing Wednesday night across the northern tier and colder valleys of central PA. Daytime high temperatures will be 5 to 10 degrees below normal, ranging from the upper 50s to the mid 60s.
Temperatures will return closer to normal for the end of the week and into the weekend as the surface high moves off to the east and southerly flow develops. There is quite a bit of spread in the guidance regarding the upper level pattern as we head into the weekend, but there appears to be at least some potential for showers to work their way back into the forecast for the Friday-Saturday timeframe.
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.AVIATION /18Z SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... Wind is very variable. Small local effects like heat islands and terrain-induced convective currents are driving which direction the wind (if any) is blowing from at any minute. Speeds are under 5KT, though. The air will calm down early this evening as we stratify/stabilize. Perhaps only BFD & JST could keep a 2-3KT S wind overnight. Next issue is (again) fog. Main points vs Sat AM conditions: 1) slightly higher dewpoints 2) Temps 2-7F milder. So, both these spell a lower chc for IFR and certainly LIFR at all terminals. Will still bring IPT down in the fcst for a few hrs around sunrise, though, based on past performances the last couple of nights. Limiting IFR from 09-1230Z, and tempo LIFR 10-12Z. Otherwise, VFR/SKC and not even cirrus on Sun. A more-consistent S sfc wind develops thanks to the center of the sfc high moving even farther E into the ocean. Sun night is similar to tonight, so there could still be a pocket or two of fog in the deepest valleys. But, odds for IPT going IFR Mon AM are even lower than tonight/Sun AM.
Outlook...
Mon...AM Fog (Mainly N PA); otherwise VFR.
Mon night...Incr clds, SHRA poss W toward sunrise.
Tue...Sct SHRA. TSRA poss W & S late.
Tue PM...CFROPA. SHRA. TSRA poss. IFR fog poss mainly NW.
Wed...Sct AM SHRA SE. Otherwise becoming VFR.
Thu...AM fog then VFR.
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.CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.
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SYNOPSIS...Lambert/Dangelo NEAR TERM...Dangelo SHORT TERM...Dangelo LONG TERM...Colbert/Bauco AVIATION...Dangelo
NWS CTP Office Area Forecast Discussion