Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS St. Louis, MO

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003
FXUS63 KLSX 011947
AFDLSX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Saint Louis MO
247 PM CDT Wed May 1 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- An active pattern will promote multiple chances for showers and
  thunderstorms throughout the next week, though a majority of
  this time will be dry.

- The threat for strong to marginally-severe thunderstorms remains
  in place tomorrow, and is expanded a bit further east compared
  to earlier thinking. Confidence remains low (less than 30%) that
  any severe weather occurs, but large hail to 1 inch and damaging
  wind to 60mph would be the threats if storms can become strong
  enough.

&&

.SHORT TERM...  (Through Late Thursday Night)
Issued at 246 PM CDT Wed May 1 2024

A weak cold front associated with a shortwave aloft dropped south
this morning across the region, but with little in the way of
cold air aloft, a wind shift was the only sensible weather
associated with it. The region is more broadly situated under weak
ridging between two waves, one to our northwest and one to our
southeast. The front will begin to inch northward late this
afternoon as the shortwave exits and a surface low in the central
Plains slowly tracks northeast. While surface-based instability is
currently in the 1500-2000 J/kg range at least, convergence along
the front is meager at best. With little in the way of upper-
level lift or forcing to support deeper, more organized
convection, weak isolated to widely-scattered thunderstorms are
still forecast this afternoon and early evening.

The front advances north with greater speed overnight when the low-
level jet intensifies, but by that point all indications are that
the jet (and any low-level forcing for thunderstorms to persist)
shunts far north of the region into the Upper Mississippi Valley. As
such, while a rogue thunderstorm or two cannot be ruled out
overnight in northern Missouri, the region will stay almost
completely dry. 850mb/925mb warm air advection intensifies overnight
in northern Missouri, but we`re unable to realize much of that
warmth at the surface. By the time we can mix more deeply on Friday,
the warm advection becomes far more muted. While southerly surface
winds and some degree of insolation will help keep temperatures
above normal (mid-70s to mid-80s from northwest to southeast), more
extreme values will stay out of our reach.

Convection overnight in the central Plains will eject into northwest
Missouri, gradually tracking east and weakening by it arrives in our
northern forecast area around sunrise. How widespread any convective
debris will be may have some impact on our instability later in the
afternoon. Nevertheless, instability redevelops ahead of a slowly-
approaching, weak surface cold front from the west. Aloft, a modest
shortwave embedded in the upper-level ridge will also drift into the
Mid-Mississippi Valley during the late morning. With some degree of
mid-level ascent, albeit weak, in place, a more tangible threat for
strong to marginally-severe thunderstorms across most of the
forecast area during the afternoon and very early evening. Barring a
robust cold pool from the morning convection eliminating
instability, which is highly unlikely (less than 10% chance), MLCAPE
values are forecast to jump into the 750-1250 J/kg range across the
region. Particular focus for the most appreciable uncapped
instability is in central/northeast Missouri and west-central
Illinois, but areas as far east as the St. Louis metropolitan area
cannot be ruled out for a stronger thunderstorm. The one noteworthy
limit to the severe weather potential is a lack of deep-layer shear.
If convection manages to sustain itself, large hail to 1 inch and
damaging wind to 60mph would be the predominant threats. By sunset,
instability will wane and without a low-level jet to promote
continued forcing, thunderstorm strength will drop considerably.
High rain chances (upwards of 80%) continue overnight, but these may
be a bit too high given the very weak forcing available.

MRB

&&

.LONG TERM...  (Friday through Next Wednesday)
Issued at 246 PM CDT Wed May 1 2024

The weak cold front barely makes it through the forecast area on
Friday, and the continued unimpressive forcing combined with gradual
height rises aloft will allow only weak showers and isolated
thunderstorms to develop early Friday. The more noteworthy impact
from the boundary will be the relatively-cooler (but still near-
normal) air it brings in its wake. Cool easterly winds usher in
enough dry air to keep most of the region rain-free from Friday
afternoon to Saturday morning before another wave glances the
region. This is the first of a series of weak waves that threaten
the region, with a cutoff low stalled over the northern High Plains
and ridging over the southeast CONUS promoting generally southwest
flow aloft. With subtle timing and amplitude differences leading to
large impacts on sensible weather, there`s not a lot of confidence
in the exact timing of any rain chances from Friday through the
weekend. However, the forcing looks consistently weak and transient,
and the region can expect plenty of dry time until early next week.
Any rain that does fall will not have immediate impacts on the
rivers at this stage, though heavier rain across the Missouri River
Basin may eventually lead to secondary rises.

By Sunday, global-scale ensembles converge on a trough deepening
once more in the Intermountain West, promoting broad, diffluent
southwest flow aloft and setting up another potentially-active
weather pattern in the central CONUS. At the same time, more
pronounced southerly flow in the boundary layer and resultant warm
air advection will bolster temperatures back into the low/mid-80s
yet again across most of the region through early next week. Exactly
how warm we get will come down to rain timing and cloud cover, which
isn`t all that certain at this point. While the synoptic-scale
pattern will be more favorable for stronger thunderstorms to develop
early next week, the devil is always in the details and there are
far too many differences in the ensemble guidance to be confident in
much beyond rain chances at that stage.

MRB

&&

.AVIATION...  (For the 18z TAFs through 18z Thursday Afternoon)
Issued at 1215 PM CDT Wed May 1 2024

VFR conditions will prevail at the terminals through Thursday
afternoon. A weak cold front that passed through the region this
morning will lift back north gradually this afternoon and evening,
sending the current northerly winds back out of the south.
Convergence along the front is very weak, and despite sufficient
instability for convection, this coupled with a lack of upper-
level forcing will result in isolated to widely- scattered storms
at best. There is little confidence in direct terminal impact
(even "vicinity" wording") and as such thunder was kept out of the
TAFs.

There will be another threat for showers and thunderstorms
tomorrow morning and afternoon from west to east, but the threat
is outside of the current TAF period (except KSTL, where VCSH was
added at the very end of the TAF to suggest that potential).

MRB

&&

.LSX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MO...None.
IL...None.
&&

$$

WFO LSX