Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Springfield, MO
Issued by NWS Springfield, MO
Versions:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
858 FXUS63 KSGF 150547 AFDSGF Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Springfield MO 1247 AM CDT Wed May 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Potential for dense fog again early this morning, especially west of Highway 65 and within the insulated pockets of the eastern Ozarks near lakes and in valleys. - Additional shower and thunderstorms are expected at times from late this evening into Friday. A few strong to marginally severe storms may be possible, along with locally heavy rainfall and a minor localized flooding risk. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY/... Issued at 323 PM CDT Tue May 14 2024 Current conditions and synoptic overview: Isolated showers are persisting through the morning hours in parts of southwest Missouri on the backside of a cold front that passed through overnight. These showers are causing a short-lived, rapid deterioration in local conditions as they pass. Aloft, a trough with vertically stacked closed lows sits right over Missouri, indicating occlusion. With the warm, moist airmass being undercut by the cold front overnight, temperatures dropped without an equal drop in moisture content, bringing widespread fog to the early morning hours. Pockets of the most dense fog persisted until late morning, though scattered clouds are in place with some pockets of drizzle and light rain underneath. If you don`t care about the science: Isolated, short-lived showers/heavy rain and/or drizzle-y conditions through the rest of the afternoon, with cloud cover expected to become a little less suffocating with the sun peeking out more and more. High temps around 70 degrees Tuesday, lows in the mid- to upper 50s Tuesday night, temperatures rising Wednesday to highs near 80. Expect dense fog on Wednesday morning, especially the further west you get. Some showers Wednesday also aren`t completely out of the question, depending on what models you feel like taking at face value. If you care about the science: Scattered pockets of post-frontal drizzle, showers, and even short- lived heavy rain will persist through the afternoon hours. High low- level relative humidities paired with CVA bubbles aloft instigating rising motion is the support for this convection, but the isolated nature of the CVA from the closed lows is causing the updrafts to remain very discrete. The updrafts are well represented in early afternoon satellite imagery, with small areas of cloud top temperatures between -15 and -25C indicating that the strongest updrafts with the heaviest precip underneath really are localized, making the discernment of the PoPs a not-very-fun game of Whack-A- Storm. The strongest of these low-topped storms are producing around 1.25"/hr rates per the SGF radar as well as MRMS, but with residence times of 15-20 minutes over a single area, accumulations are around a half an inch at best. There`s not any lightning with these storms due to lack of sufficient depth of ascent, so severe weather seems incredibly unlikely today as a result. Satellite has also shown the cumulo-form (?) cloud field to be patchy and disconnected, and even here at Springfield the sun has been coming and going. Tonight, dew points remain high near the surface as winds calm with the eastward progression of the low and associated pressure gradient reduction. Crossover temperatures around 57-58 with lows getting to 56 and lower means in the pockets around lakes in the eastern Ozarks and in the western portion of the area, dense fog will develop in the 2-3am timeframe and likely persist through the morning commute on Wednesday. On Wednesday, an upper-level ridge axis passes across the region, and with some help from jet-level divergence, some showers could reach east enough to impact the Ozarks, though global models and ensembles don`t seem to be as big of fans of that as say, the RAP or NAM. Leaving PoPs low for Wednesday due to lack of output from the most recent HREF LPMMs. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/... Issued at 323 PM CDT Tue May 14 2024 As the next disturbance moves in from the High Plains late Wednesday night into early Thursday morning, the development of a low-level ridge over the Gulf Coast will send a moisture surge with the LLJ through central Texas and into NE Oklahoma. Dew point depressions of 5 or below are being hinted at by CAMs getting into range, with MUCAPE within that corridor being sustained overnight, feeding into convection with a messy mode moving Thursday morning. LREF shows around a 50% chance of PWAT in excess of 1.4", and with strong deep layer ascent and model soundings indicating humped hodographs and sufficient mid-level instability, an MCS Thursday morning seems increasingly likely. Depending on the development and evolution of this complex through the day Thursday, any remnant outflow boundaries or mesoscale interactions could introduce the potential for severe storms in the afternoon prior to development of convection along the cold front in the evening. Hail the size of quarters and wind gusts to 60mph appear to be the primary hazards due to expected storm modes and the elevated nature of the instability at initiation in the morning, but deep layer shear could introduce a tornado potential in the afternoon and evening if the instability is able to get rooted near the surface on a boundary or the like. The higher confidence hazard for Thursday appears to be heavy rain and flooding, with an MCS being most well known for its flood- causing tendencies. Already saturated soils from all the recent rainfall will need to be able to take at least another inch of rain over the course of a day. Rain looks to be fairly consistent over the area (though breaks are possible in between waves) Thursday and Friday as the upper-level trough makes its way through. Temperatures through the end of the week will remain in the mid- to upper 70s and are trending towards warming into the weekend, with cloud cover reducing in the wake of the Thursday/Friday system to bring a May-like sunny and warm weekend. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z THURSDAY/... Issued at 1247 AM CDT Wed May 15 2024 The surface low continues to push off to the east early this morning as an area of surface high pressure pushes east towards the area Light winds will occur across the area through the TAF period and will vary in direction at times. Some patchy fog will be possible again early this morning with IFR to LIFR conditions possible with the fog development. Any fog that can develop will dissipate by the mid evening hours. Most the TAF period will be dry as an upper level ridge builds over the region. An upper trough will move east across the Plains this evening into tonight and storms will develop across Oklahoma and Kansas this evening and push east. It`s possible this activity starts to push into the far western portions of the area late in the TAF period but the better potential for the activity across the area will be just beyond this TAF period tonight into Thursday. && .CLIMATE... Issued at 323 PM CDT Tue May 14 2024 Record High Temperatures: May 20: KUNO: 89/1964 && .SGF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... KS...None. MO...None. && $$ SHORT TERM...Camden LONG TERM...Camden AVIATION...Wise CLIMATE...Camden