Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Indianapolis, IN

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FXUS63 KIND 142239
AFDIND

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Indianapolis IN
639 PM EDT Thu Mar 14 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Potential to see severe weather develop this evening intothe
  early overnight hours.

- Breezy during daytime Saturday-Monday, gusts at least 20-30 mph

- Much colder early week, hard freeze expected Monday Night

&&

.MESOSCALE UPDATE...
Issued at 508 PM EDT Thu Mar 14 2024

Current satellite imagery shows a vast area of clearing behind this
morning`s convective complex. Rapid atmospheric recovery has
occurred, and temperatures from I-70 southward have warmed into the
lower 70s. A cumulus field has developed, stretching from Illinois
into Indiana. Visually, the cumulus has a wavy and flat appearance
signifying low-level stability. Across northern Illinois, smooth
stratus is flowing southward behind a cold front which can be seen
as a thin line of cloud cover spreading south and east. Convective
initiation has occurred along this boundary across our northern
counties near Lafayette. Further south and west, a more unstable
layer signified by ragged and agitated cumulus has since erupted
with convective near and west of St Louis. Anvil cirrus from these
storms should spread northeast into Indiana over the next several
hours.

Taking a look at sounding data out of IND, we`ll see pronounced low-
level capping inversion around 850mb with steep lapse rates above it
(7.2 C/Km). Surface lapse rates have been increasing as well as the
lower boundary layer continues to recover. Interestingly enough, the
850mb cap has been descending with time which signifies larger-scale
subsidence. Indeed, model data shows neutral to even slight height
rises through the afternoon. This could also be partly from residual
subsidence behind the departing MCS. This may be a mitigating factor
for convective coverage this afternoon...at least for a little
while. Should the cap and broad subsidence persist, convection may
become limited to the cold front itself as it progresses
southeastward. With a shear vector nearly parallel to the boundary,
quick upscale growth is possible. Hodographs are mainly long and
straight, with some low-level curvature from IND south and westward.
Shear values over 60 knots are more than enough to support
supercells upon initiation, or while things remain discrete. A
transition to a mainly linear mode is likely as the evening
progresses.

In terms of convective hazards, IND soundings show a wide and tall
CAPE profile with values between 1500-2000 J/kg. A large amount of
the CAPE falls within the hail growth zone and winds increase
markedly from there upward for good storm top ventilation. Long
straight hodographs, large CAPE, and steep lapse rates mean large
hail is one of the primary hazards this afternoon (especially north
of I-70). With how high the instability stretches, any discrete
cells / supercells may be able to generate hail over 2" in diameter.
The best chance for this would be shortly after initiation, before
any upscale growth occurs. Secondary threats include damaging winds,
as enough momentum remains in the low-level jet to be transfered
downward by strong cores. Finally, the threat for tornadoes also
exists as some curvature exists in the lowest 1km of the hodograph
(which is mainly long and straight above that) along with abundant
low-level buoyancy.

There also exists a low risk for flash flooding, especially if any
storm training occurs.

&&

.SHORT TERM (This evening through Friday)...
Issued at 300 PM EDT Thu Mar 14 2024

Quiet weather conditions are expected over the next hour or two
across the area due to mesoscale subsidence behind the QLCS which
moved through earlier in the day. ACARS soundings show a weak cap
just above 850mb from the subsidence. While this is currently
inhibiting convection, low-level theta-e advection ahead of an
advancing cold front and daytime heating will erode the cap. A
additional convection is expected to initiate around the 4-5pm period
this afternoon. Moderate instability up to 2500 J/KG of MLCAPE and
strong effective bulk-shear will be supportive for supercells this
evening. Damaging wind gusts, large to very large hail, and isolated
tornadoes are possible with these storms. In addition, training
storms could lead to localized flooding.

Upscale growth is likely during the evening and storms should
gradually move southeast. The threat for severe weather should
quickly begin to diminish around midnight as the better instability
shift south. Scattered showers and storms are still likely to
continue south of I-70 through the late overnight hours due to how
slow the cold front is moving.

By Friday morning, look for the front to be in the process of
exiting the area. Showers may still be ongoing over southern
counties along and just ahead of the cold front. Other than morning
showers across the south, surface high pressure building in will
provide quiet weather conditions for the end of the work week. Look
for clouds to quickly clear during the afternoon once drier air
filters in. This will provide some slight warming. However, cloud
cover early in the day combined with cold air advection should
greatly limit diurnal heating. Highs will range from the low to mid
50s.

&&

.LONG TERM (Friday night through Thursday)...
Issued at 305 PM EDT Thu Mar 14 2024

Friday night through Sunday...

Essentially dry and breezy conditions will be the rule through this
weekend as the region transitions to at least a brief colder pattern.
Cooler high pressure centered over the Rockies will build eastward
into the region...although the more distinct feature will be a
rather potent cyclone sliding east across southern Canada, fueled by
a stronger late-winter upper trough plunging down the Upper Midwest
on Saturday.
Associated stronger, yet moisture-starved cold front to cross the
CWA around Saturday evening.  Wind gusts should peak during daylight
hours around 20-30 mph each day, both from the SW ahead of the
boundary SAT... and then from more WNW/NW directions through early
next week.

Monday through Thursday...

Mainly dry conditions will be the rule through most of the next
workweek as rather broad Canadian surface high pressure progresses
from the northern Plains to the Gulf coast by the mid-week.  This
ridge will suppress most Gulf moisture while upper forcing is
limited to a deeper/more amplified trough that will cross the
Midwest Monday...before a broad zonal pattern takes over while
slowly see-sawing from chilly northwesterly to more seasonable
westerly flow.

While guidance is continuing to show at least a 24-hour period
around the Monday timeframe with H850 temperatures below the
critical negative 8 degrees level to initiate convective snow
showers...recent trends are favoring less-organized forcing so have
removed slight chance POPs for time being...although wet snow
flurries will certainly be possible, especially over the region`s
northeastern half which will be downwind of flow off of southern
Lake Michigan.  Passing weak waves embedded in the arriving zonal
pattern around the Tuesday timeframe will favor variable cloudiness
with ceilings more likely over northern portions of the Midwest.

Readings will be mainly near to slightly below normal past what
should be a chillier day Monday with highs in mainly the 35-40F
range under the passing trough.  And what should be widespread 25-
30F minimums both Sunday night and Monday night.  Any early
vegetation would be at risk during pre-dawn hours, although
sustained winds of at least 5-10 mph would at least discourage frost
formation.

Chances for what may be more conversational/light rain return around
the Thursday timeframe as the overall split upper flow supports a
weak southern wave lifting towards the region from the southern
Plains.
Staunch zonal flow along the northern CONUS should prevent the ridge-
building that has lead to frequent unseasonably mild conditions over
the past month...with instead slight moderation only allowing highs
in the 50s across the CWA Wednesday and Thursday.

&&

.AVIATION (00Z TAF Issuance)...
Issued at 638 PM EDT Thu Mar 14 2024

Impacts:

- SW winds sustained to 30 knots, gusts to 50 knots and hail
  to an inch and larger possible in thunderstorms this evening

- MVFR and brief IFR conditions also possible in thunderstorms
  this evening

Discussion:

Strong and severe thunderstorms will continue to develop this
evening, especially near and south of a front that will move
southeast across the terminals tonight. There will be lingering
showers and possibly weaker thunderstorms the remainder of the night
with MVFR conditions possible. Finally, the threat for convection
will end Friday morning, but MVFR ceilings may linger in the wake of
the front.

&&

.IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.
&&

$$

MESOSCALE...Eckhoff
SHORT TERM...Melo
LONG TERM...AGM
AVIATION...MK


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