Area Forecast Discussion Issued by NWS Louisville, KY
000
FXUS63 KLMK 221118
AFDLMK
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LOUISVILLE KY
717 AM EDT WED MAY 22 2013
...Updated Aviation Discussion...
.Short Term (Today through Thursday)...
Issued at 310 AM EDT Wed May 22 2013
Areas of low pressure will move from Iowa to lower Michigan today,
with surface trofs dropping to the south. One such trof, combined
with an upper shortwave, should help to spark renewed showers and
thunderstorms today. A few stronger storms could develop, with
marginally severe wind gusts as the main threat and marginally
severe hail as a secondary concern. Any tornadic activity would be
confined to just a brief spin-up where local convective boundaries
interact.
High temperatures today will be highly dependent on cloud and shower
coverage. Will go for highs around 80, which is consistent with
current guidance, the inherited forecast, and surrounding offices.
The warmest temperatures should be in the east.
Shower and thunderstorm activity should wane this evening, with a
fairly quiet overnight period. The mercury will drop to around the
60 degree mark.
On Thursday the upper trof axis will finally swing through and give
us one last chance of showers and thunderstorms with this system.
Moisture will be more shallow and instability not as great, so
severe weather is not expected. Some small hail could fall from the
taller storms, though, as the upper trof moves in and wet bulb zero
heights drop. High temperatures will be in the lower to middle 70s.
.Long Term (Thursday Night - Tuesday)...
Issued at 300 AM EDT Tue May 22 2013
An amplified 500mb pattern continues late Thursday with a deep
stationary closed low forecast over the Pacific Northwest. A narrow
ridge is expected to extend north into the Canadian Front Range.
Closer to home, a very deep, cold and yet progressive trough is
expected to extend southward from Hudson`s Bay through the Great
Lakes. It is this feature that will usher in a very pleasant weekend
with cool temperatures for late May.
A relatively sharp cold front will move southeast of the Ohio River
late in the afternoon on Thursday. Much drier air will move south
overnight all the way through Tennessee as strong high pressure of
Canadian origin builds southward along the Mississippi River valley.
Brisk northwest winds late Thursday afternoon will become northerly
and continue at 10 to 15 mph through the evening hours.
Residual cloudiness Thursday evening will clear by dawn Friday.
Temperatures will cool off rapidly and bottom out in the upper 40s.
Expect mostly clear skies and cool temperatures Friday through late
Saturday. With high pressure building right over Indiana on Friday,
winds will become light from the northeast during the afternoon and
will become nearly calm by early Saturday. Despite nearly cloud-free
skies Friday afternoon, highs will struggle to reach 70, with upper
60s likely across the Bluegrass. After another cool night with lows
in the upper 40s, Saturday will warm a couple of degrees into the
lower 70s.
500mb heights will begin to build over the southern Plains by
Sunday. Eventually, ridging is forecast to expand across the Plains
and eventually into the Lower Ohio Valley from Tuesday through the
rest of the upcoming work week. This will eventually bring
mid-summer heat to much of the mid-section of the CONUS.
During this period of transition, Sunday through Tuesday, northwest
flow aloft will persist over the Lower Ohio Valley. A boundary will
develop by late Sunday across the region, separating cool dry air
and easterly winds over Ohio from more humid air advancing north
along the Mississippi River. In general, this front may lie over
northern Kentucky late Sunday, slowly moving north of the
Commonwealth through Tuesday. Moisture pooling along this boundary
coupled with occasional disturbances sliding southeastward may bring
occasional rounds of convection. The ECMWF is the farthest south
with precipitation of any of the long-term guidance, developing
widespread showers during the day Sunday right over Kentucky. Prefer
the slightly farther north GFS, which presents greater chances of
occasional convection across southern Indiana and the Bluegrass
Region.
Despite increasing clouds, low dewpoints will keep Sunday quite mild
with highs in the mid to upper 70s. Both temperatures and humidities
will rise towards Tuesday with highs in the lower to mid 80s
expected.
&&
.Aviation (12Z TAF Issuance)...
Issued at 715 AM EDT Wed May 22 2013
IFR and even some LIFR ceilings formed west of SDF and BWG earlier
this morning. So far there have been no signs of low clouds at any
of the airports. Will tentatively continue with a VFR TAF for all
three sites, but SDF and BWG will have to be closely monitored for
any low cloud development.
Some valley fog has also formed this morning, but is not expected to
impact the terminals.
During the daylight hours winds will pick up from the SSW and
convection is expected to redevelop by afternoon as the atmosphere
warms and an upper level disturbance interacts with a weak surface
trof.
For now will allow the convection to die back in the evening and
keep the TAFs dry for tonight. Winds will gradually turn to the west
by Thursday morning.
&&
.LMK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
IN...NONE.
KY...NONE.
$$
Short Term.......13
Long Term........JSD
Aviation.........13/RAS