Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Nashville, TN
Issued by NWS Nashville, TN
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376 FXUS64 KOHX 261130 AFDOHX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Nashville TN 630 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 ...New AVIATION... .SHORT TERM... (Today through Monday) Issued at 141 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 All is quiet in Middle Tennessee at the moment but that won`t last. We face a substantial severe weather threat today. Right now, our eyes are back to the west over Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas where storms are ongoing. That activity will move eastward through the rest of the overnight hours. CAMS are showing the activity over eastern Oklahoma/ northwestern Arkansas impacting our area during the morning hours. There could be enough instability around for this round to produce some damaging wind and an instance or two of large hail. While this round has some severe potential this is not the main round. The atmosphere will rapidly destabilize during the afternoon with SBCAPE values potentially as high as 3000 J/kg late in the afternoon. There is some uncertainty regarding the convective evolution late in the afternoon. While there won`t be any large scale lift during that time frame, there could be some remnant outflow boundaries around that could be a source of storm initiation. Our effective bulk shear will be in excess of 50 kts by the afternoon with some steeper mid level lapse rates advecting into the area from the west. If storms can fire late in the afternoon, we could see a couple supercells with all severe threats (damaging winds, large hail, and tornadoes). Confidence is higher in a solution where storms fire to our west during the evening and move eastward into our area. By the time storms get here, we will likely be looking at an MCS. With that said, damaging winds would be the primary concern, but a few circulations embedded in the line will pose a tornado threat and a couple instances of large hail will still be possible given the steep lapse rates aloft. The line of storms should move through the area and clear our south and east by 2-4 AM CDT Monday morning. At that point, the severe threat should be over but the rain will linger. In addition to the severe threat, a flash flooding threat will be present particularly in the north where chances are higher of multiple rounds of storms from this morning and this evening. While storm motions will be progressive today, recent heavy rainfall and PWAT values around the 90th percentile will pose enough threat to go ahead and issue a flood watch for the entire area. The front will slowly move through the CWA late tonight into Memorial Day. The rain chances on Memorial Day should be confined to areas east of I-65 and those chances will decrease as the morning and afternoon progress. && .LONG TERM... (Monday Night through next Sunday) Issued at 141 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 By Monday night, the front will be east of us and the entire area should be dry. This will be the start of a calmer pattern for the rest of the week. Large scale troughing will dip out of Canada into the Great Lakes region on Tuesday with northwesterly low level flow here locally. The air will be drier on Tuesday with dew points falling into the mid to upper 50s by sunset. By Wednesday, the low level flow will be northerly as surface high pressure moves from the northerly plains toward the Great Lakes. Highs on Wednesday and Thursday will struggle to touch 80 degrees and the nights will be cooler with lows in the 50s Thursday morning and Friday morning. In fact, a few spots on the plateau may dip into the 40s. The large trough will slide east on Friday with upper level ridging on its heels. Highs on Friday will rebound back into the low to mid 80s. Those warmer temperatures will stick around through next weekend. && .AVIATION... (12Z TAFS) Issued at 622 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Active weather expected during this taf cycle. A line of strong to severe storms is currently approaching from the west and is expected to bring impacts to terminals through the morning. Additionally, some scattered development is possible this afternoon, but no one model has a good idea where they`ll develop or even if they will develop. If storms do develop this afternoon, all modes of severe weather will be possible, likely bringing VFR vis thresholds down to IFR. A second line of strong thunderstorms is expected to push in from the west tonight after 04Z, with strong winds and very heavy rain being the primary threats. && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... Nashville 90 71 85 64 / 60 90 20 0 Clarksville 88 69 83 61 / 80 90 10 0 Crossville 82 64 78 56 / 70 90 40 10 Columbia 90 68 85 61 / 50 90 20 0 Cookeville 83 66 80 59 / 70 90 40 10 Jamestown 82 64 78 57 / 80 90 40 10 Lawrenceburg 88 68 84 61 / 40 90 20 0 Murfreesboro 89 68 85 60 / 60 90 20 0 Waverly 89 67 83 61 / 60 90 10 0 && .OHX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Flood Watch through Monday morning for Bedford-Cannon-Cheatham- Clay-Coffee-Cumberland-Davidson-De Kalb-Dickson-Fentress-Giles- Grundy-Hickman-Houston-Humphreys-Jackson-Lawrence-Lewis-Macon- Marshall-Maury-Montgomery-Overton-Perry-Pickett-Putnam-Robertson- Rutherford-Smith-Stewart-Sumner-Trousdale-Van Buren-Warren-Wayne- White-Williamson-Wilson. && $$ SHORT TERM...Reagan LONG TERM....Reagan AVIATION.....Baggett