Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Detroit/Pontiac, MI

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362 FXUS63 KDTX 030935 AFDDTX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Detroit/Pontiac MI 535 AM EDT Mon Jun 3 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Temperatures warm up Monday and Tuesday with highs returning to the 80s. Chance for showers or storms Tuesday night. - Showers and some thunderstorms likely Wednesday as a major weather pattern shift begins. After Wednesday, below normal temperatures are likely through at least the end of the week. && .AVIATION...
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Widespread fog has expanded across the airspace this morning, with majority of TAF sites seeing vsbys down to 1/4 SM or less at times. Radiative nature of the fog means it should quickly begin to mix out shortly after sunrise (11z-13z), with all TAF sites expected to return to VFR by 15z. Rest of the TAF period is characterized by light east to southeast winds (around 5 knots) and a continuous stream of high cloud alongside afternoon cumulus development. There is a low chance for a shower to clip MBS/FNT early Tuesday morning as a decaying MCS tracks into central Michigan, but confidence is too low at the moment to include in this issuance. For DTW/D21 Convection...Thunderstorms are not expected through this forecast period. DTW THRESHOLD PROBABILITIES... * High for cigs/vsby below 200 ft and/or 1/2 SM through sunrise this morning. * High for ceiling below 5000 feet through sunrise, low this afternoon through Tuesday.
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&& .PREV DISCUSSION...
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Issued at 350 AM EDT Mon Jun 3 2024 DISCUSSION... Low amplitude mid-upper level ridging is supporting an area of weak (1016mb) high pressure over Lower Michigan this morning. Calm to very weak easterly flow with little to no airmass turnover has caused a formation of shallow ground based br/hz over virtually all of the region. There have been a few holdouts, namely inside of the urban heat island of Detroit. Based on trends with a bouncing of surface observation, expecting fog through daybreak but then burning off fairly quickly or rising into a lower low coverage stratus. Forecast soundings are not that supportive of a strong ground based inversion. A long day with powerful solar intensity will result in the growth of the PBL. Highs today are expected to climb above 80 degrees with sunshine this afternoon. Flow trajectories are expected to remain largely anticyclonic Tuesday particularly in the 850-600mb layer. Background forcing will support large wavelength ridging albeit with increases in warm advection by the evening. Models have shown upstream convective activity over Wisconsin approaching the northern cwa sometime Monday night and early Tuesday. The blended guidance has had a tough time with the setup and has been broadbrushing Pops. Did go ahead and removed some chance PoPs in this period. Some differences remain on the timing of the richer thetae content but there is a signal that enhanced convective augmented moisture will arrive from the Mid Mississippi River Valley after 00Z Wednesday. The most notable aspect of the Tuesday is the warmth and mugginess with daytime highs reaching the upper 80s and dewpoints well into the middle 60s. Shower and thunderstorm chances begin increasing Tuesday night in response to a larger scale, upright warm front lifting northward Lower Michigan. Uncertainty does remain for Tuesday night as downstream ridge amplification will continue immediately ahead of the unseasonably strong Potential Vorticity anomaly over the northern Plains. Disagreement exists between the NAM and ECMWF when precipitation arrives with confidence increasing for the daytime Wednesday. If thundestorms were to develop Tuesday night no strong thunderstorm activity is expected with relatively high stability in the lowest 5.0 kft agl. The particulars are rather interesting for Wednesday as a very strong potential vorticity trough is forecasted to turning to a strongly negative tilt over Southeast Michigan at midday. The issue is that opaque cloud in place during the morning with a low level pressure circulation embedded back into the warm sector is expected to significantly compromise the insolation. Current model data is marginal with convective available potential energy at just under 1000 J/kg SBCAPE for the early afternoon hours. 0-6km bulk shear is generally in the 25 to 30 knot range. The latest Swody3 has a General Thunderstorm designation for Southeast Michigan Wednesday. A closed upper level low pressure system is then forecasted to impact Southeast Michigan with a very long duration of northwest flow from Thursday through next Monday. Periodic rain chances will exist but will remain virtually impossible to time. High temperatures during the period are expected to be in the upper 60s to 70s with lows in the 50s. MARINE... Upper level shortwave ridge brings a brief period of high pressure into the area today. Light northerly winds provide chances for patchy fog this morning, with any pockets that do develop dissipating by sunrise. Approaching warm front brings some chances for some light showers to develop Tuesday followed by a cold front on Wednesday, seeing chances for storms in the latter. Low-level flow up to 30 knots on Wednesday is expected 1000 feet above the surface, meaning that a stray strong gust mixing to the ground is a distinct possibility. Small Craft Advisories are not currently expected for Wednesday, but could remain a possibility if an upward wind gust trend develops in the models.
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&& .DTX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MI...None. Lake Huron...None. Lake St Clair...None. Michigan waters of Lake Erie...None. && $$ AVIATION.....MV DISCUSSION...CB MARINE.......BC You can obtain your latest National Weather Service forecasts online at www.weather.gov/detroit.