Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Kansas City/Pleasant Hill, MO

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000
FXUS63 KEAX 160857
AFDEAX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Kansas City/Pleasant Hill MO
357 AM CDT Tue Apr 16 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Gusty winds precede a line of showers and thunderstorms this
  morning. Ambient wind gusts around 35-45 MPH continue
  throughout the afternoon. Please secure any loose objects.

- The first round of showers and thunderstorms moves into the area
around sunrise. These storms bring chances for damaging winds and
heavy down pours.

- Additional thunderstorms are expected to develop through the
afternoon hours. These storms bring chances for damaging winds,
large hail, and possible tornadoes. The primary area of concern is
across northern MO north of I-70 and east of I-35.

- The evolution of storms today is very highly dependent on
  preceding activity and the ability for the environment to
  recharge between rounds. Sun versus clouds could mean the
  difference between widespread thunderstorms to more discrete
  stronger cells with the potential for severe hazards.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 357 AM CDT Tue Apr 16 2024

A low pressure system currently working its way down the front range
of the Rockies is bringing us active weather to start Tuesday
morning. The 500mb jet streak rounds the base of the low during the
overnight while an intensifying low level jet continues to advect
warm air and moisture into the region. This keeps the lower
atmosphere fairly unstable during the overnight hours. A Pacific
front moving across the CONUS serves as the catalyst for showers and
thunderstorms developing across central KS which then move eastward
through the second half of the night. A line of storms is expected
to arrive in far eastern KS early this morning. Strong
kinematic forcing, surface convergence, and instability (CAPE
values ~1500-2000 J/KgK) present chances for severe weather as
this line moves through the region during the morning. Damaging
winds are the most likely hazard with a side potential for large
hail with elevated storms.

While confidence is high in a line of storms entering the area
this morning, the afternoon outlook remains somewhat unclear.
Consensus points toward most of the activity remaining northern
of I-70; mainly concentrated along the US-36 corridor. There is
fairly high confidence that this second round of storms will be
in this general vicinity There are a few scenarios that could
play out. All of which are dependent on the timing, location,
and effects from the initial line of storms. The first is that
storms progress a little slower across western MO. This enables
the environment to heat up ahead of the line`s arrival into NE
MO. This presents the opportunity for some enhanced convection
within the line as it approaches the US-65 corridor. This could
potentially bring some high winds, hail, and possibly an
isolated tornado. Many of the short range CAMs have proposed
this or a similar solution.

The second proposal is the line decouples from the front and moves
briskly through as elevated convection. This then enables clearing
behind the line. Continued southerly flow advects further moisture
into the region which when coupled with solar heating recharges the
environment setting up the potential for a second line of storms
during the afternoon. This solution poses the greatest risk for
severe storms across the region. Initial discrete supercells bring
the potential for significant hail (2"+), high winds, and tornadoes.
Consensus shows initiation of this second line along the I-35
corridor north of the MO River.

The third solution is overspreading cloud cover in the wake of the
first line of storms this morning. This limits diurnal heating which
in turn limits the ability for the ambient environment to recharge.
It does not eliminate the risk for severe storms; however, it does
curtail expected hazards. Strong winds across the system and PWAT
values approaching 1"-1.5" suggest a continued potential for
damaging wind and heavy rainfall. Severe hail and tornadoes remain
possible; however, the lack of additional heating lessens the
likelihood of large hail and tornadoes.

There is no one specific solution that stands out, especially as
no guidance member has shown strong correlation to
observations. It is looking like we will have to see how things
play out through the morning hours. After the first line of
storms moves through around sunrise, it will become much more
clear how the remainder of the day will evolve. Model
projections of upper air movements show a classic case of not
all of the ingredients making it to the right places at the
right times for at least our coverage area. This haphazard
organization and arrival of various elements adds uncertainty
and plays a significant roll in storm mode and intensity as
slight shifts could put things in the right place. Looking at
satellite, surface observations, as well as the meteorological
conceptual model points towards the second solution being the
most likely (initial line followed by redevelopment in the
afternoon); however, residual cloud cover behind the first
morning line and placement of mesoscale features remain the
largest variables. Further dependency on the speed of these
morning storms, speed of the overall front, upper level
dynamics, and solar heating duration add to the uncertainty.
Regardless, overall chances for severe weather remain present,
and it is important that you have a severe weather action plan
as well as multiple ways to receive weather information. This is
very important in these conditional type scenarios.

Storms exit the region by sunset. Some wrap around precipitation
bringing additional isolated thunderstorms is possible across far
northern MO overnight. These storms are not expected to be severe.
Looking further, the pattern continues to remain fairly active. An
embedded shortwave in the upper level flow looks to spin up a weak
leeward trough that passes to our south. This brings chances for
precipitation Thursday. Beyond that, a strong midlevel high occupies
the central Plains keeping skies clear for the weekend. Upper level
flow shifts to more northerly sending cooler Canadian air southward
trending temperatures cooler for the upcoming weekend.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z WEDNESDAY/...
Issued at 1248 AM CDT Tue Apr 16 2024

A weak line of showers and thunderstorm is currently passing by
the terminals. Subsequent rounds of storms are expected through
the period. Winds pick up ahead of an approaching line of
storms anticipated around 13-14Z. Additional development is
possible during the afternoon; however, these storms are likely
to develop east of the terminals; thus, they were left out of
the forecast at this time. Southerly winds remain gusty through
the afternoon dissipating after sunset.

&&

.EAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MO...Wind Advisory from 9 AM this morning to 7 PM CDT this evening
     for MOZ001>008-011>017-020>025-028>033-037>040-043>046-
     053-054.
KS...Wind Advisory from 9 AM this morning to 7 PM CDT this evening
     for KSZ025-057-060-102>105.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Pesel
AVIATION...Pesel


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