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Weather forecasting and analysis, space and historic events, climate information

7:00 AM | A taste of summer through Thursday with a threat for showers and storms each day

Paul Dorian

6-Day Forecast

Today

Becoming partly sunny, very warm and humid, slight chance for a late day shower or thunderstorm, highs in the low-to-mid 80’s

Tonight

Mostly cloudy, mild, chance for showers and thunderstorms, upper 60’s

Wednesday

Partly sunny, very warm and humid, chance for showers and thunderstorms, low-to-mid 80’s

Wednesday Night

Mostly cloudy, mild, chance for showers and thunderstorms, mid-to-upper 60’s

Thursday

Mostly cloudy, warm and humid, showers and thunderstorms likely and some of the storms can be strong-to-severe, upper 70's

Friday

Mostly cloudy, cooler, chance for showers, low 70’s

Saturday

Mostly sunny, cool, near 70

Sunday

Partly sunny, cool, near 70

Discussion

A taste of summer will occur in the Mid-Atlantic region today, tomorrow and Thursday as temperatures will climb well up into the 80’s in many locations and humidity levels will become more reminiscent of the summertime. One of the main ingredients necessary for severe weather to occur in the central and eastern US is moisture-laden air from the Gulf of Mexico and that has been largely missing from this part of the country during the spring until the last several days. In fact, dew points on Monday climbed well up into the 60’s in the Mid-Atlantic region and they will hold at those rather high levels from today through Thursday. At the same time, a strong upper level feature will slide slowly eastward to the eastern states during the next few days and this combination of humid air with strong upper level support will generate severe weather today from the southern Plains to the Upper Midwest, in the Ohio Valley on Wednesday, and then perhaps in the Mid-Atlantic region later Thursday. A strong surface cold front will approach the east coast late Thursday and this will likely spark the formation of strong-to-severe thunderstorms from the Carolinas to New England.

Once the cold front passes off the east coast on Friday, strong Canadian high pressure will build into the Mid-Atlantic region and, similar to many previous springtime scenarios, colder-than-normal air will spread to the east with this high pressure system. As a result, it does not look like a warm "beach-type" weekend for coastal locations in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, and frost is not out of the question for some interior, higher elevation locations of the Northeast US. Generally cool and dry weather is likely to continue into the latter part of the Memorial Day weekend.

Video

httpv://youtu.be/cU7GdZBRwBU