Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS St. Louis, MO

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139
FXUS63 KLSX 211731
AFDLSX

Area Forecast Discussion...Updated Aviation
National Weather Service Saint Louis MO
1231 PM CDT Tue May 21 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- It`s going to be a hot one today, with temperatures reaching the
  low 90s, near record territory at St Louis. Heat and humidity
  will fuel a line of severe thunderstorms which will move in from
  the northwest this evening. Damaging winds will be the most
  widespread threat, but large hail and a few tornadoes will also
  be possible depending on storm mode.

- The severe weather threat Wednesday shifted southeast and is
  more limited locally. Wednesday is likely to be the coolest
  day of the forecast for most.

- The rest of the forecast will have near to above normal
  temperatures with frequent chances for showers and
  thunderstorms, although no obvious severe weather episodes are
  evident at this range.


&&

.SHORT TERM...  (Through Late Wednesday Afternoon)
Issued at 249 AM CDT Tue May 21 2024

Our warm and humid air mass continues today and actually reaches its
peak in terms of temperatures. We`ll see a fair amount of 90+ degree
readings, which will be near the record for St Louis (93 set in
1941). A warm front to our north across Iowa will be the primary
focus for thunderstorms this morning and into the day being fueled by
the very warm and humid air mass. Our area should remain dry for
most of the day Tuesday as at least some capping of the air mass
inhibits thunderstorm formation and forcing remains focused to our
north. That changes this evening, though.

The primary severe weather episode of Tuesday is expected to
commence in the late afternoon to early evening across northwest
Missouri into central Iowa. Surface low pressure will be forming and
pushing off to the northeast while a cold front develops and pushes
southeast behind it. Thunderstorm initiation seems most likely near
where the cold front reaches the dryline in northeast Kansas into
northwest Missouri as what capping exists will be eroded just as the
next shortwave trough moves out into the northern Plains. With
strong deep layer shear, supercells will be the initial storm mode
in an environment very favorable for large hail and damaging winds
as instability in the hail growth zone aloft is quite strong while a
deep near-surface mixed layer will enable the development of strong
downdrafts. There will also be a threat for tornadoes, although with
the deep boundary layer the low level shear will be somewhat limited
and LCL heights relatively high. These factors will get somewhat
more favorable for tornadoes during the early evening.

Relatively widespread initiation is expected in a 1-2 hour window
early this evening with storms likely to form quickly into a broken
line with QLCS structure and embedded supercells. This is the likely
storm mode as they enter our forecast area around 6PM this evening.
Damaging winds will be the primary threat, though local mesovortices
could also develop where the low level shear lines up favorably. As
the line pushes southeast it will begin to outrun the better
instability and shear, gradually losing its punch and eventually
falling apart altogether. Most of our area will see rain tonight,
though, and POPs are high due to the expected widespread coverage
this evening. The line should be exiting to the southeast near or
shortly after midnight.

Models are in pretty strong agreement that the storms tonight will
push the effective surface front southeastward with a significant
drop in dewpoint noted behind it. This will push Wednesday`s severe
weather threat southeast as well in the remaining warm sector. We
could still see rain and a few thunderstorms north of the front in
the southern half of our forecast area Wednesday afternoon as a
shortwave trough moves by, but the threat for severe weather is
significantly lower. Temperatures will also be significantly
cooler Wednesday behind the front, with most areas staying in the
70s, the coolest day of the forecast.

Kimble

&&

.LONG TERM...  (Wednesday Night through Monday)
Issued at 249 AM CDT Tue May 21 2024

For the extended portion of the forecast, the upper flow pattern
should be westerly to southwesterly right through the holiday
weekend with Gulf of Mexico moisture still readily available. In
general this spells temperatures near or above normal with frequent
opportunities for rain as nearly daily shortwave troughs move by.

While the front does push south of us for Wednesday, renewed
convection along it Wednesday afternoon helps to wash out the
boundary. Surface flow turns back to the south on Thursday with
those higher dewpoints oozing back northward because of it. It looks
like the best shortwave energy is to our south on Thursday and to
our north on Friday, but we can`t rule out some showers and
thunderstorms developing both days. Friday`s trough drags a cold
front in behind it which stalls near our area Saturday. The next
wave tracks along this stalled boundary on Sunday with a potentially
deeper trough developing behind this wave.

With so many potential rounds of showers and thunderstorms to track,
it is difficult to have much confidence on the timing of any
individual rounds considering the impact prior rounds will tend to
have on the subsequent rounds. As a result, there are POPs in every
period of the forecast with only small fluctuations each period.
This is not meant to say the whole weekend will be a washout. It
just means we can`t clearly identify any periods where it definitely
won`t rain. Each round of showers and thunderstorms may only bring a
couple of hours of wet weather with it allowing lots of dry time in
between. Temperatures will be seasonably warm for the most part but
not excessively hot, in the 80s. But there could be some cooler
weather as well if clouds and showers limit heating more or if we
get a more solid cold front pushing through the area. There isn`t a
strong signal for severe weather in any period, but we couldn`t
rule out a few stronger storms depending on how each day plays
out. Sunday`s wave may prove the best opportunity, but confidence
is low on all the variables lining up.

Kimble

&&

.AVIATION...  (For the 18z TAFs through 18z Wednesday Afternoon)
Issued at 1226 PM CDT Tue May 21 2024

Southerly winds gusting to 25-30+ kts and scattered-broken VFR
cumulus clouds will prevail across the region this afternoon. We
are still anticipating a line of severe thunderstorms to develop
across western MO later this afternoon, with this line moving
quickly to the east-southeast across central/eastern MO and
western IL this evening. The TAFs reflect a 2 hour window with IFR
flight conditions and strong winds when the line of storms is
expected to move through the respective terminals. Following the
passage of the line of storms there should be a westerly wind
shift and return to VFR flight conditions.

Glass

&&

.LSX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MO...None.
IL...None.
&&

$$

WFO LSX