Author Topic: [Alert]IND issues Area Forecast Discussion (AFD) at Jul 4, 6:30 AM EDT  (Read 306 times)

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IND issues Area Forecast Discussion (AFD) at Jul 4, 6:30 AM EDT

318 
FXUS63 KIND 041030
AFDIND

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Indianapolis IN
630 AM EDT Thu Jul 4 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Thunderstrom complex expected to move through from mid morning
  to early afternoon. Isolateds damaging winds possible

- Expected lull in between rounds of storms during the mid afternoon
  and evening for 4th of July

- Dry conditions and less humid late Friday through Sunday

&&

.SHORT TERM (Today and tonight)...
Issued at 227 AM EDT Thu Jul 4 2024

This Morning and Early Afternoon...

06Z IR satellite imagery is beginning to show the first glimpse of
the development on a nocturnal MCS over eastern KS into western MO.
This will continue to strengthen as it moves eastward supported by
diabatic pressure drops and an anomalously moist surface layer. This
MCS will progress relatively quickly, but will still take another 8-
10 hours before it reaches central Indiana tomorrow morning. Prior
to its arrival, upper level cloud cover will help mitigate some
diurnal cooling keeping the nocturnal inversion shallow.

As this system approaches from the west, deepening low pressure in
the MCSs wake will help increase southerly low level flow,
destabilizing the shallow CIN quickly. This increase in low level
flow (30-40kts of EFF Bulk Shear) along with elevated surface
moisture (72-75 dew points) will also aid in convective
organization, likely keeping the MCS fairly strong even in a non-
climatologically prone time period. There is still some uncertainty
on the specifics of where the MCS will pass through, but generally,
the axis of precipitation should begin somewhere between Terre Haute
and Evansville as it enters Indiana.

As mentioned, the shear and elevated moisture should be able to keep
the MCS organized, with any areas directly in its path under a
possible severe threat (Terre Haute to Evansville and locations
eastward). There is some potential for the severe threat to dive
south along the LLJ axis, with central Indiana left in the weaker
upshear component. If the MCS remains organized over central
Indiana, the main threat will be damaging winds within wet
microbursts, but an isolated QLCS tornado can not be ruled out due
to the increased near surface southerly flow (0-1km SRH 80-120
m2/s2). Worst case scenario would be a more widespread wind threat
along the UDCZ in the event surface temperatures and near surface
lapse rates are able to increase rapidly prior to MCS arrival.

Warm frontal like processes along the differential heating boundary
with a modest SW LLJ should also allow for a greater precip shield
north of the MCS, providing 0.5-1.0" of much need rain along and
north of the I-70 corridor. The MCS should exit central Indiana by
around 18Z +/- an hour.

One non-precipitation item of note, temperatures pre-MCS arrival
over far southern central Indiana may be able to get into the upper
80s late this morning into the early afternoon. If this does occur,
our daytime high will occur earlier than typical.

Late Afternoon through Evening...

Following the MCS passage, local pressure gains should induce subtle
ridging in the low to mid levels during the afternoon and evening
hours ahead of an approaching low over the Upper Midwest. With this
in mind, despite a frontal boundary near the Ohio River, mid level
drying and subsidence may work to inhibit convective development
during the latter half of the day tomorrow. Still, an isolated
shower or thunderstorm cannot be ruled out, if an updraft is able to
withstand the drying mid levels.

Generally, skies should remain cloudy over much of central Indiana
through the mid afternoon. As the mid levels begin to dry, a few
pockets of sunshine are possible in the early evening hours. Given
greater certainty of cloudy conditions, afternoon temperatures will
be kept in the low 80s throughout central Indiana, but areas with
greater evening sunshine may be able to reach the mid 80s.

Tonight...

After dusk, any remaining isolated showers and thunderstorm should
begin to wain as diurnal cooling related CIN takes over. This should
keep conditions fairly dry through the early overnight hours until a
short wave and associated low approaches from the west. Another
convective system is likely to develop in the warm sector of the
short wave this evening over the Missouri Valley, of which will be
the primary threat for rain over central Indiana late tonight. HREF
members are still widely varied on strength and location of this
MCS, leading to high uncertainty in the thunderstorm forecast for
central Indiana as of this forecast update.

&&

.LONG TERM (Friday through Wednesday)...
Issued at 227 AM EDT Thu Jul 4 2024

On Friday, stronger synoptic-scale forcing arrives as closed
midlevel low passes to our north and DCVA progresses across Indiana.
Lower tropospheric warm/moist advection will occur early in the
morning until the cold front arrives midday to early afternoon. A
couple scenarios are possible. 1. the warm advection regime
continues to feed convection that is ongoing to our south from the
previous diurnal cycle, tempering new development further north at
least somewhat. 2. an upstream convective cluster evolves and moves
into Indiana during the morning and may result in greater rain
coverage further north into central Indiana than scenario #1. Still,
the northward extent will be limited somewhat by model indicated
instability, which tapers with northward extent. Frontal convection
during the early afternoon should be across the eastern portion of
the area given currently modeled frontal timing. A post-MCS airmass
would be more overturned and less conducive than a scenario where
less convection is present during the morning. Refinements to the
forecast will occur later today as the mesoscale details become more
clear.

Cooler (around 5F negative anomalies) and slightly less humid
conditions are expected Saturday in the wake of the front. Midlevel
height rises and strengthening southwesterly flow ahead of the next
shortwave trough should bring temperatures back to near climatology
on Sunday, but the subtropical moisture band isn't particularly
pronounced or anomalous. Forcing and moisture become sufficient for
some precipitation by Monday, but even then the warm conveyor belt
is somewhat fractured from deep subtropical moisture connection.
It's possible models are under-representing moisture given Beryl's
remnants at lower latitudes, augmenting trough strengthen and
moisture which models can struggle with fully capturing latent heat
release. So, if the forecast early next week trends, it may be
toward a wetter scenario.

Model spread grows a little into the middle part of next week, but
the general pattern favors very modest air mass change in the wake
of the shortwave trough. Deep moisture will be shunted away so rain
chances will be low, even with one or more perturbations rotating
through the broader trough. Temperatures should be near or just
below early July climatology which is max 85 and min 66 at IND.

&&

.AVIATION (12Z TAF Issuance)...
Issued at 630 AM EDT Thu Jul 4 2024

Impacts:

- Widespread rain and thunderstorms this morning

- Isolated convection this afternoon but confidence is low

- More showers and storms later tonight through early Friday

Discussion:

Patchy fog at a few sites this morning will diminish later this
morning as surface heating and increased mixing occur.

Elevated convection will continue through the morning within
warm/moist advection regime, traversing central Indiana. This round
should exit by around 18-19z, and then some diurnal destablization
and renewed isolated to scattered thunderstorms may occur, with
relatively lower probability of impacting terminals. Visibility and
ceilings will be impacted with storms. Additional storms are
possible late tonight and early Friday.

&&

.IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.
&&

$$

SHORT TERM...Updike
LONG TERM...BRB
AVIATION...BRB

Source: IND issues Area Forecast Discussion (AFD) at Jul 4, 6:30 AM EDT

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