Forecast Discussions mentioning any of
"ACARS" "MDCRS" "AIRCRAFT" "TAMDAR" "AMDAR" "WVSS" received at GSD on 06/26/23
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Louisville KY
851 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
.Mesoscale Update...
Issued at 850 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
Supercell thunderstorms have moved across areas north of the
Bluegrass/Western KY Parkways earlier this afternoon. Storms have
struggled to maintain intensity as they move ahead of the main
forcing boundary, a cold front located across southern IN at this
time. As the front pushes southeast later this evening, currently
discrete cells will likely congeal into a quasi-linear structure as
slab-like lifting from the front overcomes a capping inversion which
has prevented storm development across south central KY so far
today. As convective mode changes, the severe hail and tornado
threat will diminish slightly while the straight-line wind threat
will persist given ample DCAPE. Severe weather parameters (e.g. SCP,
STP) are expected to remain elevated as storms move southeast;
however, these may be overdone given convective inhibition and
overturning which is not handled well in high-res guidance.
Another thing to watch is an expected increase in the low-level jet
strength over the next few hours. This will contribute to increased
low-level shear and helicity values between now and 06Z as
convection moves southeast. As a result, the tornado threat, while
decreasing, will continue to exist as storms move southeast.
&&
.Short Term...(This evening through Monday)
Issued at 332 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
...Severe Storms, Some with Significant Hail, Wind and Tornadoes,
Expected This Evening...
...Have Your Severe Weather Safety Plans in Place Now...
Key Messages:
* Second wave of strong to severe storms late this afternoon into
the evening.
* All severe hazards are possible this evening. From widespread
damaging winds to very large hail and a few tornadoes, some which
could be strong.
Confidence:
Confidence remains moderate on storm initiation later this afternoon
and early evening. With medium-high confidence that any storms that
do develop could quickly turn severe and dangerous.
Discussion:
Forecast remains on track for the development of strong to severe
storms developing later this afternoon into early evening. While the
first wave of convection from this morning may have limited daytime
heating, with dew points in the low/mid 70s and temperatures across
central KY and southern IN in the low/mid 80s, meso analysis has an
axis of SBCAPE ranging from 3000-4500 J/kg along and west of the I-
65 corridor stretching from Nashville northward into south central
MI. Providing the atmosphere with ample instability this afternoon
and evening. Strong 60-70kt 500mb jet streak centered over northern
MO into western IL will continue to work east-southeast this
afternoon/evening at the base of the upper-level trough associated
with the upper-low over WI. Although it is expected to weaken some
over the next couple hours as it noses into the Ohio Valley from the
northwest, it will provide 50+kts of deep layer shear. At the
surface, a cold front associated with a sfc low over WI stretching
from Chicago down through central IL into northern AR will continue
to push eastward this evening. Convection has already begun to fire
ahead of the cold front across north central IN where the SPC has
already issued a tornado watch. This boundary, along with residual
outflow from this mornings activity has help to be the focus for the
development this afternoon. The one limiting factor so far this
afternoon across southern IN and central KY has been a fairly deep
warm layer cap between 900-800mb as seen on AMDAR soundings out of
SDF this afternoon. It likely will take some time for this cap to
break but once it does, expect initial develop to be supercellular
over the area early this evening before congealing into a linear
cluster later this evening as the cold front approaches later this
evening and overnight.
All severe hazards remain in play from damaging winds, large hail
and possible strong tornadoes. Model soundings continue to show
ample 0-1/0-3km SRH ranging from 150-300 m2/s2 and STP values
increasing into the 2-5 range indicating the possibility of a few
long track tornadoes. Large hail will also be a concern given the
deep shear values, large positive area on model soundings and good
amount of dry air through the vertical column.
Storms will quickly move off to the east and out of our CWA between
3-5am EDT with clearing quiet weather behind the storms.
Monday will start off with lows in the low/mid 60s as the cold
front works across the central KY. Initially, we start off dry with
partly/mostly sunny skies but clouds increase during the afternoon.
Cyclonic flow aloft associated with the stacked system over MI will
swing a love of vorticity through the region. This could help
generate some isolated showers and even a few rumbles of thunder
during the afternoon and evening due to some steep low-level lapse
rates, especially if we get good amount of morning sunshine. Highs
will warm into the low/mid 80s and it will be breezy out of the west
with gusts of 25 to near 30 mph.
&&
.Long Term...(Monday night through Sunday)
Issued at 300 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Key Messages:
- Precip chances linger on Tuesday
- Warming through next week until we hit the low-mid 90s on Friday
- Precip chances increase by next weekend
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Monday night - Tuesday...
The low pressure system moving through Sunday night and Monday will
be to the east of the region by Monday night. Another shortwave
trough will move through the region Monday night into Tuesday,
bringing scattered showers and isolated storms mainly to our
northeastern counties. Forecast soundings show a dry adiabatic
layer, which will likely lead to breezier conditions on Tuesday
around 10-14mph and gusts up to 20mph. High temperatures on Tuesday
in the southeastern portion of the CWA will be in the upper 80s,
where the northeastern portion of the CWA will be in the low-mid 80s
due to lingering cloud cover and scattered showers.
Tuesday night - Friday...
High pressure will build in from the west Tuesday night into
Wednesday. This will allow the rest of the week to remain dry and
mostly clear. Temperatures will be warming up through the week. On
Wednesday low temperatures will be in the low 60s and by Friday they
will be in the low 70s. High temperatures on Wednesday will be in
the 80s and by Friday, in the low - mid 90s. On Friday, NBM shows
heat indices creeping into the low 100s in our southeastern
counties.
Friday night - next weekend...
On Friday night and into the weekend, a shortwave trough out ahead
of a more substantial trough will move through the region bringing
increased precipitation chances.
&&
.Aviation...(00Z TAF Issuance)
Issued at 740 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
The main challenge during the upcoming forecast period will be
timing out thunderstorms between now and 06Z. Latest hi-
resolution guidance depicts a wave of storms moving from NW to SE
later this evening, impacting SDF and LEX before pushing south to
BWG. Locally strong straight line winds and reduced visibilities
from heavy rainfall are the main threats with these thunderstorms,
with IFR (possibly lower) visibilities expected in the heaviest
precipitation cores. Once the storms clear BWG, light winds and VFR
conditions are expected for the remainder of the overnight hours.
Tomorrow, an upper low will linger across the Ohio Valley and upper
Midwest, with guidance showing a 5-6 kft stratus deck impacting
SDF/LEX/HNB. Winds will increase out of the west, with 10-15 kt
sustained winds and 15-25 kt gusts expected during the late morning
and afternoon hours. A stray shower or storm cannot be ruled out,
especially at LEX; however, confidence is too low to mention at this
time. Otherwise, expect VFR conditions to continue through the
remainder of the current forecast period.
&&
.LMK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
IN...None.
KY...None.
&&
$$
Mesoscale...CSG
Short Term...BTN
Long Term...SRM
Aviation...CSG
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Tampa Bay Ruskin FL
626 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
...New UPDATE, AVIATION...
.UPDATE...
Issued at 619 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
Much drier mid level air advecting across north and central
Florida this evening as seen in W/V imagery suppressing convection
across much of the area. Scattered showers and isolated
thunderstorms persist over southwest Florida in region of deeper
available moisture and along outflow boundaries pushing back to
the west. Isolated showers were also along the I-4 corridor...and
may see a few develop over the next hour or two along the I-75
corridor as outflow boundaries collide along that area.
Shower/thunderstorm activity is expected to dissipate by midnight
with skies becoming mostly clear overnight.
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 219 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
A digging upper-level trough has settled south with a sharp boundary
present in water vapor satellite imagery across the South Central FL
peninsula this afternoon. Afternoon ACARS soundings from TPA and RSW
represent this delineation well. A noticeably drier column is
present at TPA with a PW value of 1.26 inches. At FMY, moisture is
far more readily available through the column leading to a PW value
of over 2 inches. As such, the Tampa Bay area is warm and dry.
Showers and isolated thunderstorms continue across SWFL.
For at least the first half of the week, a similar setup largely
dominates. A drier continental airmass settles across much of the
peninsula reducing rain chances. This is more muted across the
southern interior and SWFL, but everyone is looking at relatively
lower rain chances for the week ahead. Where storms do form, a
weaker upper-level synoptic flow favors more typical summertime
convection. Isolated storms have the potential to be stronger, but
no significant severe weather concerns exist at this time.
Regardless, it`s not going to feel any better at the surface. A
lighter, but predominantly westerly flow continues for most of the
work week, keeping conditions warm and humid at the surface with
shallow moisture advection off the Gulf. Overnight lows in the upper
70s to even the low 80s near the coast are likely in this pattern.
Finally, there is a potential for a more ESE wind shift as next
weekend approaches with upper level ridging building west, allowing
surface ridging to build back west too. This favors more enhanced
boundary collisions along the FL West coast later in the afternoon
and evening. For now, the forecast remains pretty conservative,
but the highest rain chances for the week after today come back
into the forecast for next weekend.
&&
.AVIATION...
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 619 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
A few showers and thunderstorms this evening over southwest
Florida may briefly impact PGD/RSW/FMY with LCL MVFR
CIGs/VSBYs...otherwise VFR conditions will prevail overnight as
skies become mostly clear.
&&
.MARINE...
Issued at 219 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
Quiet, mostly rain-free conditions are forecast across coastal
waters over the next few days, allowing waves to continue subsiding
below 2 feet. This current pattern remains in place for most of the
work week.
&&
.FIRE WEATHER...
Issued at 219 PM EDT Sun Jun 25 2023
Fewer storms are expected for the next few days with some drier air
aloft. This does not translate to the surface, however, as a light
predominantly westerly flow continues to keep warm and humid
conditions in place. As such, red flag conditions are not expected
with RH values remaining above critical thresholds.
&&
.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
TPA 77 93 78 92 / 10 10 0 10
FMY 76 93 77 94 / 30 50 10 30
GIF 73 94 74 95 / 30 30 0 20
SRQ 76 92 77 91 / 10 10 0 10
BKV 70 95 71 94 / 10 10 0 20
SPG 79 90 79 89 / 10 10 0 10
&&
Sea Breeze Thunderstorm Regime For Monday: 1
Sea Breeze Thunderstorm Regime For Tuesday: 4
For additional information on sea breeze regimes, go to:
https://www.weather.gov/tbw/ThunderstormClimatology
&&
.TBW WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
FL...None.
Gulf waters...None.
&&
$$
UPDATE/AVIATION/MARINE/FIRE WEATHER...Oglesby
DECISION SUPPORT...RDavis
UPPER AIR/CLIMATE...RDavis