Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Central Illinois

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850
FXUS63 KILX 251723
AFDILX

Area Forecast Discussion...Updated Aviation
National Weather Service Lincoln IL
1223 PM CDT Sat May 25 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Today will be a great day for outdoor activities, with mostly
  sunny skies, light winds, reduced humidity, and high
  temperatures in the 70s.

- Multiple rounds of thunderstorms are expected (greater than 80%
  chance) on Sunday. The initial wave of storms on Sunday morning
  could pose a risk of large hail (level 1 out of 5 risk), while
  additional development later in the day will be capable of all
  severe hazards (level 3 of 5).

- Locally heavy rain from the thunderstorms on Sunday could lead
  to flash flooding, especially if it occurs in areas that
  received heavy rain on Friday.

- Conditions trend drier during the upcoming work week, with a few
  lingering showers/storms north of I-72 Monday/Tuesday (15-20%
  chance), followed by mostly dry weather Wednesday-Friday.

&&

.UPDATE...
Issued at 1001 AM CDT Sat May 25 2024

Happy Memorial Day weekend! Today continues to be a beautiful,
calm day. Perfect weather for getting you routdoor chores done
before the next round of active weather arrives tomorrow. Highs
today will get up to the upper 70s, with clear blue skies and no
precipitation. The next chance of rain and thunderstorms arrive
early tomorrow morning.

Copple

&&

.SHORT TERM...  (Through Late Tonight)
Issued at 238 AM CDT Sat May 25 2024

A cold front continues to progress east across the area, extending
roughly from Rantoul towards St. Louis at 215am/0715z. Nighttime
microphysics satellite imagery shows a band of clouds from
immediately behind the front back towards the IL River. Much of
the precip activity has come to an end within the ILX CWA, but
isolated pockets of light rain can`t be ruled out within that area
of cloud cover, which is expected to depart east into IN by mid-
morning.

A pleasant Saturday is in store as weak sfc high pressure,
currently positioned over Kansas City, shifts east following the
cold frontal passage. Skies will be mostly clear today, with light
sfc winds and temperatures peaking in the upper 70s to low 80s.
Lower dewpoints (in the upper 40s or 50s during the afternoon)
should feel quite refreshing.

Erwin

.LONG TERM... (Sunday through next Saturday)
Issued at 238 AM CDT Sat May 25 2024

Severe thunderstorms are possible on Sunday (level 3 of 5 risk).
Guidance depicts a concerning parameter space, but there is still
quite a bit of uncertainty as to how this event could unfold.

In response to a sfc low in the lee of the Rockies, t-storms are
expected to develop Sat eve across the Plains, and CAMs show the
remnants of this convection pushing towards W IL close to sunrise on
Sun, continuing across the area Sun AM. These storms would be
elevated. Often times, we see these convective complexes weaken
after daybreak as the LLJ weakens and cloud top heating occurs, but
with guidance showing around 2000 J/kg of MUCAPE present, it seems
these storms could pose a hail threat. The SPC included portions
of western IL in a level 1 (of 5) risk in the Day 1 outlook, but
that would be for these Sun AM storms occurring late in the Day 1
forecast period (towards 12z/7am on Sunday). These storms are a
key point of uncertainty in the subsequent forecast, as their
evolution will impact destabilization later in the
afternoon/evening. It`s also possible that if the timing of the
first round of storms starts to shift slightly later into the
morning/early afternoon, they could reintensify and pose a more
robust severe threat.

In the upper levels on Sun, two shortwaves are evident in guidance,
one accompanying the morning storms, and another approaching during
the late afternoon/evening. The presence of both of these waves does
increase confidence that the two waves of storms currently shown in
guidance will actually occur. For the afternoon/evening, current
forecast soundings suggest very strong sfc-based instability
(greater than 3000 J/kg) developing south of I-72 as dewpoints surge
into the low 70s. Even the oft over-mixed HRRR is showing dewpoints
in the 70s across southern IL Sun PM. The forecast soundings appear
quite favorable for all severe hazards, with minimal capping, strong
deep layer shear (50 knots) and strong low level helicity (over 200
J/kg 0-1km storm-relative helicity), but again, the impacts of the
wave of morning storms will go a long way towards determining if
this pristine environment becomes a reality or not. Mesoscale
boundaries associated with the morning storms will be key in
determining if/where storms occur Sun afternoon. For now, the 25.00z
HRRR and NAMNest are actually in decent agreement - depicting robust
t-storm development Sun afternoon, generally near and south of I-72.
Given the mesoscale uncertainties, would not be surprised at all if
the CAMs placement of storms shifts considerably in future runs, but
for now, this is where the severe storm chances appear highest Sun
PM.

Deep layer shear vectors are oriented roughly east-west Sun PM,
which is close to paralleling the anticipated mesoscale boundaries.
Accordingly, upscale growth appears likely and this is well-captured
by the CAMs. Such a storm mode favors damaging winds as the primary
hazard. 0-3km shear vectors are around 30 knots, which is sufficient
but not overly supportive of a QLCS tornado threat, and thus the 5%
tornado risk feels appropriate despite the otherwise favorable
hodographs that at first glance would seem to signal a greater
tornado threat. One concern due to this boundary-parallel flow is
locally heavy rainfall. HREF 24-hr LPMM shows rainfall amounts
generally under 1.5" thru 7pm Sun, with pockets of locally higher
amounts exceeding 2-3", which could cause some flash flooding
concerns, particularly if it occurs in areas that received heavy
rainfall on Fri (along/just south of I-72).

The presence of the passing shortwave could keep scattered post-
frontal showers around Sun night, but the severe threat should
diminish as the front pushes south of the area late Sun evening.
Into early next week, upper trough becomes a persistent feature over
the Great Lakes. Cyclonic flow persists across IL, with several
upper level shortwaves pivoting around the main trough, and thus
pivoting through IL. That could keep isolated showers/storms in the
storm chances in the forecast Mon-Tues afternoons when diurnal
heating is maximized, but with low instability (less than 1000 J/kg)
no severe weather is expected those days.

Finally, it looks like we could see a prolonged dry period for the
latter half of the work week as an amplified upper ridge builds over
the central Plains, resulting in relatively strong (~1026-1028mb)
sfc high pressure over the Midwest. Precip chances are less than 15%
on Wed-Thurs. Deterministic guidance looks dry for Fri and the
daytime hours next Sat, with any precip off to the west. Ensemble
guidance spread starts to increase, however, such that low end PoPs
do exist across western IL Fri/Sat. As guidance comes into better
agreement, I expect the 15-30% PoPs for Fri-Sat to trend lower, at
least across eastern IL (closer to the sfc high). Temps will be near
to slightly below normal for much of the upcoming work week, with
highs in the 70s gradually trending warmer as we move towards next
weekend.

Erwin

&&

.AVIATION...  (For the 18z TAFs through 18z Sunday Afternoon)
Issued at 1223 PM CDT Sat May 25 2024

This afternoon is a great day to fly. VFR conditions will hang
around into the early overnight hours. Conditions will deteriorate
as the line of storms enters from the west and will move through to
the east through the morning. Ceilings will start dropping around
11z at PIA and will domino across central Illinois sites from there.
MVFR ceilings are expected for the morning hours after 12z. By mid
morning there could be some periods of lower visibilities but
confidence of when is low, hence them being left at 6SM.

Copple

&&

.ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.
&&

$$