Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS St. Louis, MO
Issued by NWS St. Louis, MO
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984 FXUS63 KLSX 211940 AFDLSX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Saint Louis MO 240 PM CDT Tue May 21 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - A line of severe thunderstorms will impact the entire region tonight with most of the severe weather centered on this evening. All severe weather hazards will be possible throughout the region, but the greatest threat of damaging winds, large hail, and tornadoes (including a strong tornado) will be focused across central and northeast Missouri and west central Illinois. - Showers and thunderstorms chances will be focused south of I-70 on Wednesday as a cold front settles into southward. A few severe thunderstorms will be possible, mainly across southeast Missouri and southwest Illinois in the afternoon and evening. - Unsettled weather will dominate the from Thursday through the Memorial Day weekend with frequent chances for showers and thunderstorms, and normal to above normal temperatures. && .SHORT TERM... (Through Late Wednesday Night) Issued at 200 PM CDT Tue May 21 2024 It is the waiting game at this hour early this afternoon. Instabilitycontinues to grow with heating, and most of the CWA is characterized by MLCAPE of 1500-2000+ J/KG but capped as well with a decent warm layer above 850 mb. An axis of very unstable air and MLCAPE of 3000+ J/KG focused ahead of the cold front across eastern KS into far NW will be the genesis zone and the latest GOES imagery is already showing deepening convective cu/towers and storm initiation. Thunderstorms should erupt from NW MO into far eastern KS within the next few hours and favorable deep layer shear of 55+ kts and the aforementioned CAPE suggests they will quickly become severe with supercells favored. The supercell storms will move quickly east-northeast and should grow in coverage into a broken line, tracking into central and northeast MO in the 6-8 pm time frame. This line will then track quickly to the east- southeast through the evening with MLCAPE values of 2000+ and robust deep layer shear maintaining the severe threat across the ENTIRE AREA until it exits the CWA in southeast MO and far southwest IL near 06-07z. Deep layer shear vectors have a fairly large orthogonal component to the advancing cold front/forcing suggesting that the line should at least be composed of semi- discrete supercells into late evening with merger potential suggesting localized upscale growth in severe bowing line segments/clusters. All severe weather hazards will be possible throughout the CWA, but the greatest potential for high- end severe weather including very large hail greater than 2 inches in diameter, wind gusts possibly of 80+ mph, and tornadoes including a strong tornado will reside this evening across central and northeast MO and west-central IL. In this area the instability will be greatest during the duration of the event and there is a short window of slightly better low-level hodograph curvature. The low-level winds veer through the evening diminishing hodograph curvature and resulting in more of a straight-line profile in the low-levels which is less favorable in general for supercell tornadoes, unless good deviant motion occurs. 0-3km shear vectors would also support tornado potential with linear structures and QLCS processes as well. The cold front will settle into southern MO and southern IL on Wednesday. A well-defined progressive short wave trof will move through the mid-upper MS Valley Wednesday afternoon and evening and this will aid in showers and thunderstorms generally focused south of I-70 and especially across southeast MO and southern IL in proximity to the frontal zone. While there appears to be some severe potential in the afternoon and evening, the greatest instability is forecast at this time to reside south of the CWA and this would suggest that is where the greatest severe threat will be favored as well. Wednesday will also be 10-15 degrees cooler with the area largely in the post-frontal air mass. Glass && .LONG TERM... (Thursday through Next Tuesday) Issued at 200 PM CDT Tue May 21 2024 An unsettled pattern will persist into early next week with progressive west-southwest flow aloft forecast. While there continue to be some differences in the guidance suite with details, this flow regime will be feature periodic shortwaves tracking within the flow and traversing the area and frontal boundaries attendant with them wavering north to south and across the area. This will result in frequent shower and thunderstorm chances, however dry time will be frequent as well. Currently Friday and Sunday have the greatest precipitation potential but not all day rains. High temperatures are a bit uncertain and could vary depending on clouds and timing of the rain. Our current forecast is a bit cooler than the previous one and generally lies in the lower quartile of the NBM range, and suggests warmer highs more into the 80s is certainly quite possible. Glass && .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