Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS North Platte, NE

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717 FXUS63 KLBF 140534 AFDLBF Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service North Platte NE 1234 AM CDT Fri Jun 14 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Recurring chances for rain and thunderstorms are likely with strong to severe thunderstorms possible Friday and Saturday. - Some uncertainty remains but more severe weather is possible on Sunday. - Fairly active pattern continues into next week but confidence in temperatures is low at this time. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... Issued at 346 PM CDT Thu Jun 13 2024 Mid-afternoon surface analysis depicts much of the area in general east-northeasterly flow behind a cool front that passed early this morning. This helped bring a swift end to the heat that was observed Wednesday and the quick progression with cooler air filtering in behind has held afternoon highs into the low 80s with locations south of Interstate 80 still managing near 90 degF. Surface high pressure will shift east across the Red River Valley of the north. Low-level fetch will originate from this source through late today which is supportive of the cooler temperatures. Flow will continue to veer to easterly by late afternoon which will help drive the formating of rain and thunderstorms off the Front Range to the west. With the effective front well to the south, the bulk of any instability will be removed to the south and this is where the Storm Prediction Center (SPC) has placed their latest Day 1 Marginal Risk (level 1 of 5). This outlook clips our far southwest corner but confidence in seeing a notable thunderstorm potential, much less severe threat, is low. HREF probabilities are quite low with ensemble max QPF output showing less than 0.10" anywhere in our forecast area. This is likely due to the fact that the local environment is fairly hostile to convection with significant capping thanks in part to h85 and h7 temperatures in the low 20s and middle teens degC respectively. As temperatures cool this evening, low-level capping will only increase which should help keep most if not all locations dry. Lows tonight should fall into the upper 50s to low 60s. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... Issued at 346 PM CDT Thu Jun 13 2024 Friday and Saturday...likely the more noteworthy period of time in the forecast period. Upper-level ridge of high pressure to the south will slowly shift east with upper ridge axis approaching western Nebraska by early Friday morning. A disturbance will track into the Desert Southwest and carve its way through the ridge aloft. This will prompt ridge breakdown during the day Friday. Southerly flow will enhance ahead of this feature as low pressure begins to develop across central Wyoming. This stronger flow will help usher in richer boundary layer moisture as dew point values quickly recover back into the 60s. Combined with modest lapse rates aloft, moderate to strong instability will develop as MLCAPE values are progged to climb into the 1500-2500 j/kg range by 00z Saturday (7pm CDT Friday) as afternoon highs reach the low to middle 80s. Under a localized speed maximum, deep layer shear will be supportive of organized convection with 0-6km BWD values in the 25 to 35 knot range. This should support multicell storm modes with a few embedded supercells possible. Forcing for ascent will quickly ramp up by evening as the main PV anomaly crosses the Central Rockies. Subsequent height falls will peak Friday evening into Saturday morning. By early to mid- evening, expectations are for thunderstorms to quickly track north and east out of Colorado/northwest Kansas and into southwest Nebraska. Primary concern will be damaging wind gusts as hi-res guidance indicates a fairly quick upscale progression of thunderstorms into an environment with moderate DCAPE (800-1200 j/kg) and delta theta-e differentials of greater than 25 degC. Extended HRRR guidance (12z and 18z runs) shows areas of enhanced wind gusts exceeding 40 knots and even peaking around 60 knots. While large hail will also be possible, this will primarily reside in storms that can remain discrete which will be a decreasing probability as the evening progresses. Though a tornado cannot be ruled out given modest curvature in the lowest levels, confidence in seeing one is quite low given storm mode and quickly invading cold pool conglomeration. The latest SPC Outlook for Friday has much of the area in a Slight Risk (level 2 of 5), and generally have no qualms with this. Precipitation will persist overnight into Saturday with PoPs peaking around Midnight CDT Friday night around 80%. Forcing wanes as the trough axis clears the local area around sunrise Saturday and as such have PoPs quickly decreasing from west to east through the morning Saturday. Uncertainty exists around how the afternoon hours Saturday play out. With clouds and precipitation chances potentially lasting into the early afternoon, environmental recovery is somewhat uncertain. The latest SPC Outlook for Saturday show our far north central zones in a Marginal Risk (level 1 of 5) and believe this is adequate for now given some lingering uncertainties. It`s interesting to note that the operational NAM and GFS keep any afternoon redevelopment east of the forecast area so we`ll need to monitor for increasing/decreasing probabilities. Depending on pace of clearing, temperatures remain somewhat uncertain though forecast highs are likely to return to above normal values reaching the middle 80s east to low 90s west. Sunday...an interesting day with a clash of cooler and more mild airmasses across the central Plains. Behind the departing trough, a fairly progressive cool front will dive south along the lee of the northern Rockies. Further south, southerly flow will reinforce low- level moisture with dew points likely to remain in the lower 60s. Eventually, the cool front will win out with moderate CAA overspreading the area. How far south this front reaches is the subject of greatest uncertainty as temperatures remains more mild to the north and hot to the south. Eventually, this frontal boundary will still and lift back north slightly as a warm front. Easterly upslope flow immediately north of the surface boundary will support orographic lift across northeast Colorado while the front itself will be a possible focus for thunderstorm development. NWP guidance varies quite widely about placement of this boundary and thus where greatest PoPs set up. For now, believe inherited Chance PoPs (up to 50%) are adequate though subsequent forecasts could introduce large changes to these values. The NAM is furthest south with this frontal boundary whereas the GFS/ECWMF shows it settling around the I-80 corridor. Capping will be strong but strong forcing from low-level convergence may be enough to overcome this especially as the evening low-level jet ramps up. Strong instability and deep layer shear will be in place and suggest an organized severe weather event but confidence in realizing thunderstorm initiation is low. Will need to closely monitor this potential in the coming days. Monday and beyond...continued southwesterly flow with a steady parade of northern stream disturbances should keep the extended forecast on the active side next week. While day-to-day predictability will remain low given model guidance variations, recurring afternoon and evening thunderstorm potential appears at least probable for the foreseeable future. Persistent fetch from the Gulf of Mexico should provide adequate moisture to support this idea. NBM guidance for temperatures next week show large spread in 25th to 75th percentile values and this is likely due to some uncertainty on how far east the upper-level troughing encroaches on the area. For now, deterministic solutions show daytime highs remaining in the 80s for most but large swings are possible as confidence in evolution of the extended becomes more certain. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY/...
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Issued at 1233 AM CDT Fri Jun 14 2024 Isolated showers and thunderstorms are possible across wrn/ncntl Nebraska overnight through 21z Friday aftn. VFR ceilings/vsbys are likely during this time. From 21z Friday aftn onward, scattered to numerous SHRA/TSRA are expected to develop across wrn Nebraska which will spread through ncntl Nebraska Friday evening.
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&& .LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SHORT TERM...NMJ LONG TERM...NMJ AVIATION...CDC