…Remarkably quiet weather conditions will continues across most of the
country through the end of the week…
…Well above-average temperatures today across the Eastern U.S. and
across the central/southern U.S. through Friday…
Fairly uneventful fall weather will continue the remarkably dry weather
pattern across the Continental U.S. through the end of the work week. A
pair of fast moving, but fairly moisture starved frontal systems will
progress across the country with limited changes resulting in above to
well above average warm temperatures across the Southern Plains. A
potential for record daily temperature records remains today across the
Northeast and Mid-Atlantic before the first front slides through later
tonight into early Thursday morning; while near record heat expands from
the Southern Plains into the Lower Mississippi and Central Gulf Coast
states by Thursday into Friday.
The second frontal system is starting to press out of the Pacific into the
Northwest and Northern Rockies with limited shower and higher mountain
light snow showers today before pressing into the northern and central
Plains by Thursday. The only area of impactful cold will follow this front
across portions of the Northwest, where Frost advisories and Freeze
warnings are up for portions of western Oregon and far Northwest
California.
By Thursday, a few scattered showers may develop into isolated
thunderstorms across the Missouri Valley into the western Midwest mainly
after sunset. Further south stronger winds and lower humidity may be
conducive for an Elevated fire weather risk for Thursday across eastern
OK, southeast KS, southwest MO and far northwest AR; as highlighted by the
Storm Prediction Center.
Gallina
Graphics available at
https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php