Forecast Discussions mentioning any of "HRRR" "RAP" "RUC13" "RUC" "RR" received at GSD on 08/16/24


Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service La Crosse WI
1052 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Showers and storms persist into the evening hours today with gusty winds being possible in any stronger storms that develop. Additional showers and storms are likely (50-80% chance) for Friday. - Fog potential tonight into tomorrow morning east of the Mississippi River. - Slightly below normal temperatures through next week with sporadic shower and storm chances. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 309 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Rest of Today - Tonight: Showers and Storms This Evening, Fog Potential Overnight East of the Mississippi River The general synoptic setup this afternoon can be seen on GOES-16 water vapor imagery and 15.16z RAP 500mb heights with a surface low and corresponding upper-low situated on the ND/MN state line. As this low slowly works its way southeast, pieces of shortwave energy can be noted in the cyclonic flow, aiding convective initiation across the Great Plains and Midwest. Attention this afternoon turns to how much instability we have managed to build in order to aid convection as we approach peak heating. As of 1830z, noting some developing cumulus across portions of southeast MN leading to shower activity. Still some questions with how these showers will deepen over the coming hours though. While the 15.17z RAP continues to increase MLCAPE values to around 1000-2000 J/kg locally into the evening, currently satellite trends have kept a fairly persistent low-level cloud deck over much of the local area into the afternoon. As a result, ongoing convection could struggle to deepen with limited instability where cloud cover persisted. If storms are able to tap into more instability where clearing is present, DCAPE values of 600-900 J/kg in the 15.17z RAP would support an isolated threat for some stronger wind gusts as storms move east. With the aforementioned cloud cover lingering over portions of the area through peak heating this afternoon, particularly along and east of the Mississippi River, diurnal mixing processes likely will be minimized in these locations allowing low-level moisture to remain in place going into the overnight. Consequently, noting deterministic soundings developing a near surface inversion with this low-level moisture, particularly across southwestern Wisconsin. The main question will be if any cloud cover lingers into the overnight hours which could hinder any fog development. A key point of interest in the 15.12z HREF visibility probabilities overnight is there is minimal deviation between the 4 mile probabilities (40-70%) and the 1/4 mile probabilities (20-50%) in southwestern Wisconsin. As a result, areas that manage to develop fog would favor low visibilities that could lead to fog becoming locally dense before fog dissipates Friday morning. Friday: Seasonable With Additional Showers/Storms Likely Looking towards Friday, the previously stated low pressure system pushes southeast into north-central Wisconsin on Friday afternoon. Consequently, this will further instigate shower and storm development throughout much of the day on Friday. The overall setup generally shows a piece of vorticity associated with a subtle shortwave that progresses through the area during the late morning and early afternoon. As instability increases by afternoon, convection will develop along an associated surface boundary that will progressively push eastbound. With minimal 0-6km bulk shear in the 15.15z RAP to maintain any organized convection, storm mode will be very pulse-like in nature. The one caveat to the afternoon showers and storms tomorrow will be the possibility for any non-supercell funnels that can develop. With the vertically stacked low and a surface boundary pushing through the area, the non-supercell tornado parameter in the 15.15z RAP is highlighting portions of central and north-central Wisconsin with values greater than 1 during the afternoon. After this round of convection moves through during the early afternoon hours, limited instability in the 15.15z RAP would suggest limited able for deep convection to occur. However, given some of the CAMs holding onto showers later into the evening with marginal instability and weak pieces of energy pivoting around the low, held onto some precipitation chances through the evening (20-40% chance). Saturday - Wednesday: Continued Seasonable Temperatures With Spotty Shower and Storm Potential As we head into the weekend and next week, the aforementioned vertically stacked low will slowly continue to migrate eastward. As the associated trough axis becomes more neutrally tilted, a deepening ridge to our west will help posture our region in northwesterly flow pattern. Consequently, this will aid in keeping our temperatures near to slightly below average into next week. This is reflected in the 15.12z grand ensemble (GEFS/EC ensemble/Canadian ensemble) with median high temperatures trending in the middle 70s to lower 80s with inter- quartile spread of generally around 5 degrees through the first half of next week. Shower and storm chances will be possible with any shortwaves embedded in the flow but guidance currently having low confidence in how these may resolve at this time. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 1053 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Partly to mostly cloudy skies for the overnight period. Some areas of patchy fog will be possible, especially for areas along and east of the Mississippi. If enough clearing does take place, IFR and LIFR fog could develop, especially in the river valleys. There is currently between a 20 and 30% chance of these lower flight categories occurring overnight. Scattered showers and storms will be possible across the area from Friday late morning through the rest of the day. MVFR conditions are likely to occur during the afternoon with lower flight categories expected for Friday night due to low stratus clouds. Southwest winds will transition to northwest winds Friday afternoon with some gusts between 15 and 25kts, especially in southeast Minnesota and northeast Iowa. && .ARX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... WI...None. MN...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Naylor AVIATION...Cecava
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Bismarck ND
946 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated thunderstorms possible, with mainly rain showers east of Highway 3, through this evening. The threat for severe weather is low. - Areas of wildfire smoke to return across the west today, then across the west and central tonight through Friday. - Warmer weather, with limited chances (20 to 40%) for precipitation, is anticipated Friday into early next week. && .UPDATE... Issued at 945 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Showers over the eastern portions of the forecast area are now generally found over the southern James River Valley, and have begun to scatter out while continuing its southeastward trajectory. The earlier isolated showers and storms across central North Dakota have also generally dissipated, with no lightning detected across the area over the past few hours. The visibility reductions due to surface wildfire smoke previously found across much of western North Dakota are now found mainly in the southwest. Another push of smoke is beginning to move out of the southern Canadian Prairies, with visibility reductions as far south as Yorkton and smoke evident on satellite imagery, and is expected to begin to move into the northwest over the next few hours before lingering overnight. Winds remain northerly and have generally begun to diminish, except in the far southeast where showers linger and sustained speeds from 15 to 25 knots, and gusts up to 30 knots can be found. The forecast remains on track at this time. UPDATE Issued at 650 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 A broad area showers that are wrapped around a low pressure center to the east of the forecast area linger over the southern James River Valley at the time of this early evening update. Rainfall rates remain fairly low, less than one-tenth of an inch a hour. A few short-lived thunderstorms continue to form off of the pseudo dryline moving in from the northeast, mainly over north central North Dakota. The previously mentioned elevated Non-Supercell Tornado parameter continues to diminish this evening which, along with the very short-lived nature of these thunderstorms, continues to limit the chances to funnel or landspout development over our area. Some visibility reductions due to surface smoke continue over the west, though the bulk of the smoke has already progressed much further south than suggested by either the HRRR or RAP smoke models for this time. Will continue to monitor the trends of these visibility reductions. At this time of this update, we have cancelled the Flood Advisory present over portions of Dickey and LaMoure counties as floodwater continue to recede. Otherwise, have made a few tweaks to the sky grids to account for the latest satellite trend. The forecast remains on track. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 302 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Wrapped up upper level low will continue to bring showers and perhaps an isolated thunderstorm across eastern portions through this evening. This will mainly be for areas along and east of Highway 3. Meanwhile, abundant instability across central and northern portions could lead to some pulse like thunderstorms through this evening. WPC has analyzed a cold front in northwestern ND currently, although this appears to be more of a pseudo dry line moving through. This front could be the focus for a few stronger storms through this evening. Shear is lacking, with up to 20 knots currently found in the CWA. Lapse rates are also lacking. Thus severe hail is not anticipated at this time, although small hail is possible. The wind threat is also minimal, although inverted v soundings could indicate some elevated wind gusts are possible as the pulse thunderstorms collapse. Of concern with the upper low, steep low level lapse rates, some low level shear, and some low level CAPE there could perhaps be some brief funnel clouds near any more robust updrafts from todays convection. Non Super Cell Tornado parameter is also elevated currently on SPC`s meso analysis page. The pulse nature of these storms may not give enough residence time for a funnel cloud or brief landspout to setup, although it is possible. Behind this mentioned boundary is starting to see some wildfire smoke filter into the state. This could impact the northwest through the evening. Tonight, thunderstorms should diminish shortly after sunset, while showers may linger in the southeast. Smoke will continue to filter into the west and north, perhaps reducing visibility through the night. RH values will approach 100 percent, although winds may be elevated enough to hinder fog development tonight. Thus have left fog out for now. Lows tonight will be in the mid 50s to mid 60s. Upper low will continue to push eastward Friday. This could perhaps bring some showers to the southeast, with slight PoPs now in the forecast. Smoke will also continue to filter into the state a high pressure builds into the area through the day. Smoke may linger into Friday night as well. Highs will be still remain slightly be low normal and generally in the mid 70s to lower 80s. A weak warm front may then lift across the state on Saturday which could bring some showers and thunderstorms, mainly across the west. Shear is elevated, although instability is limited. There could be an isolated stronger storm as a result, and will have to monitor for anything stronger. Temperatures should warm with this front, into the 80s west and upper 70s east. Upper level ridge builds more overhead on Sunday bringing mainly clear skies and more warming temperatures. Perhaps some mid to upper 80s will be found as a result in the central and west, with lower 80s east. Clusters then have this ridge set up in the central US and flatten at some point. How far north this flattens will determine thunderstorm chances. If this flattens more over ND, then daily thunderstorm chances are possible, and could possibly be strong. This ridge also bring higher confidence in warmer temperatures in the 80s to perhaps lower 90s at least through mid week. This could also keep overnight lows near normal. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 650 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 For the 00Z TAF period, mainly VFR conditions are anticipated at KXWA and KBIS. At the terminals of KMOT and KJMS, MVFR to VFR ceilings are expected through Friday morning as a broad area of precipitation continues to where a broad area of precipitation wraps around a lower pressure to the east of the forecast area. A few showers and thunderstorms are also developing across central North Dakota along a pseudo dryline pushing in from the northwest, and may occasionally impact the terminals of KBIS and KMOT through this evening. At KDIK, wildfire smoke is occasionally promoting MVFR visibilities at the time of this update. Near surface smoke models have not been capturing these visibility reductions particularly well, so while near surface wildfire smoke is expected to filter across the west and central overnight, confidence is too low to add visibility reductions due to the smoke any other site at this time. Moderate winds out of the north-northwest will generally diminish through this evening and overnight, except in the southwest, including at the terminal of KJMS, where moderate winds from 15 to 20 knots, and gusts up to 25 knots are anticipated to continue through the early Friday afternoon. && .BIS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ UPDATE...Adam DISCUSSION...Anglin AVIATION...Adam
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Boise ID
856 PM MDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .DISCUSSION...Showers and thunderstorms ended rapidly this evening as a short wave trough in Oregon moved into eastern WA. Warmer weather will occur the next two days as upper flow changes from west to southwest Friday, and to nearly southerly Saturday. High temps Saturday will be 95-100 degrees in the lower southern valleys. Monsoon moisture will be kept east of our CWA so skies will be mostly clear. Today`s rain cleared some of the smoke, but HRRR model shows it clearing even more during the next two days, especially in southern areas Saturday. Smoke will continue, however, near the fires to the north and northeast of Boise. Current forecast is in good shape. No updates. && .AVIATION...VFR, except localized MVFR/IFR and mountain obscuration near wildfires. Surface winds: variable 10 kt or less overnight, then SW to NW 5-10 kt Friday afternoon. Winds aloft at 10kft MSL: SW 10-20 kt. KBOI...VFR. Haze from distant wildfires. Surface winds: light and variable overnight, then NW 5-10 kt Friday afternoon. Weekend Outlook...VFR, except localized MVFR/IFR and mountain obscuration near wildfires. High density altitude due to hot temperatures, mainly Saturday. South-southwest winds aloft of 20-40 kt will produce gusty afternoon winds Sat/Sun across SE Oregon and mountains of SW Idaho. && .PREV DISCUSSION... SHORT TERM...Tonight through Saturday night...A shortwave is moving across eastern Oregon this afternoon, and is the focus of showers and thunderstorms. The showers and thunderstorms will slowly move NE tonight as the shortwave exits the area. Main threats of storms will be gusty outflow winds to 50 mph, areas of blowing dust, and new fire starts. Some of the high resolution guidance still shows remnant thunderstorm outflows moving across the Treasure Valley late this afternoon and evening as the showers and storms weaken. Conditions dry out tonight after sunset. Another weak disturbance brings a slight chance of thunderstorms on Friday afternoon mainly north of a line from southern Baker County OR to Banner Summit. Higher terrain of SE Oregon could see cumulus buildups but otherwise the area remains dry with high temperatures holding a few degrees below normal. Strong southwest flow develops on Saturday as a trough digs south along the Pacific Northwest coast. Temperatures warm to around 5-10 degrees above normal with 95-100 in the Snake Basin on Saturday. Southwest flow will bring breezy and unstable conditions especially during the afternoons, where a fire weather watch has been issued. LONG TERM...Sunday through Thursday...A trough will remain off the Pacific Northwest coast and a strong ridge over CO/NM will keep strong southwest flow going over the region through the long term. Southwest Idaho and southeast Oregon will remain in a dry slot, with hot, very dry, and windy conditions expected through the long term. Temperatures will be around normal to 5 degrees above normal through the period. Monsoon moisture should stay east of Twin Falls through the period. && .BOI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ID...Red Flag Warning until 10 PM MDT this evening IDZ402-403. Fire Weather Watch from Saturday afternoon through Saturday evening IDZ401>403-421. Fire Weather Watch from Saturday afternoon through Saturday evening IDZ423-426. OR...Red Flag Warning until 10 PM MDT /9 PM PDT/ this evening ORZ636-637-646. Fire Weather Watch from Saturday afternoon through Saturday evening ORZ636-637. && $$ www.weather.gov/Boise Interact with us via social media: www.facebook.com/NWSBoise www.twitter.com/NWSBoise DISCUSSION...LC AVIATION.....SH SHORT TERM...KA LONG TERM....KA
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Boston/Norton MA
1039 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Scattered showers thunderstorms will end this evening. Dry weather returns Friday and will continue Saturday for all but far western portions of southern New England. A slow moving front will lead to unsettled weather Sunday through Tuesday. A drying trend with seasonable temperatures are expected for the middle of next week. Meanwhile, Hurricane Ernesto will track well southeast of New England, but it will bring rough surf and strong rip currents to south facing ocean beaches this weekend. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/... Latest SPC mesoanalysis showed the convective environment weakening rapidly late this evening. The last few runs of the RAP were handling the lingering convection the best, but did make some tweaks from there to account for observed trends. Expecting rainfall to end between 11 PM and 2 AM. Minor tweaks to temperatures as well. 8 PM Update... Widespread convection across eastern southern New England has mostly diminished, with some isolated convective cells moving into western MA from the CT River Valley in VT/NH. These storms have already begun to weaken with sunset around 745pm, and should continue to do so as instability wanes. With a lot of residual moisture, with radar QPF estimates topping 5" in parts of SE MA and the Cape!, and light ENE to calm winds, do expect fog to form, especially east of Worcester. In fact, we have already seen a bit of fog develop around the office. The remains uncertainty in how low vsbys will go overnight, with some guidance, like the GLAMP, hinting at widespread 1/4sm fog, and other guidance taking a much more moderate approach of vsby reductions to 2-3SM. 245 pm update... Convection developing, so far along the sea breeze boundary along the south coast and higher terrain in western MA and CT. Also watching the cluster of t-storms just to the north that is in association with the shortwave dropping south. Temperatures aloft are fairly chilly (-14 to -16C at 500mb), so some small hail is to be expected with the storms. Sub cloud layer is also rather dry, so that will enhance the potential of seeing localized downbursts/gusty winds with the strongest storms. DCAPE values are running 800-1000 J/kg, which is fairly notable. Otherwise, winds in the atmosphere aren`t all that strong, so shear is minimal, meaning we shouldn`t see organization with the thunderstorms. They`ll tend to be more pulse variety. Hi-res CAMs still not doing all that great with the convective forecasts, so took a more broadbrush approach with the PoP forecast through the evening. Expect the activity to quickly weaken as we get closer to sunset, so the strongest activity should be between now (as I type this, not necessarily as you read it) and 6pm. For the rest of the night, it should be quiet. We will likely have some patchy fog develop given the light winds, especially in any areas that receive rain through this evening. && .SHORT TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT/... 245 pm update... Looks like a quiet day. Ridging will be building in aloft. Some of the hi-res models suggest a shower or two could develop across the higher terrain of the Berkshires. At this point, kept the chances less than 10%. Surface winds will be light, so sea breezes will develop by late morning along the coast. Thus immediate coastal locations will remain cooler than inland. 850mb temperatures will be running around 15C, which would support high temperatures in the mid 80s in most areas (except cooler along the coast). Quiet weather into Friday night as well. Could be some patchy fog in a few spots. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... 300 pm update... Key Points * Generally dry first half of the weekend with a chance for some pop up showers across interior SNE * Unsettled late Sunday into early next workweek with slow moving front swinging through the northeast * Drying trend appears to develop mid next week with seasonable temperatures Saturday and Sunday... Guidance continues to trend drier for Saturday with mid level ridging parked over southern New England through late Saturday evening; before the ridge moves seaward overnight and into Sunday. Southerly flow will yield increasing moisture with PWATs climbing back towards 1.5". Can`t rule out a few diurnal showers across the terrain of interior southern New England but it should be a dry day for most. Temperatures will be seasonable, in the upper 70s to mid 80s, but climbing dewpoints, into the mid/upper 60s, will result in some mugginess. Ridge slowly moves east of the region on Sunday, though likely influences a mainly dry day, ahead of approaching cold front/trough moving east from the Great Lakes region. With the slowing departure of the ridge and delayed arrival of the front, thinking the best forcing arrives over SNE overnight, after instability wanes. Thus, the Sunday afternoon thunderstorm threat looks to be best to our southwest of our region. This is corroborated by the CSU Severe Probabilities which also keeps the wind threat to our southwest. This aforementioned trough comes in time to help steer Hurricane Ernesto away from our region, though we expect coastal impacts, such as high rip risks and high surf, to begin to impact the region the second half of the weekend. Monday into Tuesday... With a later shift in guidance, the best chance for widespread rain and thunderstorms will come on Monday. Prefrontal PWATs will climb to as high as 1.8-2", which will result in numerous showers and embedded downpours through the day; though, again the threat for the most precipitation looks to be west of Worcester. Ensemble probabilities don`t hint at a tremendous amount of precipitation to be associated with the front, with both the GEFS and ECMWF probs of 1" of QPF maxing out around 30% across the high terrain. CAPE looks to rise to between 1500-2000J/kg on Monday which should provide enough "juice" to initiated scattered thunderstorms. We will need to keep an eye on the severe threat, with the CSU day 5 probs highlighting a low wind threat for the region on Monday. Front should pass by early Tuesday which will yield generally improving conditions. Much drier air is expected to filter in behind the front, falling to as low as 0.5" by late Tuesday evening. Mid week and beyond... Substantial ridging develops over the central CONUS mid week, though we generally remain on the lee side of the ridge, which should help us avoid the worst of the potential heat. It will also yield a mainly dry mid week and beyond. && .AVIATION /03Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... Forecast Confidence Levels: Low - less than 30 percent. Moderate - 30 to 60 percent. High - greater than 60 percent. Moderate confidence through tonight. High confidence Friday. Isolated showers will persist through ~04-06Z. Forecast guidance is indicating fog developing in areas later tonight, and suspect the areas that see fog is where it rained earlier today. Some of that fog could result in IFR visibility and ceilings if it gets thick enough. Winds will be light overnight. For Friday, VFR. More light surface winds, so sea breezes will develop by late morning. VFR continues Friday night, with potential for local MVFR/IFR in any patchy fog. KBOS TAF...Moderate Confidence. There is potential for MVFR or IFR conditions to develop after 06z with fog and stratus. If it does develop, it will be out by 12z. Seabreeze should develop about 14z Friday. KBDL TAF...Moderate Confidence. VFR conditions prevail. Could be some MVFR in fog very late tonight. Outlook /Saturday through Tuesday/... Saturday: VFR. Saturday Night: VFR. Slight chance SHRA. Sunday: Mainly VFR, with local MVFR possible. Slight chance SHRA. Sunday Night: Mainly VFR, with local IFR possible. Chance SHRA, isolated TSRA. Monday: Mainly MVFR, with local IFR possible. Chance SHRA, slight chance TSRA. Monday Night: Mainly VFR, with local IFR possible. Chance SHRA, slight chance TSRA. Tuesday: Mainly VFR, with local IFR possible. Slight chance SHRA. && .MARINE... Forecaster Confidence Levels: Low - less than 30 percent. Medium - 30 to 60 percent. High - greater than 60 percent. 300 pm update... Through Friday Night...High Confidence. Light winds through Friday night. Only aspect of the forecast that mariners need to be aware of is the expected increase in swells starting Friday night and lasting into Monday. These swells and associated increased wave heights will be from Hurricane Ernesto. The swells will also be of very long period (13 to 16 seconds), so this will also result in strong rip currents and high surf developing along south facing coast lines. This may also result in rough conditions at the entrances to inlets and harbors. Outlook /Saturday through Tuesday/... Saturday: Winds less than 25 kt. Areas of seas approaching 5 ft. Saturday Night: Winds less than 25 kt. Seas up to 5 ft. Sunday: Winds less than 25 kt. Areas of rough seas. Sunday Night: Winds less than 25 kt. Areas of rough seas. Slight chance of rain showers. Monday: Winds less than 25 kt. Areas of rough seas. Chance of rain showers, isolated thunderstorms. Monday Night through Tuesday: Winds less than 25 kt. Seas up to 5 ft. Slight chance of rain showers. && .BOX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. MA...Air Quality Alert until midnight EDT Friday night for MAZ002>004-008>012. RI...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...KS/Nash NEAR TERM...Belk/KS/Nash SHORT TERM...Nash LONG TERM...KS AVIATION...Belk/KS/Nash MARINE...KS/Nash
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Billings MT
244 PM MDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .DISCUSSION... This afternoon through Friday night... A ridge at 500 mb will slide eastward tonight, with the ridge axis reaching the MT/Dakota border by 6 AM MDT Friday. To the west of the ridge axis, southwesterly cyclonic flow will move over our area and facilitate the development of isolated-scattered showers and thunderstorms, first over the mountains this afternoon, then across most of south central MT tonight (20-70% chance, greatest in the mountains). Instability and wind shear are low, so not expecting severe weather at this time. On Friday, our area will continue to be under southwesterly, cyclonic flow aloft with additional disturbances moving through the flow. This pattern will facilitate additional isolated to scattered shower and thunderstorm activity over much of the area (20-50% chance, greatest north of Billings). A ridge should return at 500 mb Friday night, causing shower and thunderstorm activity to diminish from west to east. Low temperatures will generally be in the 50s to lower 60s tonight and Friday night. High temperatures will mainly be in the 80s to lower 90s Friday. Smoke: there will be smoke in the atmosphere into Friday. HRRR shows greater smoke concentrations near the surface probably over eastern MT. Smoke could decrease over the Beartooth/Absaroka Mountains tonight-Friday as southwesterly winds aloft push the smoke out of that area. RMS Saturday through Thursday... The extended forecast features above normal temperatures with continued chances of precipitation as monsoonal moisture returns to the region under a developing ridge aloft. On Saturday, the upper ridge will begin to build back in over the region as a low pressure system digs south off the west coast of the United States. The return flow of monsoonal moisture will remain south of our area Saturday, so warm and dry conditions are in the forecast. On Sunday, the monsoonal moisture looks to return along with the chance of precipitation in the afternoon and evening across portions of the area (15-50% chance mainly west of Billings, highest in the mountains). Sunday also looks to be the warmest day of the weekend with high temperatures reaching into the low to mid 90s. The hot conditions with periodic chances of precipitation will then continue Monday through Thursday as the upper level weather pattern looks to stay relatively consistent. With that said, uncertainty does exist in how the pattern will evolve into the end of the week. This uncertainty impacts temperatures and placement of precipitation across the region, so this is something to watch as we progress into next week. Arends && .AVIATION... While VFR conditions will prevail today, lofted wildfire smoke will continue to reduce slant range visibility at times. With this, surface impacts from the smoke remain uncertain. Weather stations in northern Montana have seen reductions in surface visibility from the smoke today, and some of these impacts could move south into southeastern Montana. At this time, airports around KMLS and KBHK have the best chance of seeing surface visibility reductions below 10 miles. Too much uncertainty remains at KBIL for any mention to be added into their TAF. Outside of smoke, isolated showers and thunderstorms will move over the mountains around KLVM this evening. This activity could produce local MVFR with brief gusty winds at KLVM. Arends && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMP/POPS... Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu ----------------------------------------------------------- BIL 059/087 059/090 062/094 064/093 062/094 061/091 060/086 12/T 10/U 01/U 12/W 21/U 11/U 11/B LVM 049/083 049/088 054/091 056/090 054/090 053/088 052/083 63/T 30/U 02/T 14/T 22/T 12/T 22/W HDN 057/089 056/092 060/096 063/094 060/094 058/093 058/088 12/T 10/U 00/U 12/W 21/U 11/U 11/U MLS 057/087 062/090 063/093 067/094 063/091 061/090 061/086 01/H 20/U 00/U 12/T 21/U 11/U 21/U 4BQ 058/088 060/092 063/095 066/093 064/093 061/093 061/089 02/T 20/U 00/U 02/T 21/U 10/U 11/B BHK 054/084 057/089 060/090 061/089 060/089 059/089 058/085 00/H 21/U 00/U 11/B 31/U 10/U 21/U SHR 053/088 053/092 059/094 061/091 059/092 057/093 058/088 12/T 00/U 01/U 13/T 21/U 11/U 11/B && .BYZ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MT...None. WY...None. && $$ weather.gov/billings
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Cleveland OH
948 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .SYNOPSIS... A warm front will lift northeast across the area on Friday as low pressure slowly approaches from the northwest. This low pressure will drift east through the weekend, dragging a cold front across the area Saturday. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/... 930 PM...Radar returns continue to be apparent across portions of North and Northwest Ohio this evening, though much of this activity remains light with the dry low- level air mass in place. Slightly heavier rain exists just south of the area across central OH. Otherwise, we`ll be watching how convection evolves across eastern IA/IL this evening and overnight ahead of an upper-level trough evident on water vapor imagery. Still some uncertainty on the eastward extent of this convective activity, though there exists the potential for a few thunderstorms Friday morning across Northwest Ohio. Previous Discussion... Low pressure currently over Minnesota will drift towards northern lower Michigan by late Friday night. Ahead of this low a warm front will lift northeast across the area on Friday. An initial cold front (with little airmass change) will cross from west to east Friday night with a shortwave aloft crossing through the southern Great Lakes Friday afternoon/evening. Moist isentropic lift ahead of the warm front is supporting clouds and light rain showers into parts of western Ohio. While dry low-levels are in place ahead of this light rain, at least some of it is reaching the ground. Expect thicker clouds and potential for a few light rain showers to slowly spread east through tonight, though progress will likely slow for several hours later this evening into the overnight as the rain will struggle to push east into the departing high pressure. There will be another (greater) push of showers as the warm front lifts in very late tonight into Friday morning from west to east. We should see a period of relatively drier weather spread in from the west/southwest behind the warm front into the afternoon on Friday. By mid to late-afternoon, any heating will result in some destabilization which should allow showers and thunderstorms to increase in coverage as the shortwave moves through the region and adds some large-scale lift. Storms will be favored across parts of Northeast OH/Northwest PA in proximity to the warm front, with additional activity trying to spread in from the west during the late afternoon or evening ahead of the approaching cold front. Shower and storm chances will continue to work east across the area Friday night as the cold front moves through, though the overall coverage and intensity should gradually diminish after sunset. The environment will Friday afternoon and evening will feature relatively skinny CAPE due to weak mid-level lapse rates with modest wind shear. Overall, about 25 knots of deep-layer shear and 750-1500 J/KG of MLCAPE can be expected. While a couple of stronger storms may produce gusty to locally damaging winds thanks to 700-1000 J/KG of DCAPE and somewhat steep low-level lapse rates of 7-8C/km, feel like the severe threat is on the lower end. The SPC has maintained a Day 2 "Marginal Risk" (level 1/5) for severe weather for Friday afternoon-evening. Skinny instability profiles and precipitable water values climbing to 1.75-2.00" will support efficient rain rates with convection Friday afternoon and evening, so if some training or back- building occurs (as the HRRR and ARW hint at) there could be a localized heavy rain/flooding concern too. Any localized severe weather or flooding threats will diminish with time after sunset Friday night. Lows tonight will be milder than the last several, generally ranging from the mid 60s to near 70. Highs on Friday will reach the lower to upper 80s with increasing humidity. The coverage of clouds and rain with the warm frontal passage will influence those highs. With muggy dew points, lows will struggle to fall much below the upper 60s to near 70 Friday night. && .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/... A wet and active pattern will dominate this weekend as a surface low meanders east across the Great Lakes region. On Saturday, an upper level trough will continue to dig south across the region as an occluding low approaches the central Great Lakes. A cold front associated with this low will depart to the east early Saturday with some showers and thunderstorms lingering across eastern portions of the CWA. The aforementioned low will persist over the region, resulting in winds behind the departing front remaining from the southwest and continuing to advect moisture and warmer temperatures into the area.An 850mb LLJ of 20-30 knots and upper level support from a shortwave moving on the periphery of the trough will enhance the chance for shower and thunderstorm potential through Saturday afternoon ahead of a secondary cold front. Daytime heating should aid in enhancing instability across the area with models generally suggesting an average of 1500 J/kg by 18Z Saturday with 0-6km bulk shear of 20-30 knots. These conditions should lead to an increase risk of severe weather Saturday afternoon into the evening hours which SPC has highlighted in a Day 3 Marginal with the primary threat remaining strong winds. There are some potential limiting factors however that make this forecast less confident, including how the overnight/morning convection and lingering clouds will impact the area by increasing stability which will likely be enhanced if the initial cold front slows at all. The other aspect is the exact location of the low pressure center over the region. There remains a bit of a spread in model agreement with some placing the low closer to Lake Erie while others place it closer to over Lake Huron which will impact the location of the features described above. In addition to the severe threat, PWAT values of 1.5-1.8 inches and warm cloud depths greater than 10kft will present another chance for locally heavy rainfall and potential flooding. As a result, WPC has placed portions of the area in a Day 3 Marginal ERO. By Saturday night, showers and thunderstorms will linger across the area, but the severe threat will diminish once the sun goes down. The aforementioned low will continue to very slowly move east through Sunday, finally reaching the New England area Sunday night. With the placement and continued upper level support from a deepening trough, chances of showers and isolated thunderstorms will persist through the entire period, gradually tapering from west to east Sunday night. Less confidence exists for any chance of severe weather or heavy rainfall on Sunday as the generally flow become northwesterly and colder air begins to push south. Will need to continue to monitor the pattern given the uncertainty of the low placement. High temperatures on Saturday will climb into the upper 70s to low 80s, possibly warming a tad more in areas where there is any cloud breaks. Once winds shift to northwesterly for Sunday, CAA will return highs to the mid to upper 70s. Overnight lows through the period will be in the low 60s. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... Lingering showers and storms may persist across the eastern CWA as the aforementioned low continues to slowly drift northeast towards Nova Scotia. By Monday evening, high pressure should become dominant across the entire area and end the potential for precipitation from Monday night through Thursday. With the presence of a Canadian high pressure over the area, temperatures will remain a bit cooler Monday through Wednesday with highs climbing into the low to mid 70s and then will slightly warm near the end of the period into the upper 70s. Overnight lows will drop into the 50s. && .AVIATION /00Z Friday THROUGH Tuesday/... VFR across the TAF sites this evening with primarily VFR to persist through much of the TAF period. Will be primarily dealing with a lot of light rain showers with minimal impact expected in the first half of the TAF period. Non- VFR appears more likely towards the end of the TAF period Friday afternoon and evening, though confidence remains low on thunderstorm timing and location. Have added vcts at the central and eastern TAF sites in this update, excluding TOL/FDY since confidence in afternoon/evening thunderstorms is lower along the I-75 corridor. Thunderstorms could be strong at times Friday afternoon and evening, with the primary threat being wind. Otherwise, ceilings should remain above 3kft for the most part, though can`t rule out brief drops between 2 to 3kft in any heavier showers or thunderstorms. Winds will generally favor a east to southeast direction this evening and overnight, around 5 knots. Winds will gradually shift more towards the southeast and eventually south by Friday afternoon, 10 to 12 knots. Outlook...Non-VFR possible in periods of showers and thunderstorms Friday night through Monday, especially in the afternoon and evening hours. Widespread non-VFR appears most likely in low ceilings on Sunday into Monday. && .MARINE... Easterly winds of 5-10 knots this afternoon will gradually become southeasterly at 10-15 knots by Friday morning. A warm front associated with a low pressure system over the western Great Lakes will move north across the lake on Friday resulting in winds gradually becoming more southerly at 10-15 knots. The aforementioned low pressure system will slowly drift east across the region, becoming centered near Lake Erie on Saturday. This will increase the gradient across Lake Erie and result in winds increasing from the southwest to 15-20 knots. This flow will keep the largest waves isolated to the northern lakeshore. As the low shifts towards New England late Sunday into Monday, a northerly flow will become established at 15-20 knots with waves building to 4-6 feet along the near shore. The entire period from Saturday through Monday will potentially need a Small Craft Advisory. By Tuesday of next week, high pressure will return to the region, weakening variable winds to 5-10 knots. && .CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...None. PA...None. NY...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Sullivan NEAR TERM...Kahn/Sullivan SHORT TERM...Campbell LONG TERM...Campbell AVIATION...Kahn MARINE...Campbell
Area Forecast Discussion...UPDATED
National Weather Service Quad Cities IA IL
814 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - A severe risk remains through 11 pm timeframe with isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms. Hail and damaging winds are the main threats. - A pattern change will bring mainly quiet weather to the area Saturday night through next Thursday. Temperatures look to be near normal. && .UPDATE... Issued at 813 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Severe Thunderstorm Watch 623 remains in effect for southeast Iowa and northeast Missouri until 11 PM CDT tonight. Storms continue to develop across the area ahead of a eastward moving cold front but have struggled to strengthen to severe limits in eastern Iowa and northeast Missouri. An inversion exists on the 00 UTC DVN sounding around 840 mb. There are steeper lapse rates above the inversion resulting in most unstable CAPE to around 2800 J/KG. Model soundings do show a cooling or weakening of the inversion. Low level flow is weak but mid to upper level flow is faster resulting in 0 to 6 km shear of 40 to 45 knots mostly in the mid to upper levels. CAMs have been supportive of some increase in coverage of these storms through 10 PM. Think that hail and damaging winds are the main threat from any storms that intensify this evening. Winds are forecast to remain light across the area tonight and given recent rains and abundant low level moisture patchy to areas of fog are possible tonight after 3 AM. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/... Issued at 258 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Tonight, uncertainty remains with possible storm development after 6 pm in western parts of the CWA. Trends of the HRRR have been to delay the time of development, which is now showing closer to 6 or 7 in our western CWA. The NAMNEST has only shown some activity in the far SW after 8 pm. MUCAPE values of 2 to 3K J/kg build into the area late this afternoon and evening. This, along with mid level lapse rates over 7 C/km and moderate shear, will all some supercells to be possible with strong winds, hail, and tornadoes all a threat. The caveat is whether the clouds that have been over the area most of the day will clear in time for needed heating for development. Some temps in the low 80s are seen in south central IA as of 2 pm. Moisture is plentiful, with dew points in the lower and middle 70s area wide. Due to these uncertainties, kept POPs in the chance category. As for timing, it looks like areas west of the MS River will see activity from 6 pm to 10 PM, with the eastern CWA seeing it 9 pm to about midnight or 1 am. Overnight, any showers or storms will exit to the east. Some patchy fog is possible overnight, but left mention out of grids for now. Lows will be in the 60s. Friday, a secondary cold front will sweep across the area as the surface low moves across northern WI. Sunshine will prevail south of Highway 30, while clouds and even some shower and thunderstorm chances will be possible to the north. SPC has NW IL in a marginal risk area for wind gusts and hail. Highs will top out in the lower 80s north to upper 80s south. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... Issued at 258 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Largely quiet weather dominates the Quad Cities CWA in the long term as the upper low currently situated over the ND/MN border slowly migrates east over the next several days putting the area into northwest flow. Temperatures are expected to sit generally right around average through Tuesday with highs in the upper 70s/lower 80s and lows in the upper 50s/lower 60s. Temperatures, combined with manageable humidity levels (especially early next week), should make for overall pleasant weather. The focus over this weekend will be on the upper low Saturday as it pushes into Lower Michigan, which could provide enough forcing for a few wrap-around showers over the far eastern portions of our area. The most favored time for shower activity comes during the daytime hours on Saturday. Still, generally low chances (<35%) of precipitation exist, so not expecting anything in the way of widespread rainfall. Shower chances diminish Sunday and beyond as the upper low exits and high pressure builds in. Mid-level ridging builds in by midweek which will nudge temperatures back up into the upper 80s late week. Siemianowski && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 632 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 TAFs are currently VFR ahead of a cold front that is moving across central Iowa. Isolated showers and thunderstorms are possible through 06 UTC with the best chance currently at KCID from 1 to 3 UTC. Periods of MVFR to IFR conditions are possible in any showers and storms. Stronger thunderstorms could produce winds up to 40 knots but confidence is low on what TAF sites this would occur at. Conditions will improve to VFR after 06 UTC and continue through the remainder of the period. Winds will turn to the west behind the front with gusts up to 20 knots possible after 15 UTC on Thursday. && .DVN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IA...None. IL...None. MO...None. && $$ UPDATE...Cousins SHORT TERM...14 LONG TERM...12/14 AVIATION...Cousins
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Glasgow MT
246 PM MDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .DISCUSSION... KEY MESSAGES: - Surface smoke moving in from Canadian wildfires has prompted a Dense Smoke Advisory and Air Quality Alert through Friday afternoon. - A wetter Friday is in store for much of northern Montana, with the greatest chances for a wetting rain highest across Phillips County (40% to 60% chance of exceedance). - Hint of a line of storms developing across the island ranges Friday afternoon with severe wind gusts being the biggest concern. - A slight warming trend through the weekend brings the return of widespread highs in the 90s. WEATHER PATTERN OVERVIEW: A 500 hPa trough in the Gulf of Alaska will move south in the next 24 hrs, parking itself off the Washington coastline, cutting off from the jet stream, while a shortwave trough traverses the Great Plains and parking itself in the ECONUS, setting up an Omega Block pattern. Being downstream of the western-most cutoff low pressure will lead to enhanced upper-level divergence and increased PoP chances across northern Montana on Friday. The probability of a wetting rain (at least a tenth of an inch of rainfall) on Friday ranges from 40% to 60% across the western half of the CWA, and 20% to 40% south and east of Glasgow. For Friday afternoon and evening, some CAMs are hinting of a line of showers and thunderstorms (possibly with some bowing hinted in the 16th 00Z HRRR run). Latest RAP13 forecast soundings in our western zones show relatively dry low and mid- levels, indicative of severe wind gust concerns. Will have to monitor this trend carefully. By Saturday, 500 hPa heights increase, leading to drier conditions and temperatures increasing as high as the mid-90s, as per the NBM mean. FORECAST CONFIDENCE & DEVIATIONS: Main change from the NBM in the short term forecast is adding in the latest HRRR/RAP13 surface smoke guidance into the Weather and Visibility grids. The source of the smoke for this next batch of smoke and haze today and into Friday comes from the wildfires across the far northern Canadian Prairie. The concentration of the particulate matter will be much higher than recent days and is not being captured well without a concentration formula adjustment based on current observations. With respect to high temperatures from Sunday onward, the probability of reaching 100F for max temperatures is highest for locations in lower elevations of adjacent river valleys, though these probabilities of exceedance do not go above a 20% chance. We will have to carefully monitor the trends for the 500 hPa high pressure and how much heights increase in subsequent model runs and to see if we creep back up to the 100s. -Enriquez/Zanker && .AVIATION... UPDATED: 2000Z FLIGHT CAT: Mainly MVFR - IFR DISCUSSION: Mostly clear skies are expected through Friday morning above wildfire smoke filtering in from Canada. This will lead to periods of IFR visibility, particularly after sunrise on Friday after some improvement this evening. By 00Z Saturday, the next round of scattered thunderstorms will approach the TAF sites from the west. WINDS: North at 10-15 knots becoming east at 5-10 knots around 06Z. && .GGW WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Dense Smoke Advisory until 6 PM MDT Friday for Central and Southeast Phillips-Central and Southern Valley-Daniels-Dawson- Eastern Roosevelt-Garfield-McCone-Northern Phillips-Northern Valley-Petroleum-Prairie-Richland-Sheridan-Southwest Phillips- Western Roosevelt-Wibaux. && $$ weather.gov/glasgow
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Hastings NE
707 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 ...Aviation Update... .KEY MESSAGES... - A round of isolated to scattered thunderstorms possible very late tonight, but moreso during the day on Friday, particularly for areas SW of the Tri-Cities. Another Marginal Risk of severe with this activity. - Mainly quiet and seasonable Friday night through Sunday. - Amplified NW upper flow could lead to a series of upper disturbances early to middle of next week and off and on rain chances. Confidence on coverage/timing details very low. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 425 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 A potent, but compact, upper vort lobe is moving E through the Siouxland area and has been responsible for some isolated thunderstorms this afternoon. There remains some agitated CU along a subtle wind shift/outflow from earlier activity - roughly along the Platte River. Continued heating ahead of this wind shift could still spark another thunderstorm or two through 6-7PM, but this appears very slight chance (only ~20%) and conditional as the primary upper forcing and associated mid level cooling is steadily shifting E away from the area. CAMs have struggled to get a handle on activity today, but where they have been at least consistent on a run to run basis is that development along the boundary this eve will be sparse, at best. After a quiet late eve and most of the overnight, the next chance for iso-scat convection will move into far SW portions of the CWA around dawn. This will be associated with a weak upper disturbance interacting with the deep layer moisture gradient, or elevated warm front. The LLJ remains pretty weak in our area, but the veering nature could help to push/develop activity a bit further E during the AM. Guidance is in pretty good agreement that the brunt of convection will remain SW of the Tri-Cities, but is somewhat mixed on the overall coverage and organization. There does appear to be a non-zero risk for some strong or severe storms to develop on Friday along the instability gradient, but this looks to be conditional on overall weak forcing. Should a storm tap into the instability (1000-2000 J/kg of MUCAPE), there would be strong effective shear to work with (esp. by August standards) at around 50-60kt. This could easily allow for storm organization into supercells and pose a risk for large hail. The greatest chances from the ensembles is closer to or S of I-70, but the 18Z HRRR is close enough to esp. Rooks Co to warrant some concern. This would be somewhat unusual timing of late AM into early aftn. Otherwise, looks to be fairly quiet Fri PM through the weekend with seasonably comfortable temperatures (highs in the 80s) and humidity. The upper pattern will really amplify over the weekend, with deep troughing over the E 1/3rd of the CONUS, and strong upper ridging along the Rockies. This should keep the really active and cool conditions well to the E, and the real hot temperatures to the SW over the central/southern High Plains...leaving the local area in between in mainly near normal temps. The deep layer moisture axis will remain close enough to the area, esp. considering what should be a stream of weak upper disturbances as there typically are in NW flow, to cause some shower and thunderstorm chcs off and on next week. In theory, just about any disturbance could induce enough WAA/isentropic lift to produce elevated convection, particularly during the overnight/AM hrs and over the W half of the CWA. So overall, the pattern will favor seasonably comfortable temperatures and off and on rain chances next week, but the details of which are just too difficult to pin down this far out. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 706 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: - General overview: This is a high-confidence VFR ceiling/visibility forecast, and at least the vast majority of the period will surely be dry/thunderstorm-free. However, there are some uncertainties with this during the daytime hours Friday, as there is a possibility that especially KEAR could be brushed by some passing shower/weak thunderstorm activity. Barring any unforeseen convective influences, winds should not be much of an issue throughout, with sustained speeds commonly at-or-below 7KT and direction largely from some variation of westerly. - Ceiling/visibility/precipitation details: With the low-levels/boundary layer not as moist/humid as 24 hours ago fog should not be an issue heading into Friday morning, thus have rather high confidence in VFR visibility throughout. As for ceiling, while confidence is also high in VFR, much of the latter half of the period (Friday daytime) will likely feature quiet a bit of mid-high level cloud cover (mainly at-or-above 10K ft.). As for shower/thunderstorm potential, especially KEAR could reside near the east-northeast fringes of potential activity, particularly between 15-21Z. As a result, later TAFs may need to consider at least basic "vicinity" (VCSH/VCTS) inclusion, but given this potential is currently beyond the first 12 hours and confidence in occurrence is less than 50% have held off for now. IF thunderstorms do occur, they should be of the weaker/non-severe variety. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Thies AVIATION...Pfannkuch
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Grand Rapids MI
921 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Chances of showers and thunderstorms through the weekend - Cooler than normal much of next week && .UPDATE... Issued at 921 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Widespread coverage of showers associated with lead shortwave, elevated warm front, and incoming axis of higher PWATs continues to slowly march across the area. There has been no thunder at all with this activity as the leading edge of any respectable MUCape values is still well to our west. The risk for a tstm does increase late tonight as RAP MUCapes of 500-1000 J/KG arrive and the next shortwave currently over Iowa/srn MN approaches. Only change to the fcst was to drop the mention of thunder in the grids until after 06Z and that was done earlier this evening. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 245 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 - Chances of showers and thunderstorms through the weekend As the low pressure system tracks into the region from the west through Friday, it will bring with it moisture, lift and instability. SPC HREF 4 hr thunder probabilities don`t really increase significantly until after 08z tonight. They remain high until mid morning when they then decrease steadily. So it looks like a break in the storm activity is expected late morning into part of the afternoon. We do destabilize in the afternoon with surface based CAPE values likely to reach 1000 J/kg away from Lake MI. Forcing is shown to be weak then. So if storms do develop then, then should remain isolated/scattered during the mid to late afternoon hours. The main mid level wave/vort max arrives from west in the 00z-04z Sat period. There`s a signal in the models for a cluster of storms to accompany this feature. The SPC HREF 4h thunder probabilities increase once again. LPMM 24 hr qpf values show small swaths of values over 2 inches 00z Fri to 00z Sat so locally excessive rain may occur. We will feature relatively high POPs trough the period as a result. Vertically stacked and slow-moving area of low pressure will be centered over Lower Michigan on Saturday and southwest Ontario on Sunday. Scattered showers or thunderstorm cells will tend to be reinvigorated with daytime heating, with greater precip chances inland and away from Lake Michigan. CAPE will be more modest than Friday, and shear will still be limited, but 20-25 knot winds in the lower atmosphere not far off the surface may allow for localized gusts over 30 mph to mix down with some showers. Though high temperatures will be cooler than normal, dew points will still be on the muggier side. - Cooler than normal much of next week A tendency for synoptic-scale ridging over the Rocky Mtn front range and troughing over the eastern Great Lakes early-mid next week will provide a flow of drier and cooler-than-normal air as high pressure builds in the Midwest. Good confidence among the ECMWF and GFS ensembles for highs mostly in the mid 70s. A small minority of members give rain chances Tuesday night or Wednesday depending on strength and location of shortwave troughs moving over the ridge. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 723 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 No significant changes to the going forecast. A band of showers crosses through West Michigan through the evening with more scattered showers behind it. Instability builds in early Friday morning bringing thunder chances with a cluster of showers moving through in the 08z-12z range. Have VCTS in the TAFs given the more scattered nature of thunderstorms. Isolated thunder is possible earlier but confidence is too low for TAF inclusion. MVFR and lower visibilities are possible in any thunderstorms. A few hours of MVFR cigs are likely Friday morning, longest at MKG. Uncertainty exists in how long MVFR cigs continue into the morning as it will depend in part on how much rainfall occurs. Even worst case scenario, any MVFR cigs lift to VFR by the afternoon. An isolated shower or storm is possible in the afternoon but coverage is to low to warrant TAF inclusion at this time. The next organized complex of storms holds off until after 00z Friday. && .MARINE... Issued at 245 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 The winds and waves will remain elevated through much of tonight as the pressure gradient tightens up as a result of the approaching low pressure system We did slightly expand the hazardous beach/boat risk this afternoon based on the latest model and observational trends. On and off hazardous conditions are predicted into the weekend so we will adjust headlines as we get closer to those periods. && .GRR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MI...Beach Hazards Statement until 2 AM EDT Friday for MIZ037-043-050- 056. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 2 AM EDT Friday for LMZ846>849. && $$ UPDATE...Meade DISCUSSION...MJS/CAS AVIATION...Thomas MARINE...MJS
Area Forecast Discussion...Updated
National Weather Service Lincoln IL
824 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Main window for severe weather tonight is expected between 9 pm and 2 am, with scattered wind damage the primary concern. - Some shower and storm activity will linger Friday and Saturday, as a slow moving upper low drifts across the Great Lakes. - An extended period of cooler conditions is expected Saturday into the middle of next week, with temperatures about 5-8 degrees below seasonal normals. && .UPDATE... Issued at 822 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 This evening, water vapor imagery reveals a broad upper low spinning across portions of the northern Great Plains and Upper Midwest with a shortwave trough ejecting from the base of this feature across IA/MO. Further southeast, a modest 20-25kt low level jet will focus moisture transport across portions of SE MO into Srn IL. These two features should support scattered convection across portions of the region overnight, though the activity on the LLJ seems favored to stay south of the forecast area. Latest RAP holds on to moderate instability through the night with dew points in the mid 70s contributing to MLCAPE values around 1500-2000 J/kg while deep layer shear values of 30-35 kt will support some stronger or severe storms. A number of CAMs continue to try to congeal upstream convection into a line as it moves across central Illinois, though the latest HRRR keeps convection more scattered in nature. While coverage still remains uncertain, shear and instability parameters do continue to support the potential for severe storms tonight. Deubelbeiss && .SHORT TERM... (Through Late Friday Afternoon) Issued at 300 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Lingering showers early this afternoon have finally been showing more of a diminishing trend, with most of the activity now around Champaign and Danville. Some clearing has occurred over western Illinois into adjacent areas of Missouri, allowing surface based CAPE`s to reach around 3000 J/kg per recent SPC mesoanalysis. Convective initiation is expected over central Iowa and north central Missouri over the next few hours, which should arrive in western Illinois toward 9-10 pm. A few of the CAM`s have also been showing development over south central Illinois late in the afternoon, and surface analysis does show a weak north/south boundary roughly near Vandalia, which could be a source of initiation. Will keep the lower (30%) PoP`s going in that area for that reason, with most of the PoP adjustments focused on the timing of the main convection later in the evening. Latest Day1 convective outlook maintains a level 2 risk of severe weather, with the main window focused between 9 pm and 2 am. Upper currently over northeast North Dakota is progged to move to central Wisconsin by Friday afternoon. Much of the convective activity should be out of our area early Friday morning, but a few storms can`t be ruled out late afternoon or early evening as the attendant surface boundary swings through the region. Think the best chance of this occurring will be near and north of I-74 near a small lower level jet max dropping into northern Illinois. With the slower arrival of the main cold front, temperatures Friday should still reach the mid 80s. However, some drier air will begin to work in during the afternoon, easing the heat index back a bit. Geelhart .LONG TERM... (Saturday through Next Thursday) Issued at 300 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Upper level progression of systems will be slow through the weekend, as Hurricane Ernesto lifts northward across the western Atlantic. This will result in the upper ridge amplifying across the Rockies. Broad troughing will continue over the eastern U.S. into early next week. Between these two, northwest flow into the Midwest will provide a cooler weather pattern that persists through this period. Highs in the upper 70s to around 80 degrees are expected, with dew points dropping into the 50s by early Monday. Rain-wise, the slow progression of the upper low over the Great Lakes will provide a risk of scattered showers on Saturday and perhaps into early Sunday, with surface high pressure providing dry conditions after that. Geelhart && .AVIATION... (For the 00z TAFs through 00z Friday Evening) Issued at 630 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 VFR conditions and southerly winds will be in place this evening as thunderstorms develop over Iowa and Missouri. These storms will move across central Illinois overnight. MVFR ceilings are expected to linger behind the storms for several hours Friday morning. Winds will set up out of the west mid to late Friday morning and conditions should return to VFR the remainder of the period. Deubelbeiss && .ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED
National Weather Service Jackson KY
1033 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Humidity, along with the possibility of showers and thunderstorms, will increase Friday and last into Saturday night. - Below normal temperatures are expected Sunday through Wednesday behind a cold front passage late Saturday night. - Showers and thunderstorms will remain possible Sunday and Monday, especially in the afternoon and early evening, with a drying trend for Tuesday into Wednesday. && .UPDATE... Issued at 1033 PM EDT THU AUG 15 2024 Update this evening extends into tomorrow. Based on current trends in temps and sky cover made some adjustments to the overnight lows, including a non-diurnal trend with additional cloud cover that will be overspreading the area over the next few hours. Overnight lows will like be reached a little after midnight, begin to level off, and then to increase a bit in the hours leading up to dawn. Also, after getting a quick peak at the 0Z NAM, RAP, and hrrr run, model solutions are suggesting the potential of some convection firing late tonight...in the hours leading up to sunrise, generally between 4 and 8 am across much of the forecast area. After this early morning convection, a second round appears to take aim at the area through the late morning and early afternoon. With the expected timing of the additional cloud cover and convection, trended afternoon highs across our east and southeast down a bit. However, there could be some late afternoon partial clearing and the chance for some recovery of temperatures. Thus only tweaked highs down just a few degrees over areas of interest. Adjustments to the forecast and updated zones have been issued. UPDATE Issued at 700 PM EDT THU AUG 15 2024 Hourly temperatures have been falling a bit quicker than previously forecast, so this trend will need to be watched closely over the next few hours to determine whether or not tonights low temperatures need to be adjusted. Used the most recent obs to freshen up the hourly grids and establish new trends. && .SHORT TERM...(This evening through Friday night) Issued at 350 PM EDT THU AUG 15 2024 The short term portion of the forecast looks to be quite active, as a vigorous area of low pressure moves through the Great Lakes region to finish out the week. The weather should remain quiet for most of tonight, as the aforementioned system moves slowly our way. The models differed a bit in their handling of this system and its evolution and associated precipitation. The NAM12, NAMNEST, GFS, and WPC guidance were all quite wet across our region, especially Friday and Friday night, during frontal passage. The SREF and RAP models were not as wet, and had larger time gaps between precipitation episodes than the other four model mentioned above. With a general consensus amongst a higher number of models, decided to go with the wetter solutions at this time. The latest model QPF also differed a bit across the area, with multiple bullseyes of higher amounts showing up across our area Friday and Friday night, likely due to the models difficulty in handling convection during that time. However, with model soundings precipitable water values between 1.50 and just over 2 inches common across our area Friday and Friday night, chose to go with the higher model QPF from both the NAM12 and GFS solutions, with a swath of higher amounts across our southern tiers of counties from the Hal Rogers Parkway southward to the Tennessee border. There is still a marginal risk of excessive rainfall across portions or all of our forecast area Friday and Friday night, along with a marginal risk of severe weather. The probability of severe storms on Friday is quite low at this time, or roughly a 5% chance. As for the chances of excessive rainfall that could lead to flooding, there is currently a 5 to 14% chance of that occurring to end the week, which is also quite low. As always, everyone should remain aware of the danger posed by cloud to ground lightning that could occur with any thunderstorm. Warm and humid conditions will continue through the end of the week. Highs on Friday will likely be several degrees cooler than what we experienced today, but with dewpoints expected to increase into the upper 60s and lower 70s on Friday, it will be quite steamy outside. The high moisture levels will aid in thunderstorm formation and maintenance as well. .LONG TERM...(Saturday through Thursday) Issued at 347 PM EDT THU AUG 15 2024 There is good agreement among the ensemble and deterministic solutions for an upper low to push across the Great Lakes, with the trough axis swinging through the Ohio Valley. This coupled with a nearby frontal boundary will keep the weather active to begin the period. Even so, the overall evolution in convection remains in question, as you could begin the day at times with early morning convection. This will certainly play a roll into how much instability can be recovered in the afternoon hours. The EFI does show decent signal for the climatologically significant combination of CAPE and shear on Saturday, but when looking at CAPE alone it was a much lesser signal. This means the shear seems to be driving the values up more and the jet energy noted in the various solutions is one that would support deeper layer shear. Given the uncertainties mentioned, SPC did keep a marginal risk going for Saturday. In terms of flooding, the concern here would be places that can see multiple iterations of storms, so overall threat right now is lower. Outside this expect near normal temperatures (mid to upper 80s) Saturday depending on cloud cover. This trough axis will continue to swig through the area and lower heights some as it does. This will keep the weather active through Monday. The highest chances of rain will be Sunday when chances of rain peak at around 50-90 percent particularly in the far eastern parts of eastern Kentucky. By Monday, afternoon highs will be running around 10 degrees below normal, with highs in the mid to upper 70s in most locations. A cold front or post frontal trough will user in much dryer air by Tuesday. The PWATs will be running in the 25th percentile range for this time of year at around 0.75 inches. There is good agreement on an area of high pressure pushing into the Great Lakes providing northerly flow at the surface and will lead a much cooler night Tuesday into Wednesday morning. The dewpoints are expected to mix out well under deep mixing on Tuesday and did adjust this down given the usually too hot NBM deterministic toward the 10th percentile. Given this lowered valleys into the upper 40s to lower 50s for overnight lows by Wednesday morning. This cooler valley trend was also noted in the COOP MOS. We will begin to rebound through the week to near normal for afternoon highs, with overnight lows remaining in the low to mid 50s in most cases. The other good news is it should be nice and dry Tuesday into Thursday under the northerly flow and lower PWAT values. && .AVIATION...(For the 00Z TAFS through 00Z Friday evening) ISSUED AT 756 PM EDT THU AUG 15 2024 VFR conditions are expected as a predominant flight condition through the bulk of the period. However, guidance suggests there could be some short periods of high end MVFR conditions, mainly associated with showers and especially thunderstorms that develop across the area through the 10Z-18Z time frame as a slow moving surface cold front approaches form the west. FROPA is not expected through the area until Saturday night, or around 24 hours beyond the end of the current forecast window. Winds will be light and variable, around 5 kts or less until after sunrise, when a southwest gradient wind between 5-10 kts develops ahead of the approaching cold front. Winds could be gusty in the vicinity of any thunderstorms. && .JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NONE. && $$ UPDATE...RAY SHORT TERM...AR LONG TERM...DJ AVIATION...RAY
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL
840 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Several rounds of thunderstorms are possible from tonight into Friday. A few storms may be severe, and not all areas will see thunderstorms. - Isolated showers and thunderstorms possible over the weekend, especially on Saturday. - Temperatures early next week will be below average with highs in the 70s to around 80. && .UPDATE... Issued at 839 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 There are spotty weak returns that remain on radar passing over the area. However, as soon as they develop, the quickly fall apart. Isolated to scattered sprinkles to light rain is possible (15 to 20 percent chance) for the next couple hours. There is a sharp instability gradient from northwest to southeast draped just along our western forecast area. Given the lack of instability presently, thunder is not expected until after 9PM, first arriving around I-39 before moving east. Most attention on radar is focused on the thunderstorm activity over eastern Iowa and northeastern Missouri. These storms are expected to move eastward through the overnight. As better instability moves into the area, there is the potential for some development out ahead of the current activity, but the overall coverage of storms is expected to be scattered at best. Given how cloudy it was during the day which inhibited heating and provided weaker low level lapse rates as well as slightly weaker forcing, confidence is lower on the risk for severe weather. However, given stronger effective shear and enough moisture and instability present, stronger storms could develop where some small hail or localized wind gusts could necessitate the issuance of a severe thunderstorm warning. That being said, thunderstorm activity is expected through the overnight before it slowly moves east of the forecast area after daybreak allowing for improving conditions for the morning commute. DK && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 230 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Through Friday Night: Regional water vapor and radar imagery depicts an elongated area of low pressure centered over the Midwest with several embedded shortwaves pinwheeling around the perimeter of the circulation. The first shortwave is currently moving through the Lower Great Lakes, and continues to support scattered showers across northern Illinois and northwestern Indiana. Mostly cloudy skies have prevented highs from climbing much above the low to mid 70s, altogether making for a cool, and somewhat wet, day. With the increasingly tight pressure gradient being forced by the approaching surface component of the broad upper-level low in the northern Plains, south to southeast winds remain breezy and continue to build up waves on Lake Michigan. A Beach Hazards Statement remains in effect from Chicago to Waukegan (and points northward) though this evening. The next upper-level shortwave and associated upper-level jet speed max is easily identifiable in radar and satellite imagery near eastern Nebraska, and will approach our area after dark. Although forecast confidence in exactly how and were thunderstorms develop remains on the lower side of the spectrum, an ensemble of convective allowing models favors at least scattered thunderstorms moving through the general area from about midnight to daybreak along the nose of the aforementioned jet speed max. While thunderstorms will likely be rooted above the near-surface layer, cloud-layer shear >50 kt should support semi-organized clusters capable of producing frequent lightning, heavy downpours, locally gusty winds, and small non-damaging hail. One or two storms may briefly acquire severe caliber hail or winds, though such a threat should be localized. The SPC Level 2/5 threat level is probably a category too high, but should cover the threat well. All remaining showers and storm should scoot east and away from our area after daybreak allowing for clouds to scatter by mid-afternoon. Boundary layer warming with surface temperatures climbing into the mid 80s and lingering low-level moisture should allow for a pool of 1000+ J/kg of MLCAPE to develop by mid-afternoon ahead of the third, and final, shortwave (currently meandering across North Dakota). With a stout pop of southwesterly (and veering) low-level winds ahead of the shortwave, forecast kinematic profiles within the instability axis tomorrow afternoon do raise eyebrows and appear supportive of low-topped supercell structures, given some 25-30kt of shear and 150-200 J/kg of SRH in the lowest 3 km (assuming a southeasterly storm motion). As a result, thunderstorms tomorrow afternoon and evening may carry a threat for localized severe weather in the form of brief tornadoes, damaging hail, and damaging winds. Now, a clear failure mode for thunderstorms (both coverage and intensity) tomorrow afternoon and evening will be the quality of low- level moisture, as the normally trustworthy HRRR and RAP depict aggressive downward mixing of mixed-layer dew points in response to breezy west winds. Forecast soundings taken from more moist CAMs also depict a notable dry pocket within the mixed layer, which would lead to similar, correspondingly low, values of MLCAPE. With that said, even just 500 J/kg of MLCAPE may be enough for sustained convective attempts given the deep-layer shear won`t be overly strong (to enhance the entrainment of dry air and "shear apart" initial updrafts). However, the signal for less-than-stellar quality moisture in the mixed layer does suggest coverage of thunderstorms may be isolated to scattered at best, and primarily confined to areas along and north of I-88 in closer proximity to the core of forcing. For now, the SPC Level 1/5 threat level for tomorrow afternoon and evening appears appropriate, as adjustments (both upward or downward) may be needed as the integrity of mixed-layer moisture becomes more clear. Borchardt Saturday through Thursday: The upper trough responsible for today`s rain can be found spinning over the North Dakota/Manitoba border this afternoon. It will gradually work its way eastward over the next several days traversing the Great Lakes over the weekend. After dragging a cold front across the area Friday night providing a chance for some stronger storms (see short term discussion above), the low level circulation will remain over Lake Michigan during the day on Saturday. The broad forcing for ascent will help pull precip chances into this weekend. Forecast soundings also remain relatively moist on the backside of the system which may make it easier for any subtle forcing mechanisms to stir up some showers. A couple of thunderstorms will be possible during the afternoon as well after heating can destabilize the low levels some. Thermo profiles though remain poor aloft and overall unfavorable for robust convection, so none is anticipated at this time. Coverage looks isolated to widely scattered but may be maximized around the lakeshore nearer to the circulation. Conditions will be seasonably cool over the weekend following Friday`s cold front. Similar highs in the middle and upper 70s are expected both days. Onshore flow will keep temperatures a bit cooler near the lake on Sunday. A rather tight MSLP gradient between the departing low and an impending high to the northwest will bring about breezy conditions over the weekend as well. As a result, building waves may make for dangerous swimming conditions (mainly Sunday into Monday). A few additional showers may go up during the day on Sunday, but with high pressure and drier air encroaching from the west, chances are primarily focused across the eastern half of the CWA. After the trough finally makes it out of the region early next week, a sizable upper ridge will dominate the western CONUS spreading high surface pressure across the Great Lakes region. This is expected to keep precip chances minimal and provide lots of sunshine during the earlier half of the week. Highs will be pretty steady in the middle to upper 70s each day before conditions look to heat up after mid- week as the ridge meanders eastward. Doom && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 616 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Aviation Forecast Concerns: - MVFR ceilings may improve for a time this evening, though patchy MVFR conditions likely will later tonight especially for KRFD. - Scattered thunderstorm potential roughly 04-08Z window at KRFD and 05-09Z for KORD/KMDW. Somewhat low confidence in coverage over terminals. - Chance of additional scattered thunderstorms Friday evening. Surface low pressure was centered over northwest MN early this evening, with a warm front extending into northern IL. A cold front trailed farther west across IA and eastern KS. Warm/moist advection in the vicinity of the warm frontal zone has maintained extensive cloud cover across the region, though most of the earlier showers have moved east of the area since this afternoon. A few spotty showers may linger this evening, though MVFR cloud cover will likely erode for a time from the southwest across most of the terminals (KRFD may have the toughest time losing the MVFR deck). Surface winds from the SSE should eventually turn more SSW late this evening. We continue to monitor scattered thunderstorm development upstream across eastern IA early this evening, which is expected to eventually increase in coverage and spread east tonight in association with a mid-level disturbance and ahead of the cold front. High-res CAM guidance generally suggests the main window for a few hours of thunder in the terminals to be after 03-04Z for KRFD and after 05Z-06Z for the Chicago metro sites. There is some spread in the degree of coverage between models however, so while confidence in thunder and the general timing is fairly high, confidence in coverage across the terminals is lower. Winds will become more SW to WSW Friday (with gusts 20-25 kt in the afternoon) as the weak cold front moves through the area. Any lingering MVFR ceilings early in the day should mix out and scatter to VFR. Another mid-level disturbance wrapping southeast across the area later in the day may produce some additional scattered thunderstorms for the terminals by early Friday evening. Ratzer && .LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IL...Beach Hazards Statement until 10 PM CDT this evening for ILZ006-ILZ103-ILZ104. IN...None. LM...Small Craft Advisory until 10 PM CDT this evening for Winthrop Harbor to Wilmette Harbor IL. && $$ Visit us at weather.gov/chicago
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Memphis TN
914 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 ...New UPDATE... .UPDATE... Issued at 908 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 GOES-16 Water Vapor satellite trends show convective development generally along the I-44 corridor in eastern Oklahoma and Missouri, and additional convection also occurring over southern Illinois. This activity is out ahead of a cold front which extends from northeast Missouri back through southeast Kansas and central Oklahoma. 00Z upper air analysis shows an upper-level ridge still in place across the Mid-South. Temperatures are still quite warm in the 80s across most locations as of 8 PM CDT. The 00Z NAM is suggesting minimal convective potential if any overnight due to the very warm mid-level temperatures and ridging present across the area. The 00Z HRRR and the Hi-Res WRF-FV3 support this limited convective potential to an extent until after sunrise when mid-level height falls begin to spread into the Tennessee Valley. Consequently, some adjustments will be made to lower rain chances to reflect current trends. Ample instability present and 25 to 30 kts of shear are sufficient for a strong to isolated severe thunderstorm if any sustained convective development does occur. Updated grids will be available shortly. CJC && .SYNOPSIS... Issued at 331 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Hot and humid conditions will continue across the region tomorrow, as heat headlines will remain in effect through 9 pm Friday. A wet and unsettled pattern will begin later tonight and may last through Saturday as a slow moving cold front advances through the Mid-South. Cooler temperatures and dry conditions are expected behind the front and should last through mid next week. && .DISCUSSION... (This evening through next Wednesday) Issued at 331 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Mid-level water vapor analysis depicts that shortwave ridging is continuing to build across the region, resulting in hot and humid conditions across the Mid-South today. Heat index values as of the discussion range from near 100 to near 110 degrees. Given the fact that temperatures will remain fairly warm overnight and dangerous heat index values are expected tomorrow, the Heat Advisory and Excessive Heat Warning have been extended until Friday night at 9 pm. There is some uncertainty with these heat headlines as some areas of the Mid-South may experience convective activity that could result in areas not reaching criteria. Additional heat headlines are possible Saturday, where moisture pools ahead of a southward moving cold front. Later this evening, a mid-level trough will continue advancing from the northern Plains with a surface cold front that will move across central Missouri. Ahead of this front, scattered thunderstorm development is expected later tonight. There continues to be uncertainty with respect storm coverage, timing, intensity. However, given the fact that forecast soundings depict a moderately unstable environment coupled with favorable effective bulk shear values, it appears at least plausible that an isolated strong to severe thunderstorm capable of large hail and damaging wind gusts could occur across the northern portions of the Mid- South. The unsettled weather pattern continues on Friday and Saturday across the rest of the region as the front continues moving south. Similar challenges appear present with respect to severe potential on these days as it pertains to the location, timing, and intensity of convection, though damaging winds and large hail are anticipated to be the main threats with any strong to severe storm that does occur. Things will begin to cool off as the front pushes through the Mid-South on Sunday, eventually bringing temperatures into the mid 80s to low 90s and dry conditions area wide by Monday. These conditions look to persist through mid next week with mid-level northwest flow prevailing across the Mid-South in association with troughing persisting over the eastern US. && .AVIATION... (00Z TAFS) Issued at 609 PM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Upstream convection is just firing up in southern Illinois. This convection should not impact the terminals, and more towards middle TN. The NAMNest seems very aggressive in MCS impacting the northern terminals this evening, but other CAMs not in favor. The latest HRRR did bring in a few isolated thunderstorms just after midnight tonight near MEM, but thinking that is influenced by the aggressiveness of the NAM. Will monitor closely, but MKL and JBR are most likely for convection late tonight into tomorrow morning. DNM && .MEG WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... AR...Excessive Heat Warning until 9 PM CDT Friday for ARZ009-018- 026>028-035-036-048-049-058. MO...Excessive Heat Warning until 9 PM CDT Friday for MOZ113-115. MS...Excessive Heat Warning until 9 PM CDT Friday for MSZ001-007-008- 010>012-020-021. Heat Advisory until 9 PM CDT Friday for MSZ002>006-009-013>017- 022>024. TN...Excessive Heat Warning until 9 PM CDT Friday for TNZ001-002-019- 048-049-088. Heat Advisory until 9 PM CDT Friday for TNZ003-004-020>022- 050>055-089>092. && $$ PUBLIC FORECAST...JPR AVIATION...DNM
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Morristown TN
1032 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 ...New UPDATE... .UPDATE... Issued at 1023 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Forecast is on track tonight with mostly clear sky conditions. The main impacts will be on Friday when a line of showers and thunderstorms is expected to move across the area. Exact timing is uncertain, but recent CAMs are showing additional convective initiation associated with the convective cluster currently across Missouri. This cluster would develop into an MCS and move towards our area mid-day to early afternoon on Friday. While this will need to be monitored, the overall severe risk continues to be marginal. The upper shortwave and PVA will be focused north of our area across the Ohio Valley with limited to no height falls for the East Tennessee area. This will result in poor mid- level lapse rates and limited instability with HRRR forecast soundings showing MLCAPE around 1000 to 1500 J/Kg with highest values across our western counties near the Cumberland Plateau. Effective bulk shear is also weak at around 15 to 20 kt. While the severe potential is limited, there is still a low risk. Even with sub- severe winds, some downed trees will be expected. In addition, RAP forecast PW values around 2.0 to 2.2 inches will result in heavy rain rates and localized flash flooding potential on Friday. && .SHORT TERM... (This evening through Friday) Issued at 300 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Key Messages: 1. Isolated showers through this evening over parts of higher terrain. 2. Scattered to numerous showers and storms Friday, with some strong to severe storms and localized flooding possible. Damaging winds would be the primary threat with any severe storms. Discussion: The rest of this evening and tonight should be mostly quiet, with some isolated shower development over the plateau and mountains. At least a couple hundredths has been recorded as of this time in some areas. Activity should wane with the loss of day time heating. Patches of fog may also be possible due to the influx of moisture funneling our way under calm conditions overnight. Friday: our mostly dry spell will come to an end this weekend with an approaching system and attendant cold front. A mid to upper level trough is forecast to slide east across the northern tier of the country. The low center will pretty much be stacked underneath it. Pre-frontal showers and thunderstorms will impact the area as early as just before or around sunrise from the west and northwest. SPC currently has us in a MRGL risk for severe weather and they mention the possibility of the morning convection diurnally strengthening as we approach Friday afternoon. 20 to 30KT effective shear along with CAPE in the 1000 J/Kg range is enough to support multicellular storms. Exact timing, evolution, movement, and the possibility or not of multiple rounds is still pretty unclear even with CAMs less than 24 hours out. All in all we can expect the possibility of strong to severe storms with damaging winds the primary threat. Heavy rainfall could also lead to localized flash flooding. Hopefully the latter will hold off with how dry we have lately been. && .LONG TERM... (Friday night through next Thursday) Issued at 300 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Key Messages: 1. Scattered to numerous showers and storms Friday evening and Saturday, with some strong to severe storms possible. 2. More scattered showers and storms possible Sunday and Monday, with better coverage across the northern areas. 3. Higher pressure building south with a more northwest flow and drier Tuesday and Wednesday with cooler high temperatures and low temperatures dropping into the 50s. Discussion: Models in general agreement with upper low over Wisconsin and Michigan to start the extended forecast period Friday night. The upper low will drift, move southeast through Saturday and Sunday opening up by Sunday night into the northeast states and digging an upper trough across the eastern states into the TN Valley and southeast through Sunday night. Multiple shortwaves will progress through the NW flow and across the Tennessee Valley Friday night and continuing through Saturday and Sunday. A cold front will be approaching the area as well on Saturday. The trough looks to shift eastward Monday into Monday night with improving conditions Monday night and continuing through Wednesday. Models are still different in the details with the timing of the shortwaves coming through but are showing Friday evening and late Saturday afternoon and evening as the best times for significant rainfall and thunderstorms. Sunday the trough and cold front will have shifted farther south with more convection south of the Tennessee state line in MS, AL, GA and the Carolinas with the GFS and NAM12 showing that will be where more significant convection develops. Model runs have been showing differences so stay tuned. With the threat for heavy rainfall some isolated flooding is possible Friday night but a better chance will be Saturday night if Friday night is wet too. Sunday and Sunday night into Monday expect storms to more directly effect the northern half of the area with another significant shortwave moving through the Ohio Valley Sunday. Overall the atmosphere looks supportive of more organized convection with some strong to severe storms possible Friday evening. The slow- moving upper trough/low continues east across the Great Lakes/OH Valley Saturday. The weak surface low over southern MI is forecast to gradually develop into southern Canada/Ontario. The weak front extending southward from the low should slowly move east-southeast across the OH Valley and Mid-Atlantic into the Southeast through Saturday night. The boundary, although not well defined and having only modest low-level convergence, should serve as a focus for strong to severe convection. Diurnal heating of a moist airmass along/ahead of the front should bring weak to moderate destabilization Saturday afternoon, even though mid-level lapse rates should remain modest. Enhanced mid-level flow associated with the upper trough/low should focus storms over parts of the lower OH Valley into the TN Valley and Mid-South. But, sufficient deep-layer shear to support some updraft organization should be present over much of the broad warm sector. Multiple clusters may develop along the length of the front Saturday afternoon and pose primarily an isolated strong to damaging wind threat as they spread east- southeast through Saturday evening. So Marginal risk is across the forecast area. Damaging winds will be the primary severe threat with these storms. In addition, any areas that see repeated and/or prolonged rounds of heavy rainfall may experience localized flooding. Cooler temperatures will be moving in behind the front Sunday and Monday, with temperatures at or a little below normal Sunday and below normal on Monday. Highs Monday only in the 60s to lower 70s higher elevations and 70s to the lower 80s. On Tuesday and continuing into Wednesday a cooler surface high pressure will build into the eastern Tennessee Valley and southern Appalachians. Dewpoints will lower into the more comfortable 50s at most sites with actual lows in the 50s Tuesday into Thursday mornings. A weak surface trough is expected to move through the upper flow Thursday and may trigger a few showers or storms. Temperatures will be warming back into the mid to upper 80s Thursday. && .AVIATION... (00Z TAFS) Issued at 724 PM EDT Thu Aug 15 2024 VFR conditions continue tonight with a low probability of fog near the TRI terminal. Rain chances increase on Friday with VCSH from mid-morning throughout the afternoon. Have included prob30 TSRA at all terminals as a thunderstorm complex is forecast to move across the region, but timing is still uncertain. SW winds remain mostly 5-10 kt with higher gusts near any thunderstorms. && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... Chattanooga Airport, TN 72 94 73 93 / 0 50 50 70 Knoxville McGhee Tyson Airport, TN 72 91 71 90 / 0 50 70 70 Oak Ridge, TN 71 89 70 89 / 10 60 70 70 Tri Cities Airport, TN 67 86 69 85 / 10 50 60 50 && .MRX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NC...NONE. TN...NONE. VA...NONE. && $$ SHORT TERM...KS LONG TERM....TD AVIATION...JB
Area Forecast Discussion...UPDATED
National Weather Service Portland OR
527 PM PDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Updated short term forecast for Thursday evening. .SYNOPSIS...An upper level low will most likely bring a widespread soaking rain to northwest OR and southwest WA late Saturday through Saturday night as showers and thunderstorms move into the area. Rain rates look to be heaviest over the Cascades, posing a threat of debris flows over/near recently burned areas associated with ongoing wildfires as hourly rain rates may approach 0.75 inches/hr. There is also a marginal risk of severe thunderstorms over the Cascades and foothills Saturday into Saturday night, as isolated damaging wind gusts up to 60 mph will be possible with any discrete cells that are able to form. Cool and cloudy weather then continues into the middle of next week an onshore flow maintains the pattern in place. && .UPDATE...Thursday evening...Radar and surface weather observations from 520 PM Thursday depicted isolated light rain showers developing in the Salem, McMinnville, Forest Grove, Hillsboro and Beaverton area. NBM PoPs are too low at <10%, so the forecast was adjusted to manually increase PoPs to 15-30% in the aforementioned areas. Also included this chance for the rest of the Portland metro and the south WA/north OR Cascade foothills as these light showers slowly shift east-southeastward. The latest iteration of the HRRR backs this up well, as simulated reflectivity guidance is showing these showers moving over parts of the Portland metro between 6-8pm Thursday evening, approaching the Columbia River Gorge and Cascade foothills after 8pm. It appears showery activity will diminish completely by 4-5am Friday before chances for showers and thunderstorms increase significantly late Saturday. This is discussed below in the short term discussion. -TK && .SHORT TERM...Now through Saturday Night...The short term forecast is highlighted by increasing chances for a widespread soaking rain across all of western WA/OR (50-80% chance) as widespread showers and scattered thunderstorms bring a threat of heavy rain and isolated wind damage. These showers and storms are associated with an upper level low that models and their ensembles show lingering over the coastal waters off the south Oregon coast. This will result in southeasterly flow aloft across southwest WA and northwest OR, helping to advect moisture into the area and increase instability. Ample QG forcing for ascent is evident as well as CVA and WAA increases ahead of an incoming trough axis and associated vort max, resulting in notable Q-vector convergence. The threat for thunderstorms is currently highest in the Cascades where instability will be maximized according to the latest model guidance (CAPE values rising to 500-1500 J/kg according to the GFS/EURO/NAM). Strong wind shear is also evident with impressive 0-6km bulk shear values between 40-55 knots. Admittedly, there is some uncertain regarding the exact timing of this system and which areas will undergo enough daytime heating for these higher CAPE values to materialize. Nevertheless, the environment is favorable enough to support at least a 20-30% chance of thunderstorms from the Coast Range to the Cascades, with the best chance being over the Cascades. In fact, the Storm Prediction Center (SPC) has introduced a marginal risk for severe thunderstorms over the Cascades/foothills, mainly for potential isolated convective wind gusts up to 60 mph with any discrete cells that are able to form before cells congeal into an MCS. Regardless of the storm mode, heavy rain will be a threat given high PWAT values over 1", fairly deep warm cloud layer depths over 7kft, and somewhat slow storm motion with cloud layer winds <20 knots. The UWWRF 1km and the NAM Nest are both showing rain rates up to 0.75 in/hr, which is not quite high enough for debris flow concerns over old burn areas, but is high enough to warrant concern for our new 2024 burn areas associated with ongoing active wildfires. As such, a Flash Flood Watch has been issued for the south WA Cascades and Oregon Cascades from Lane County northward to cover this threat as this will pose a safety concern for crews working on these fires. While confidence is high somewhere in the Cascades will be hit hard from thunderstorms, confidence is low in regards to the exact location and exact timing. Nevertheless, confidence has reached the 50% threshold needed to issue a Watch, and zones may be added or removed from the Watch as confidence increases. For now, anyone near or within the watch area should ensure they have a timely way to receive NWS warnings in case a Flash Flood Warning is issued. While the bulk of convective activity should shift northward into northwestern WA Saturday night, forecast soundings show lingering low and mid level moisture / weak instability over northwest OR and especially over southwest WA. This will likely result in at least some continued showery activity, however convection will become more shallow and chances for thunder will decrease to 15-20% or less. Despite convection becoming more shallow Saturday night, brief heavy downpours will still be possible. Showers and storms should finally begin tapering off Sunday morning, which is discussed below in the long term discussion. -TK && .LONG TERM...Sunday through Wednesday...Rain will be starting to taper off by Sunday morning as most of the energy associated with the upper trough shifts north of the region, but certainly could see a few stray showers linger into the day on Sunday and bring minimal additional rainfall amounts to the area, especially over southwest WA. Otherwise suspect the Pacific Northwest will remain under the influence of broad upper level troughing centered offshore through the middle of next week, which is well agreed upon by ensemble guidance. As such, expect a continuation of seasonably cool and cloudy weather through the end of the period with daily highs remaining in the mid to upper 70s. The proximity to the upper level trough will yield continued chances for sporadic shower activity, but no significant rainfall or thunderstorm potential is signaled beyond Sunday morning. /CB && .AVIATION...Marine stratus has mostly cleared out of all areas, with KONP being the last holdout. 40-50% chance of southern coastal terminals remaining MVFR or lower throughout the day, dropping back to IFR by 3z Fri. For other coastal terminals, MVFR conditions redevelop around 3z Fri. Inland terminals should generally remain VFR until 12-18z Fri, when the northern Willamette Valley sees marine stratus pushing up the Columbia and causing high-end MVFR cigs during that time period. 60% confidence in MVFR cigs between 12-18z Fri. Winds at all terminals are generally W/NW and under 8 kts throughout the entire period. PDX AND APPROACHES...VFR expected until 12z Fri, with a 60% chance of MVFR cigs between 12z-18z Fri due to marine stratus pushing up the Columbia. Northwest winds under 8 kt throughout the period. /JLiu && .MARINE...Expect benign conditions over the waters through early next week. Winds remain N/NW through Saturday before turning SW as surface low pressure develops. Winds are expected to remain at 10 kts or less with gusts up to 15 kts; wind-driven seas of 2 of 4 feet. -Batz && .PQR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OR...None. WA...None. PZ...None. && $$ www.weather.gov/portland Interact with us via social media: www.facebook.com/NWSPortland x.com/NWSPortland
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Pueblo CO
523 PM MDT Thu Aug 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Low chance (less than 20 percent) for a storm this evening I-25 corridor and southeast plains. - Dry and hot both Friday and Saturday. - Moisture returns Sunday, with above normal temperatures and daily chances for showers and thunderstorms persisting through next week. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/... Issued at 228 PM MDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Generally dry and warm across the area today, with little/no convection even over the mountains, as wly flow has cut off low/mid level moisture across much of srn CO. A few hints of some deeper surface moisture/instability returning into nern NM this afternoon, and some of this may leak northward over the Raton Mesa into into the srn I-25 corridor and the plains this evening and overnight. As a result, HRRR has some isolated convection developing around Pueblo/Colorado Springs 02z-04z, then sliding eastward onto the plains late evening and overnight. Will keep some low pops in place to account for this possibility, though storm strength/coverage may be limited by relatively low (CAPE 300-600 J/KG) instability. On Friday, upper ridge begins to build over Colorado, and with rising heights and continued dry air mass, expect another day of limited/no convection across much of the region. Some deeper low level moisture may sneak back into the far eastern plains late in the day as surface winds turn more n-ne, but any forcing for precip looks weak and farther east, so will keep the dry forecast in place at this point. Max temps will climb upward a few degf given warming mid-levels, and a few spots over the lower Arkansas Valley may get close to 100f by late afternoon. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... Issued at 228 PM MDT Thu Aug 15 2024 Our Friday night through Saturday weather will be dominated by high pressure sitting over New Mexico on Friday and meandering northwards towards the Colorado and New Mexico border by Saturday. This system will bring above normal temperatures and mostly dry conditions to our plains, with only very isolated showers and thunderstorms over the high country for Saturday. Overnight lows on Friday night look to be near to just slightly above normal thanks to dry conditions and efficient cooling, while daytime highs on Saturday look to rise to around 5 to 10 degrees above normal. This means highs in the mid 90s to low 100s across the plains, mid 80s to low 90s for mountain valleys, and 70s for higher terrain locations. Though relative humidity values look to fall into the low teens through Saturday afternoon, winds are expected to remain below critical fire weather thresholds. Sunday.. Sunday is a bit of a transition day, as models begin to bring a low onshore over the Pacific Northwest, which will shunt the high off to our southeast a bit as we get into the beginning of next week. This will eventually open up the monsoonal moisture tap over our region. For Sunday, models indicate that the beginning of this monsoonal moisture should start to work its way into the high country, as we remain situated along the northwestern periphery of the high. This setup could lead to the possibility of a few showers and storms pushing into the mountain adjacent plains through Sunday afternoon and Sunday evening as well, though the best chances for moisture will remain over the mountains for Sunday. Daytime highs look to remain around 4 to 8 degrees above normal for Sunday, though we will see a slight decrease from expected temperatures on Saturday, especially over and near the mountains where convective cloud cover will help to keep us cooler through the hottest part of the day. Our far eastern plains could still see triple digits under mostly sunny skies, but the majority of the I-25 corridor should top out in the 90s, with mountain valleys in the 80s and higher terrain locations in the 70s. Monday Onwards.. By Monday, models indicate that we transition to a pattern of slightly above normal temperatures and daily chances for afternoon showers and thunderstorms, especially over and near the higher terrain, thanks to the return of monsoonal moisture over the region. Ensembles, especially GEFS members, show a strong signal for PWAT anomalies exceeding the 100-140% range beginning Sunday and persisting all the way through next week. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 522 PM MDT Thu Aug 15 2024 VFR conditions are expected to prevail for all TAF sites (KALS, KCOS, and KPUB) throughout the forecast period. Winds will be light (mostly less than 10 kts) and diurnally influenced at all terminals. There will be some gusty winds during the afternoon hours tomorrow at KCOS and KPUB. -Stewey && .PUB WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SHORT TERM...PETERSEN LONG TERM...EHR AVIATION...STEWARD