Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Chicago, IL

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424 FXUS63 KLOT 250915 AFDLOT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL 415 AM CDT Tue Jun 25 2024 .KEY MESSAGES...
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- Two potential rounds of severe thunderstorms capable of producing damaging winds and flash flooding today. The first window mid-morning across northern Illinois and the second window late afternoon into mid-evening across much of the forecast area. - Another period of active weather with strong to severe thunderstorms and flash flooding is possible Friday into Saturday.
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&& .DISCUSSION...
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Issued at 413 AM CDT Tue Jun 25 2024 Through Tonight: A substantial pool of high theta-e air in eastern Iowa owing to low to mid 70s dew points will gradually advect eastward into the forecast area this morning below a growing EML plume. The result is an impressive CAPE profile primed for explosive thunderstorm at any point through this evening. The major caveat is the corresponding cap that will also be advecting into the area this morning. At this time, we are focused on two areas of potential severe convection in our area: 1) A mature MCS across central/east-central Wisconsin has started to turn more south along the existing MUCAPE gradient as the veering low-level jet impinges on the western flank of the line. Recent elevated convection developing over southwest Wisconsin indicates that the incoming EML has not capped the environment east of the Mississippi River. So, there is growing concern that the gap between this convection and the MCS begins to fill in over the next hour or two and grow upscale into northern Illinois in the 6-10am window. Will be closely watching this activity through sunrise as the downstream thermodynamic environment supports a damaging wind threat with any convection this morning. 2) Conditional on the absence of any substantial lingering cold pool across northern Illinois through mid-morning, recent CAM guidance suggests convective temps in the mid to upper 90s may be reached by mid afternoon. With a mid-level wave over eastern NE/SD and resultant convective enhancement of a decaying MCS early this morning, this feature may provide the needed forcing to allow convection to rapidly grow roughly around the I-80/88 corridors by 3- 5pm. Though deep-layer shear will be quite modest, MLCAPE values over 4,000 J/kg and DCAPE values surpassing 1,500 J/kg will support initial discrete cells/clusters with damaging hail/winds congealing into a slow-moving line with damaging winds and flooding from torrential rainfall. Ultimately, the convective line should drift south through the remainder of the CWA through this evening, continuing to produce a notable flood threat as low-level flow becomes only slightly oblique to the convection (and backward propagation vectors begin to turn to the southwest). Kluber Wednesday through Monday: A cold front will press across the region on Wednesday. Depending on how things evolve Tuesday evening and overnight, some convection may be ongoing across the area Wednesday morning, mainly south of I-80, but the trend should be towards a drier one through the day. Some guidance does show some fairly deep boundary layer mixing developing through the afternoon, perhaps enough to pop a few high-based showers, but this doesn`t seem like a significant enough signal to justify PoPs at this point. A brief period of dry and quiet conditions will then prevail through Thursday as a transient region of high pressure drifts overhead. By Thursday night into Friday morning, the surface high will be departing and shuttling across the northeast, yielding a return of moist southerly trajectories in the region. A series of low- amplitude/subtle shortwaves emanating from a robust upper low pinwheeling across Montana and into Saskatchewan will likely get swept up within freshening mid and upper level west-southwesterly flow. This in turn will lead a commensurate increase in low-level warm advection across Iowa, which will eventually spill east of the Mississippi River during the day on Friday. Latest model guidance suggests that warm advection/isentropic upglide-induced convection will probably develop late Thursday night into Friday morning across Iowa within the plume of returning elevated instability. However, latest indications are that this activity may outpace the slowly-returning elevated mixed layer leading to a gradual weakening trend through the day. However, Friday night continues to look like a period we`ll have to watch closely, as another area of low pressure and associated cold front will be impinging on the region from the north. Ahead of this, intensifying warm advection acting on any remnant outflow from morning activity will also finally be able to impinge on the returning warm/moist sector as the kinematic parameter space also becomes more supportive of storm organization. Still pretty far out with plenty of spread and uncertainties, but this is a period we`ll continue to closely eye for a severe and also flash flood potential with PWATs forecast to surge into the 2 to 2.5 inch range. We`ll get into another brief quiet period over the weekend as high pressure returns. From a synoptic perspective, winds may surge a bit down the lake as the high arrives which could yield a building wave/rip current potential over the weekend. Carlaw
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&& .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z WEDNESDAY/... Issued at 114 AM CDT Tue Jun 25 2024 Key Aviation Messages: - Line of TS with strong winds potentially in excess of 40 knots expected to impact the Chicago terminals in the 14-16Z window. - Conditional chance of another line of TS with strong winds late afternoon into early evening. An axis of small TS clusters from eastern WI into east central IL along an instability gradient will drift east with time early this morning. Isolated TS cannot be ruled out at ORD/MDW for the next couple hours between the TS clusters. Focus then turns to a growing line of TS across northern WI that is expected to track southeast into northern Illinois mid- morning. While the current TAF timing indicates a higher confidence window of 14-16Z for ORD/MDW, a broader window of 13-17Z is possible depending on any changes in the forward speed of the TS line. This line of TS will be capable of producing 40kt+ winds as well as +RA with visibility 1SM or less. Behind the line of TS, the low-level environment will begin to recover on W/WSW winds gusting around 25 knots by early afternoon. Another line of TS is expected to develop late afternoon into early evening, but confidence of the exact placement (e.g. over or just south of the terminals) of the TS supports introducing only a PROB30 from 21-01Z at this time. Behind this potential second round of TS, winds will settle west around 10 knots late evening and overnight. Kluber && .LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IL...None. IN...None. LM...Small Craft Advisory until 1 PM CDT this afternoon for the IL and IN nearshore waters. && $$ Visit us at weather.gov/chicago