Area Forecast Discussion
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539
FXUS64 KLUB 280523
AFDLUB

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Lubbock TX
1223 AM CDT Sun Apr 28 2024

...New AVIATION...

.SHORT TERM...
(This evening through Sunday morning)
Issued at 214 PM CDT Sat Apr 27 2024

Forecast remains on track for today. Dryline as of 1 pm was located
from east of Childress to Guthrie. This dryline will slowly mix east
through the afternoon with additional thunderstorm development
possible along it across the southern Rolling Plains. The
environment will remain juicy with MLCAPE of around 3000 J/Kg with
effective bulk shear of 45 kts which is supportive of very large
hail and damaging winds. There is a non-zero tornado threat however
the best environment for tornadoes remains east of our forecast
area. Behind the dryline, westerly winds are increasing and will
become gusty for locations on the Caprock with sustained winds of 20-
25 mph and wind gusts to 45 mph. These strong winds and dry air are
leading to elevated to critical fire weather conditions on the
Caprock, please see the fire weather discussion below for more
information. A Pacific cold front will sweep east across the
forecast area this evening and as the front overtake the dryline a
third and final round of strong to severe thunderstorms is possible
primarily across the Southern Rolling Plains with a hail/wind
threat. This activity will quickly sweep eastward and out of our
area by midnight. Skies will gradually clear overnight as low
temperatures drop into the 40s on the Caprock and mid 50s. /WI

&&

.LONG TERM...
(Sunday through next Friday)
Issued at 214 PM CDT Sat Apr 27 2024

The negatively-tilted trough will rotate into the west-central Great
Plains tomorrow while the respective lows become vertically-stacked,
resulting in a weakening cold front to move through the CWA during
the morning hours. Weak cyclogenesis along the edge of the
Mescalero Escarpment will cause winds to back westward by tomorrow
afternoon while also remaining light as the primary jet streak in
the mid-levels translates into the Ozark Mountain region. Confluent
flow on the backside of the departing system will result in a
subsidence layer advecting overhead, which will cap mixing heights
near 700 mb. Temperatures will peak in the middle 70s to middle 80s
from west-to-east, respectively, tomorrow. Gradual geopotential
height rises will follow heading into Monday as the upper air
pattern deamplifies less a small-scale wave propagating through the
mean flow which will maintain lee cyclogenesis across West Texas.
Temperatures on Monday will be a few degrees warmer as the westerly
fetch remains intact which, when combined with full insolation, will
result in very deep boundary-layer mixing with PBL heights ascending
to near 600 mb. However, despite the excellent mixing profiles, only
a light breeze is expected as the flow aloft is bereft of any jet
streak. The geometry of the mid/upper-level flow further north over
the central and northern Great Plains should also augment the
position of the dryline and keep it stalled in the eastern Rolling
Plains on Sunday and Monday.

A high-level, split-flow pattern is forecast to translate across
western North America heading into mid-week, with a broadly
anticyclonic 250 mb jet streak arcing over northern Mexico and into
far southwestern Texas as the left-exit region of this feature
emerges over the CWA. Slightly negative geopotential height
tendencies associated with the glancing influence of a larger-scale
gyre situated over the northern Rocky Mountains and central Canada
is forecast to maintain the dryline in the eastern Rolling Plains.
Despite the attenuation of the deep-layer split-flow, the increase
in southwesterly winds in conjuction with intense, diabatic heating,
is expected result in a sharp, well-defined dryline across the
Rolling Plains on Tuesday afternoon. Strong, mixed-layer theta-e
advection despite only 20-25 kt of westerly, mid-level flow, will
also facilitate the development of sizable CAPE, with mixed-layer
parcels potentially yielding >=2,500 J/kg amidst cross-boundary
shear vectors and straight hodographs. Severe thunderstorms will be
possible late Tuesday afternoon across the eastern Rolling Plains as
surface temperatures breach 90 degrees.

The large, cyclonic gyre located over the northern Rocky Mountains
into western and central Canada is forecast to remain intact as a
mid/upper-level ridge steadily amplifies over the northeastern
Pacific Ocean on Wednesday into Thursday. Discrepancies exist among
the global NWP guidance suites on the potential evolution of the
shortwave troughing embedded within this cyclonic gyre, and whether
or not said feature is positively- or neutrally-tilted. Regardless
of the orientation of the shortwave troughing, the persistence of
the gyre will maintain a belt of southwesterly/broadly cyclonic flow
eclipsing West Texas throughout the middle and latter half of the
week. The geostrophic deformation associated with the geopotential
height falls (albeit gradual) will also result in daily sloshing of
the dryline, with indications of the dryline generally bisecting the
CWA along the Caprock Escarpment; however, the exact positioning of
the dryline on Wednesday and Thursday remains uncertain and will be
refined over the next couple of days. Locations within the moist
sector/east of the dryline will have chances for thunderstorms on
Wednesday and Thursday afternoon. Semi-cross-boundary shear vectors
garner confidence in the potential for storms becoming severe;
however, predictability in mesoscale features and interactions
becomes limited by this point as it enters the D5-D6 period.

A cold front is forecast to move through the region by the end of
the week due to the progressive, northern-stream flow; however, the
timing of the cold front will be dictated by the eventual position
and tilt of the aforementioned shortwave trough pivoting through the
southern tranche of the synoptic gyre. Thereafter, indications are
for the return of broad troughing emerging from the western U.S. by
next weekend. The blended PoPs have been maintained area-wide for
next weekend owing to discrepancies among the global NWP guidance on
the magnitude and position of the western troughing.

Sincavage

&&

.AVIATION...
(06Z TAFS)
Issued at 1219 AM CDT Sun Apr 28 2024

VFR expected to continue at all sites. A period of strong NW wind
gusts associated with some very high-based virga will continue at
PVW and LBB through the next few hours, with a few gusts near 40
kt possible. Potential for strong wind gusts will decrease
significantly early this morning, with modest NW winds then
expected to continue through the daytime hours on Sunday.

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...
Issued at 214 PM CDT Sat Apr 27 2024

Near-critical to critical fire weather conditions are ongoing across
the western South Plains and the far southwestern TX Panhandle this
afternoon. Here, sustained southwest winds of 20 to 30 mph with
gusts to 45 mph along with minimum RH values in the low teens will
support RFTI values of 4 to 6. A Red Flag Warning remains in effect
for this area from 1 PM until 8 PM CDT.

Several rounds of isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible
across the Rolling Plains this afternoon and evening, which will
produce cloud to ground lightning as well as gusty and erratic
winds. This activity will come to an end by midnight with clearing
skies through the night. Overnight recoveries will rebound above 50
percent area wide.

&&

.LUB WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.
&&

$$

SHORT TERM...58
LONG TERM....09
AVIATION...30