Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Jackson, KY

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278 FXUS63 KJKL 302036 AFDJKL AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Jackson KY 436 PM EDT Thu May 30 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Below normal temperatures and dry weather can be expected through the rest of the work week. - It will become warmer and more humid with chances of showers and thunderstorms returning from late Saturday into the middle of next week. && .SHORT TERM...
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(This evening through Friday night) Issued at 341 PM EDT THU MAY 30 2024 Highly amplified ridging moves across the forecast area through Saturday afternoon bringing dry and comfortable weather. Backdoor cool front has moved into the region from the north on the downstream side of the high pressure centered to the north this morning and early afternoon. A reinforcing cool front drops south across the forecast area and will bring an even drier air mass to region after midnight tonight and lasting through much of Friday before modifying late Friday night as return flow begins to usher increasing humidity back into the region. With the dry air mass moving over the area tonight, excellent radiational cooling is expected with widespread lows in the 40s, with a few lower 40s reading in the typically coldest most sheltered valleys. Warmer overnight temperatures in the upper 40s to near 60 degrees are expected Friday night as flow aloft begins a warming and moistening trend. Highs Friday will reach the mid to upper 70s. .LONG TERM...(Saturday through Thursday) Issued at 436 PM EDT THU MAY 30 2024 The 30/12z model suite analysis beginning Saturday morning shows 500H ridging extending from the Carolinas northward across the Central Appalachians/Eastern Great Lakes up into Quebec toward Labrador. The first of multiple shortwave troughs will be approaching the Lower and Mid-Mississippi River. At the surface, high pressure will be centered over the North Carolina Piedmont with ridging extending northward across the Appalachians into Saint Lawrence River Valley. To our west, weak ~1010 mb low pressure is found over the Ozarks. Ridging aloft and at the surface quickly departs on Saturday as the aforementioned low tracks north of the Ohio River and lifts a warm front into eastern Kentucky. This will bring increasing moisture followed by rising PoPs and a chance for thunder. The low pressure system`s weak cool front follows quickly across Eastern Kentucky on Sunday as the low passes into the Eastern Great Lakes. This will result in thunder chances and likely PoPs late Saturday over western portions of the forecast area with a gradual translation of the higher precipitation chances to the east southeast Saturday night and Sunday as the weak front sinks southeastward. Weak shear and mid-level lapse rates suggest that any convection will be more of the garden variety. Upper level disturbances will keep diurnally modulated weak convection in the forecast on both Monday and Tuesday. Better shower and thunderstorm chances should return on Wednesday and persist into Thursday as a more substantial upper level low closes off over the Northern Plains and drifts our way. Models offer varying solutions as to how this system evolves leading to a low confidence forecast toward the end of the period. A common theme however is for this low to translate/propagate southeastward to somewhere over the eastern or southeastern CONUS, sending a cold front across our region late in the period. In more sensible terms, rain will become likely from the west on Saturday/Saturday evening (60-70% chance) as showers and thunderstorms arrive with a warm front. The threat for rainfall will persist overnight before slowly tapering from the northwest on Sunday with the passage of a weak cold front. All of the precipitation and associated cloud cover will keep daily highs very seasonable, generally in the upper 70s to lower 80s while nighttime lows range in the upper 50s to lower 60s. Showers and thunderstorms are possible (30 to 50% chance) at times on Monday and Tuesday, primarily during the afternoon and evening hours, as disturbances pass. Mostly to partly sunny skies should yield highs in the lower to middle 80s each afternoon with mild nights in the lower to middle 60s. More widespread rainfall is possible mid to late week with the arrival of a cold front and upper level low but the specific details remain obscure due to poor model agreement.
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&& .AVIATION...(For the 18Z TAFS through 18Z Friday afternoon) ISSUED AT 111 PM EDT THU MAY 30 2024 VFR conditions and light winds are expected through the TAF period under surface high pressure. With nearly ideal radiational cooling conditions, expect there will be some patchy fog develop in the typical valley locations from midnight to just after dawn. With relatively low coverage, have left out of the TAFs for now, though can`t rule out very brief visibility restrictions near dawn Friday, especially at SYM, SME, and SJS. && .JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NONE. && $$ SHORT TERM...CMC LONG TERM...GEERTSON AVIATION...CMC