Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Milwaukee/Sullivan, WI

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503
FXUS63 KMKX 040901
AFDMKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Milwaukee/Sullivan WI
401 AM CDT Tue Jun 4 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Warm/muggy conditions continue today.

- Thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon. Isolated
  severe storms with wind and hail are possible during the
  afternoon to evening hours.

- Additional thunderstorms expected tonight through early
  Wednesday AM along a cold front. No severe weather is expected
  from these storms at this time.

- Localized heavy rainfall is possible this afternoon through
  tonight, and may lead to flooding.

- Northwest winds bring cooler and drier air to southern
  Wisconsin for the second half of this week.

- Afternoon shower chances continue through the weekend, with
  thunder potential appearing very low at this time.

&&

.SHORT TERM...
Issued 358 AM CDT Tue Jun 4 2024

Today through Wednesday:

Dry / quiet weather expected for the remainder of this morning.
GOES satellite reveals a shortwave trough currently over
northwestern MO. It is expected to drift northeastward, with
PVA and diffluent flow aloft leading to ascent in our CWA in the
early to mid afternoon hours, likely triggering scattered
showers and thunderstorms. Though mostly cloudy skies are
forecast ahead of its arrival, the majority of said clouds
(aside from a few diurnal cu later in the morning) are thin /
high-altitude clouds, allowing a combination of solar heating
and southerly surface moist air advection (dewpoints rising from
mid 60s to around 70 despite daytime mixing) to rapidly
destabilize the atmosphere, achieving 2000 (possibly 3000)
joules of SBCAPE, with little to no CIN by this afternoon. With
forcing from the approaching shortwave, confidence in convective
initiation is high (PoPs increasing to 60% from southwest to
northeast this afternoon and evening). With a weakly sheared
environment (0-6 km shear 20 kts or less), no supercellular or
well organized storms are expected, mostly single cells and
clusters capable of a pulse-severe hail and wind threat. Though
individual storm cells are not expected to last long, popcorn-
style redevelopment and waves of storm clusters (afternoon and
evening) will likely lead to off-and-on shower/storm activity
for many areas this afternoon and evening.

Late this evening into tonight, a cold front sweeps west to east
across the region, delivering a 75% precip chance, likely in
the form of a north/south-oriented broken line of showers and
thunderstorms. With the afternoon and evening pre-frontal
convection eating away at the instability, this line of storms
is likely to weaken gradually on approach. Some CAMs even show
it dissipating before reaching our eastern CWA.

The cold front reaches eastern areas and moves out over Lake MI by
roughly 7 AM Wednesday morning, with winds shifting westerly and
rain chances gradually decreasing behind the front. Showers and weak
storms may linger into the Wednesday AM commute, particularly along
I-43 north of Milwaukee and I-94 south of Milwaukee (45% chance).
Mostly dry and sunny weather expected mid Wednesday, followed by a
late afternoon / evening 25% chance of showers and
thunderstorms, driven by solar heating and triggered by some
diffluence / PVA in the left exit quadrant of an approaching
200mb/300mb jet streak. These storms (if they develop) would be
in a strongly sheared low- CAPE environment, and may struggle to
organize, unless diurnal destabilization exceeds expectations.

Sheppard

&&

.LONG TERM...
Issued 358 AM CDT Tue Jun 4 2024

Wednesday night through Monday:

Synopsis: Post cold-frontal showers & storms will push east of the
region during the overnight hours Wednesday into Thursday. The
remainder of the long term period will be characterized by a quasi-
steady synoptic pattern featuring longwave ridging over the western
CONUS, and mean troughing over the Hudson Bay/Saint Lawrence River
vicinity. Tied to the aforementioned upper troughing/ridging,
surface low pressure will linger along the Quebec-Ontario border
through this weekend, with a broad high pressure ridge remaining
stagnant from the foothills of the Rockies into the Plains. West-
northwest surface winds will thus prevail through the duration of
the long term period, allowing a cooler & drier Canadian air mass to
remain in place across the region. Tied to perturbations wrapping
around the trough in the Saint Lawrence Valley, isolated rain
showers will be possible during the afternoon hours each day.

Thursday Through Monday: Cooler high temperatures and significantly
lower dew points are forecast with a Canadian air mass becoming
established across the state. The overnight update shows highs
primarily in the low-mid 70s daily, with dew points generally
ranging from the upper 40s to low 50s. Can`t rule out bouts of
diurnally-driven shower activity with Wisconsin still proximate to
the Saint Lawrence Valley disturbance/shortwaves embedded within it.
Rainfall totals are likely to be light in any activity.

Quigley

&&

.AVIATION...
Issued 358 AM CDT Tue Jun 4 2024

VFR conditions and dry weather continue this morning as high-
altitude clouds approach from the southwest. South winds
accelerate after sunrise today, with gusts to 20 kts by this
afternoon. Scattered showers and thunderstorms are expected to
develop over and southwest of our region in the mid afternoon,
gradually drifting northeastward and increasing in coverage.
Isolated severe storms are possible this afternoon and evening,
with damaging wind gusts and hail. Localized heavy rainfall
will also be a possibility this afternoon through tonight.
Generally expecting 5000 ft cumulonimbus bases.

Late this evening through tonight, a cold front crosses from
west to east, veering winds west and delivering another batch of
showers and thunderstorms. Storms are expected to weaken on
approach and be sub-severe, but the additional rainfall will
lower cloud ceilings to MVFR and possibly IFR by Wednesday
morning.

Sheppard

&&

.MARINE...
Issued 358 AM CDT Tue Jun 4 2024

A low pressure trough around 29.2 inches will cross the Northern
Plains today and move into south central Canada tonight. Southerly
winds are expected ahead of the associated cold front. Showers
and thunderstorms are expected late this afternoon through tonight.
The cold front will cross Lake Michigan Wednesday morning,
causing winds to veer westerly. Widespread showers and storms will
end by around noon Wednesday. Scattered showers are possible each
afternoon through the weekend. Westerly winds continue through
the end of the week as low pressure over south central Canada
weakens to around 29.4 inches.

A Small Craft Advisory is likely for the nearshore zones on
Thursday due to gusty west to northwest winds.

Sheppard

&&

.MKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
WI...None.
LM...None.
&&

$$

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