Here is the latest Area Forecast Discussion for Central PA
This text statement is the latest forecast reasoning from the NWS in State College, PA
See the links at the bottom of the page for previous issuances/versions of the statement as well as our other text statements.
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651 FXUS61 KCTP 210935 AFDCTP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service State College PA 535 AM EDT Thu May 21 2026 .WHAT HAS CHANGED... * Slight decrease in rainfall total forecast for Fri-Sat. && .KEY MESSAGES... 1) Periods of light rain over south central PA today north of departing cold front. 2) Major cooldown into Saturday with widespread soaking rainfall near 1 inch late Friday and Saturday. && .DISCUSSION... KEY MESSAGE 1: Periods of light rain over south central PA today north of departing cold front. With a cold front slowly moving southward away from our region today, the right entrance region of an upper jet max to our north will move overhead, extending the chance for rain esp across the southeast (nearest the sfc front). Removed thunder from the grids as models are not suggesting any CAPE above the -10C level, but rain may be briefly moderate at times. This round of rain will end from NW to SE across the region - over the Central Mtns during the late morning to early afternoon, and across the Lower Susq Valley during late afternoon to early evening. Across the northern tier, there could be enough dry air moving in by this evening that radiative cooling would be quite effective tonight, bringing low temps into the upper 30s. Elsewhere, lows tonight will range from the 40s to near 50. ----------------------------------------------------------------- KEY MESSAGE 2: Major cooldown into Saturday with widespread soaking rainfall near 1 inch late Friday and Saturday. As high pressure moves from the Great Lakes to New England, we will see a lull in the precip for much of tonight and into the first part of Friday. Rain will begin to return from south to north during the daytime and evening on Friday. Model data shows the high pressure system channeling southward down the east side of the Appalachians, setting up a cold air damming (CAD) event heading into Memorial Day weekend. Combined with steady rainfall on Saturday, highs will likely be near daily record lows at several locations (mini-max), and only a few degrees warmer than the Sat morning lows. Wind gusts around 30 mph in the Laurels and NW mountains (SE flow) will make it feel especially raw. Guidance may be too optimistic in rebounding temps Sunday into Monday, but opted to keep baseline NBM for now. That said, the trend will be to warm with steadier rain giving way to more showery conditions for Sunday into Monday. NBM QPF has dropped a bit to near 1 inch for Fri-Sat. WPC has removed the MRGL ERO from our area. The cool/stable air will cap rates from becoming excessive. The forecast rainfall is much needed over the far south central/southeastern counties who remain under D1-D2 moderate to severe drought conditions. && .AVIATION /08Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... Anafrontal rain along cold front drifting south across the Mid- Atlantic will favor flight restrictions over the South-Central Mountains (KJST/KAOO) and Lower Susquehanna Valley (KMDT/KLNS) during the TAF period, with VFR favored across the North-Central Mountains (KUNV/KIPT) and Northern Tier (KBFD) where drier air has mixed into the lower levels farther behind the cold front. Periods of steadier rain are possible across the Lower Susquehanna Valley Thursday morning given elevated instability in place (HREF mean MUCAPE of 0-100 J/kg), providing some enhancement to rainfall rates with primary impact being visibilities to ~6 SM. Lightning threat is low with meager MUCAPE values favoring pockets of steadier rain vs. enhancement to thunderstorms, though isolated lightning (10-20% chance) is possible (primarily south of Mason- Dixon Line where MUCAPE values of marginally higher). Winds will trend easterly during the day on Thursday as slow- moving high pressure builds into New England, bringing cold air damming signature with cold front drifting south on the leeward side of the Alleghenies. A lull in rain activity is expected Thursday afternoon through Friday morning with the cold front shifting south of the region, followed by increasing rain chances south-to-north over the course of the day on Friday as low pressure moves across the Ohio Valley & slowly brings Mid- Atlantic frontal boundary northward as a warm front. Outlook... Fri...Restrictions likely with rain moving in from south to north, lasting into Fri night. Sat-Sun-Mon...Restrictions likely with rain. && .CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ WHAT HAS CHANGED...Colbert KEY MESSAGES...Lambert/Colbert DISCUSSION...Lambert/Colbert AVIATION...Teare |
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