Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Chicago, IL

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872 FXUS63 KLOT 131147 AFDLOT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL 647 AM CDT Thu Jun 13 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Level 2 to 3 out 5 Risk for severe weather this afternoon and evening. Hazards include destructive hail (2"+) and wind (75mph+) and localized flash flooding. - Hot and humid conditions expected next week. - Periodic low chances for thunderstorms next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 320 AM CDT Thu Jun 13 2024 Through Tonight: Strong warm and moist advection continues early this morning across the area which has held temperatures in the 70s and dewpoints in the lower 60s. After daybreak expect dewpoints to further increase into the upper 60s and perhaps even near 70. This will make for a warm and muggy day with highs in the upper 80s to around 90 and heat indices in the low-mid 90s. We continue to monitor a couple areas of upstream convection at this hour, one small cluster moving east southeast across east central Iowa and another broader axis of convection extending from southeast Minnesota eastward across central Wisconsin. The former may bring a few showers (maybe a rogue lightning strike) into areas generally southwest of a Dixon to Paxton, IL line around daybreak. The latter may just clip areas near the WI/IL stateline near to shortly after daybreak as well. Most areas will remain dry but a general increase in cloud cover is likely for the first part of the morning. Given an overall lower shower/storm coverage, while acknowledging a brief period of increased cloud cover may delay destabilization initially this morning, earlier concerns of morning showers shunting the effective front well south of the Chicago metro are becoming a less likely outcome with each passing hour. Accordingly, confidence is increasing in scattered to potentially numerous thunderstorm development this afternoon along a cold front, potentially as early as 1-2 PM CDT across southeast Wisconsin and along the WI/IL stateline. These storms would then likely increase in coverage with southward extent as they move across the area into the evening. As expected, there remain subtle timing, coverage, and placement differences among the various suite of available model guidance but there is enough consistency to boost shower/storm chances into the "likely to definite" range (60-80%), highest south of I-80. Instability upwards of 2000-3000+ J/kg combined with deep layer shear of 35-45+ kts will support supercell structures with initial storm development this afternoon. Main hazards include significant hail (2"+) and wind gusts (75mph+). With the arrival of a subtle mid-level wave, further weakening of any remaining convective inhibition should occur toward late afternoon/early evening, suggesting storm mode transitions to congealing multi- cell clusters and bowing segments as storm coverage increases, particularly south of I-80. The SPC Day 1 Outlook for severe weather remains mostly unchanged with a level 2 of 5 risk for much of northern and northeast Illinois and northwest Indiana and a level 3 of 5 risk confined to areas southwest of the Chicago metro where the greatest instability is expected. A northeastward expansion of this area into the metro certainly cannot be ruled out with later updates. Any storms that develop across the entire area will be capable of destructive hail (2"+) and wind gusts (75+ mph). A tornado cannot be fully ruled out today given an initial supercellular mode in the afternoon, and then later into the evening after storms grow upscale, but weak low-level shear and high LCLs support no more than a 2% tornado risk. Lastly, high PWATs and the potential for a period of training storms this evening, supports a continued mention of a localized flash flooding risk. Petr Friday through Wednesday: Primary forecast concerns for the extended remain heat/humidity and thunderstorm chances. High pressure will be moving across the upper Great Lakes region Friday and this will send a weak cold front down Lake Michigan, arriving in the mid/late afternoon. While winds will already be northeast near the lake, along with cooler temps, this front will usher in cooler air across the entire cwa through Friday evening. After highs in the lower/mid 80s for most locations Friday, temps will be falling into the 60s by sunset along with lower humidity levels. Low temps by Saturday morning will be in the 50s for most areas. High temps will be back in the 80s for most areas on Saturday with dewpoints still only in the 50s. East/southeast winds will keep the IL shore of Lake Michigan cooler. As has been advertised for several days, the upper ridge will begin to build north across the region on Sunday. To some degree, the models and their ensembles have had a chance of thunderstorms from early Sunday morning through early Monday morning, as the ridge has not yet fully spread north of the cwa. And while confidence remains low, this time period, Sunday-ish, seems to be a time period to monitor for the potential for some storms, with uncertainty for timing/location. Highs on Sunday could easily be in the mid 90s for most of the area absent of any significant cloud cover/precipitation. After Sunday, confidence is very low for thunderstorm chances. The ECMWF and its ensembles are hot and dry for several days next week with the upper ridge firmly in place while the GFS continues to show frequent precip chances, which would also impact high temps, pushing them lower then currently advertised. Blended pops have some form of low chance pops from Saturday night onward and while any one of these periods may have some precip, much of the extended is likely to be dry with little skill trying to time any impulse. Uncertainty increases further by Wednesday/Thursday when a cold front may approach from the northwest bringing what will likely be the next best chance of precipitation (after Sunday) and if the front does move through the area, a break from the hot and humid conditions. As for heat index values, current highs in the lower/mid 90s and dewpoints generally in the upper 60s to around 70 yield heat index values in the upper 90s to around 100. Again, with no precip influences/effects. Plan to starting mentioning this heat potential in the HWO this morning. cms && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z FRIDAY/...
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Issued at 647 AM CDT Thu Jun 13 2024 Forecast concerns include... Scattered thunderstorms this morning with possible wind shift. Scattered strong/severe thunderstorms this afternoon. East/northeast winds late this afternoon into this evening. Scattered thunderstorms have continued to develop across southwest WI early this morning and are now moving into far northern IL. This activity is expected to continue southeast and will move across the Chicago terminals over the next few hours. A northerly wind shift is possible as well with this activity. Further development is possible on the southern flank of this activity, as it moves to the east/southeast. How this current activity may affect this afternoon`s convection is unclear. There is another upper wave that will be approaching and thunderstorm development still looks on track. The question now will be if it develops south of where this current activity moves. Trends will need to be monitored this morning into early this afternoon, but for now, opted to make no changes to the current forecast. Thunderstorms this afternoon into this evening will likely be strong to severe with gusty/erratic winds. If winds turn northerly this morning and assuming they turn back southwesterly this morning, they`ll likely gust into the 20kt range through early afternoon and then turn more westerly, possibly northwesterly. Depending on storm coverage/location, winds are expected to turn back north/northeasterly late this afternoon into this evening and then should turn back to a light north or north/northwest direction this evening. cms
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&& .LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IL...None. IN...None. LM...None. && $$ Visit us at weather.gov/chicago