Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Central Illinois

Home |  Current Version |  Previous Version |  Text Only |  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 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
430
FXUS63 KILX 240740
AFDILX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Lincoln IL
240 AM CDT Fri May 24 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- A couple rounds of showers and storms are possible today
  including a decaying line of storms this morning and
  redevelopment of strong to severe storms this afternoon and
  evening ahead of a cold front.

- Showers and thunderstorms are expected (90 percent chance)
  Sunday, some of which (15-30 percent) could be severe with all
  hazards in play.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 236 AM CDT Fri May 24 2024

Early this morning, an occluded area of low pressure is centered
over South Dakota while a cold front is in place across potions of
Nebraska and Kansas. An MCS is ongoing along the cold front and
is expected to track east across Iowa early this morning before
shifting into Illinois mid to late this morning. Guidance is mixed
on how well this line will stay together, but there is at least a
chance for showers and storms to move across central Illinois mid
to late this morning in a decaying state. Depending on how
quickly we clear out from any morning convection, some models
indicate that moderately strong instability will redevelop this
afternoon as dew points near 70 degrees advect across central
Illinois contributing to MLCAPE values of around 2000 J/kg.
Forecast soundings show steep low/mid level lapse rates with no
appreciable capping in place. Storms should be able to redevelop
this afternoon on remnant outflow boundaries, or this evening as
the synoptic cold front begins to move across the area. In
general, deep layer shear is a bit marginal today, around 25-30
kt, but does become more favorable with values around 30-35 kt as
the cold front approaches this evening.

High pressure will build across central Illinois behind the
departing cold front Saturday. At least a brief respite from the
humidity is expected as dew points mix into the 40s Saturday
afternoon under sunny skies.

Sunday, low pressure is progged to lift from near Kansas City
early in the morning to the western Great Lakes late in the
evening. A broad warm sector will be in place across much of the
Midwest. Central Illinois is expected to see temps in the upper
70s to lower 80s while dew points will be unseasonably high near
70 degrees. This combination of heat and humidity will contribute
to strong instability Sunday afternoon with MLCAPE values around
3000 J/kg. Despite the somewhat loosely organized surface low, a
negatively tilted shortwave trough and coupled upper jet will
result in strong forcing for ascent across central Illinois
Sunday. In addition, deep layer shear will be strong, 40 to 50
kts. Overall, kinematics and thermodynamics appear very favorable
for severe weather somewhere in the region. The main question mark
revolves around the evolution of early day convection which will
be working across the mid Mississippi Valley Sunday morning on a
veering LLJ initially focused over the mid Missouri Valley
Saturday night. Outflow from these storms and convective debris
adds some uncertainty in the details, but the day bears close
watching for severe weather both along the warm front earlier in
the day, and along the trailing cold front later in the day.
Forecast soundings (NAM/SREF) Sunday show long, cyclonically
curved hodographs along with very steep (>8.5-9.0 C/km) mid level
lapse rates supportive of supercells and large hail. 0-1 km bulk
shear of 15-25 kt and high SRH (>200 m2/s2) are supportive of
supercell tornadoes. Storms should become linear with time with
wind then becoming the primary hazard.

Low pressure will lift to the Canadian Maritimes early next week
while high pressure builds across the Great Plains. NW flow will
prevail across central Illinois. Cold advection will drive steep
low/mid level lapse rates and couldn`t rule out some scattered
showers/isolated storms, diurnally favored, in response to low
amplitude shortwaves digging across the region in the NW flow.
Temperatures will run a bit cooler through the first half of next
week with highs only in the lower to mid 70s and overnight lows in
the lower 50s.

Deubelbeiss

&&

.AVIATION...  (For the 06z TAFs through 06z Friday Night)
Issued at 1139 PM CDT Thu May 23 2024

A line of thunderstorms or perhaps a few distinct shorter
thunderstorm lines look on track to affect the central IL
terminals Friday morning until Friday evening. However, timing
and location of these features is still highly uncertain. It
appears the earliest impacts will likely be at KPIA, which may be
affected by more than one round of shra/tsra. Otherwise, TSRA more
likely to hold off until after 18Z. At this point, have included
VCTS in all TAFs starting 17Z-20Z until 02Z-05Z, but will hone in
on more precise timing of any thunderstorms at individual
terminals with subsequent TAF issuances as predictability
improves. For now, have kept all conditions VFR as MVFR or worse
cigs/vsbys will likely be fairly short-lived, but any
thunderstorms could produce brief lowered cigs/vsbys in MVFR or
possibly IFR range. Winds S-SE 5-10 kts overnight, becoming S
15-20 kts with gusts around 25 kts by 15Z-18Z.

37

&&

.ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.
&&

$$