Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Northern Indiana

Home |  Current Version |  Previous Version |  Graphics & Text |  Print | Product List |  Glossary On
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
955
FXUS63 KIWX 050422
AFDIWX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Northern Indiana
1222 AM EDT Sun May 5 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Light rain and a few embedded thunderstorms are possible at
  times through Monday but no severe weather is expected.

- Additional showers and storms are likely Tuesday and
  Wednesday. Some of those storms may be severe.

- After cooler weather Sunday and Monday, highs climb back to around
  80 for Tuesday and Wednesday.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 312 PM EDT Sat May 4 2024

Midlevel shortwave currently seen on water vapor imagery over
northern MN will continue to lift NE and send a decaying cold front
through the region tonight. A line of convection will continue
to develop over IL late this afternoon, capitalizing on 1500
J/kg of MLCAPE ahead of the front. However, all ingredients
point to a quick demise as it enters our CWA late this evening.
Not only do we lose daytime heating but convection will outrun
better forcing and shear as it enters our area, quickly becoming
outflow-dominant and weakening. Low level moisture convergence
and midlevel lapse rates appear insufficient to maintain robust
nocturnal convection in our area, but do anticipate some showers
with a few isolated storms to linger into the night with the
best chances in our far west 01-04Z. The chance of showers will
continue in our eastern zones into Sunday as increasingly
broad/diffuse cold front makes slow eastward progress. A few
models suggest our extreme E/SE zones may have time for some
marginal destabilization by early afternoon yielding the chance
for a few storms. However, most hi-res guidance suggests any
convection will be well outside of our CWA. Maintained a low
chance PoP for late tonight into midday Sun but any rain during
this period will be very light and very isolated. High temps
tomorrow will be much cooler in our NW CWA, especially near the
lake where 50s are likely. SE zones still have a shot at mid 70s
again before the front passes though.

Another weak shortwave ejects out of the Southern Plains and into
the Ohio Valley by Monday. However, the Great Lakes remain firmly
under the influence of AVA/subsidence with sharp midlevel ridge
approaching from the Upper Midwest. Exactly how far north precip
manages to extend remains a bit uncertain but prefer to lean on the
dry side with easterly surface winds and marginal 850mb theta-e
advection just barely touching our border. High-res guidance
available that far out also supports a drier forecast.

Situation changes drastically for Tue and Wed though. Deep upper low
just now coming onshore the West Coast will eventually pinwheel its
way across the northern CONUS as a second Pacific trough follows
quickly behind it. Global models still show some discrepancies in
how exactly this pattern will evolve with smaller details crucial to
determining the severe weather threat. Initial warm front/theta-e
surge occurs Tue AM. A few strong, elevated storms may be possible
during this time but the better severe chances appear to be Tue
evening when initial trough/upper low (potentially) approaches the
Great Lakes with moderate instability in place and (again,
potentially) a highly supportive kinematic environment. A second
round is then possible Wed evening as the second piece of energy
rotates through the region with a similar environment. There is
still alot of uncertainty with important details but definitely need
to keep an eye on these periods.

The rest of the forecast period is relatively quiet. Light rain and
breezy conditions may persist into the late week depending on how
the upper low evolves but the instability should clear out by Thu.
Cooler temps are also expected Thu-Sat.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z MONDAY/...
Issued at 1222 AM EDT Sun May 5 2024

Line of weakening and outflow dominant convection should clear KSBN
by issuance or shortly thereafter, with chances for a shower
and vicinity thunder to survive into KFWA 6-8z. Winds then veer
to the west-northwest early this morning behind an associated
sfc trough with post-frontal cooling/saturation supporting a
period of MVFR to low VFR cigs this morning into the early
afternoon.

&&

.IWX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
IN...None.
OH...None.
MI...None.
MARINE...None.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...AGD
AVIATION...Steinwedel