
A dense fog advisory remains in effect until 10 AM EST this morning for parts of northeast Georgia, Piedmont North Carolina, and Upstate South Carolina, as reported by the National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC. According to the weather update, visibility is expected to be a quarter mile or less in dense fog areas, highlighting potentially hazardous driving conditions.
This morning's forecast in Charlotte, noted by the National Weather Service, paints a picture of widespread dense fog before 10 am which should give way to partly sunny skies with a high near 49 degrees and calm winds; tonight's weather brings a slight chance of rain after 4 am amidst patchy fog, with conditions expected to be mostly cloudy and a low around 36 degrees.
Looking ahead, tomorrow offers a 50 percent chance of rain, mainly before 1 pm, with persistent patchy fog expected to clear by 2 pm, yielding to mostly cloudy skies and a high near 44 degrees, whereas the National Weather Service advises northeast winds might run 6 to 10 mph, gusting as high as 21 mph; additional precipitation could range between a tenth and quarter of an inch.
Temperatures are anticipated to fall to the low 20s by tomorrow night, but clear skies prevail into Tuesday, offering full sunshine and highs in the low 40s, calm winds turning south southwest in the afternoon, for the rest of the week, forecasts indicate mostly clear nights and mild sunny days, with highs gradually warming to the mid-50s, and by Thursday night into Friday, rain chances spike to 40 percent followed by a 30 percent likelihood during the day on Friday.
The Hazardous Weather Outlook, also provided by the National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC, asserts that beyond today's dense fog advisory, no hazardous weather is expected from tomorrow through Saturday, a relief for travelers and residents alike following this morning's limited visibility, "Please listen to NOAA Weather Radio or go to weather.gov on the Internet for more information about the following hazards," they advise for continued updates on the dense fog and upcoming weather conditions.









