Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Twin Cities, MN

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040
FXUS63 KMPX 211743
AFDMPX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Twin Cities/Chanhassen MN
1243 PM CDT Tue May 21 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) of severe weather for this
  afternoon extends as far northwest as Mankato, the southeast
  Twin Cities metro, and Eau Claire. Damaging wind gusts, hail,
  and a few tornadoes are all possible

- Strong synoptic winds late this afternoon and evening in
  western Minnesota. Wind gusts in excess of 50 mph will be
  possible.

- Widespread heavy rainfall is still expected, which will likely lead
  to an increased risk for river flooding going into the
  holiday weekend.

- Active pattern remains in place. Next for chance arrives Friday,
  with more unsettled weather possible Sunday and Memorial Day.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 424 AM CDT Tue May 21 2024

All things are still on track to have a dynamic system impact the
MPX area today as an unseasonably strong and deepening area of low
pressure moves across MN this afternoon/evening. As befitting of a
strong and dynamic system, severe weather, strong synoptic winds in
the cold conveyor belt, and heavy rainfall are all on the table for
later today.

Overnight, thunderstorms have been most prevalent just north of I-80
across Nebraska and Iowa on the nose of the best 925-850mb moisture
transport. Farther north, we`re more in the MUCAPE gradient, with
enough isentropic and lift to get the occasional shower/storm to
pulse up and down, but we have not had to deal with the level of
convection as Iowa has. As we go into the morning and the Nebraska
MCV moves into northwest IA, we should see shower/storm coverage
expand across southern MN. As the system starts to deepen today,
rapid airmass recovery is expected, as a southerly LLJ builds to
over 50 kts in IA, quickly transporting a fresh airmass into the
region. Current expectations are that shortly after 18z today,
storms will rapidly develop near the center of the surface low and
along its attendant cold front. These storms will then quickly
develop into an arcing line of storms that will accelerate to the
northeast across Iowa, southeast MN and into western WI. From the
severe perspective, given the intensifying nature of the surface
low, the kinematic environment will be impressive, the bigger
question mark comes with the degree of destabilization we see out
ahead of the line. From the MPX perspective, we`ll see the northwest
end/bookend vortex of this QLCS move across our area. The first
rendition at the Day 1 convective outlook looks to have a good
handle on how far northwest an environment supportive of severe
weather will get with the northwest edge of the Enhanced risk that
comes up to Mankato, the southeast metro, and Eau Claire. This
should be a fast moving QLCS with the primary threat being damaging
wind gusts, though the shear environment will also be conducive to
QLCS tornado development, think of something like the severe QLCS we
saw back in September of 2018.

From the rainfall perspective, there will be two QPF maxima with
this system. One will be the trowal region in the cold conveyor belt
where synoptic forcing will be maximized. In a different time of
year, this would be something that could drop 2 feet of snow, but at
almost Memorial Day, it will be a large swath of 2-4" of rain from
headwaters of the MN northeast to the Voyageurs NP region. The other
rainfall max will come where that bookend vortex tracks, which right
now looks to be from Mankato up through the Twin Cities to the Twin
Ports. This looks to be more of a 1-3" type of setup, though with
much of that falling in a couple of hour period. The current Flash
Flood Watch captures the potential path for this second area of
heavy rain and left it unchanged.

Finally, but certainly something that can`t be ignored, are the
strong winds on the west side of the system. HREF mean wind gusts
show a large area of wind gusts exceeding 50 mph developing along
the MN/SD border this afternoon. We continued the wind advisory and
expanded some out there, though with the HRRR showing winds gusting
over 60 mph, an upgrade to an High Wind Warning will be possible for
western MN.

For Wednesday, the biggest change we saw with the 00z guidance is a
sunnier/drier forecast for our area. The sunnier aspect also meant
highs took a step up as well, with 70s progged for areas south of I-
94. Dry weather is also expected to continue into Thursday if you`re
looking for a time to cut down the jungle your yard has become.

Models continue to show our next shortwave and associated system
impacting the area Thursday night through Friday. We continue to see
some spread with this system, especially in terms of its strength,
but there was a noted strengthening of this system with overnight
runs of the ECMWF and Canadian. Rainfall amounts don`t look to be as
eye popping as today`s, but given the upward trend we`ll be seeing
with our rivers, more rain certainly won`t help the situation.

For the holiday weekend, the one area where we are seeing some
agreement is Saturday being dry. For Sunday and Monday, models show
more shortwave activity rotating through the region, though
agreement at this point is pretty poor, though we can at least
expect the possibility for rain to cap off the holiday weekend.

&&

.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z WEDNESDAY/...
Issued at 1227 PM CDT Tue May 21 2024

We`re seeing a break in the showers and storms early this
afternoon before another round starts approaching from the
southwest by around 20z. A return to MVFR/IFR conditions is
expected as the storms move through, along with gusty winds.
Conditions will improve after 03-04z with only some scattered
showers. Our western most terminals will likely see gusts of
40kts or greater by this evening as the low wraps up and pulls
away to the northeast. LLWS will also be a concern for these
sites. These strong winds will move eastward through the
overnight hours and diminish somewhat by sunrise. A return to
VFR is expected during the early morning hours.

KMSP...Skies are clearing early this afternoon with thunderstorm
development still expected by 20-21z. All severe hazards are
possible through 00z before conditions improve. Winds will turn
westerly at this time with gusts around 30-35kts possible before
sunrise.

/OUTLOOK FOR KMSP/
WED...VFR. Wind W 15G30kts.
THU...VFR. Wind W 10 kts.
FRI...VFR/MVFR chc -SHRA/TSRA. Wind SE 10-15kts.
&&

.HYDROLOGY...
Issued at 321 PM CDT Mon May 20 2024

Given the setup for widespread heavy rainfall, were certain to
see most rivers in the area end their recent recession and
begin rising once again. Extended probabilistic guidance (HEFS)
shows the potential for decent rises on area rivers should
rainfall exceed 2.5 inches or so over large areas, something
that is in the realm of possibility. The upper Minnesota and
tributaries, as well as the Crow river basin, are probably the
most susceptible to seeing rises to near or above flood stage by
later in the week should this occur. Urban/small
stream/overland flooding is also possible during and shortly
after some of the heavier downpours Tuesday and Tuesday night.

A reminder: The NWS hydrology/river forecast webpage (AHPS) at
water.weather.gov is going to be discontinued next week (May
28th). The new site (NWPS, the National Water Prediction
Service) is located at water.noaa.gov  now is the time to
replace bookmarks and familiarize yourself with how the new site
looks and feels. Resources for learning more are available at
the bottom of the this page:
https:/www.weather.gov/owp/operations

&&

.MPX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MN...Wind Advisory from 4 PM this afternoon to 11 PM CDT this
     evening for Chippewa-Douglas-Lac Qui Parle-Pope-Redwood-
     Stevens-Swift-Yellow Medicine.
     Flood Watch through late tonight for Anoka-Benton-Carver-
     Chisago-Dakota-Hennepin-Isanti-Kanabec-Kandiyohi-McLeod-
     Meeker-Mille Lacs-Morrison-Ramsey-Renville-Scott-
     Sherburne-Sibley-Stearns-Todd-Washington-Wright.
     Flood Watch until 7 PM CDT this evening for Blue Earth-Brown-
     Faribault-Freeborn-Goodhue-Le Sueur-Martin-Nicollet-
     Redwood-Rice-Steele-Waseca-Watonwan.
WI...Flood Watch through late tonight for Pierce-Polk-St. Croix.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...NDC
AVIATION...Dye
HYDROLOGY...CCS