Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Kansas City/Pleasant Hill, MO

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053 FXUS63 KEAX 230852 AFDEAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Kansas City/Pleasant Hill MO 352 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 .KEY MESSAGES...
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- Warm Today, Isolated Shower Possible - Shower/Thunderstorm Complex Overnight; Severe Storms Possible - Severe Storms Forecast Saturday Evening
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&& .DISCUSSION...
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Issued at 351 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 GOES-16 water vapor satellite imagery shows the PV anomaly over the northwest CONUS that has provided persistent troughing over the past week and has been responsible for sending multiple short-wave troughs and mid-level vorticity maxima across the Central CONUS. Surface anticyclone that brought mild weather conditions on Wednesday has pushed into the southern Great Lakes Region during the overnight hours. Currently watching a short-wave perturbation around H5 that is starting to eject across the Rockies away from the main troughing region in the northwest United States. Early this morning, the dCVA associated with this has been lowering surface pressure from the Front Range into the High Plains of Kansas. This should allow pressure falls to continue and foster surface cyclogenesis. Through the morning and afternoon, downstream over our forecast area H5 heights should rise through a good portion of the afternoon. As the surface cyclone in the High Plains deepens, mass response is expected into the lower Missouri River Valley that should enhance low-level meridional flow in our area. Expecting this to boost temperatures back into the mid 80s this afternoon, and should help bring in an airmass with dewpoints in the mid 60s. Dewpoints this morning have been sitting in the 50s across most of our forecast area. As WAA kicks in, expecting a wing of isentropic ascent into our area that will try to force a few light showers. However, 850- 700mb flow turns more southwesterly as the mid-level short-wave begins to move eastward, and helps to setup a stronger EML from eastern Kansas into Central Missouri. The drier air may be enough to prevent shower activity as isentropic ascent occurs, given the antecedent lower dewpoints this morning. GEFS and other ensemble members do have around 30-40 percent probabilities for rain of at least 0.01" through the afternoon, but are less than 10 percent for a threshold of 0.10 inches of QPF. Have added in slight chance POPs through this afternoon the strongest theta-e advection is on going. 00z HREF mean QPF is very low. Strong EML should create a strong cap through most of the afternoon, so even as convergence increases with the deepening cyclone, should inhibit most convective potential in our area. The HRRR along with other CAMs do hint at some light activity, but do not produce much in the way of QPF within the wing of WAA. The main event for our area will be the arrival stronger H5 height falls, increased cyclonic vorticity advection and approach of the cold front developing a QLCS/MCS. CAMs have been developing convection over Central Nebraska around 01z and then gradually expands southward into Kansas, and reaches our western and northwestern counties after 06z and continues eastward into Friday morning. Warm sector SBCAPE will likely be in the realm of 1750-2250 J/kg, per HREF mean, though could potentially be as high as 3000 J/kg as indicated by recent runs of the RAP. Using the 0-6km layer as a proxy for deep layer shear, looking at values along the cold front around 30-40 kts, with the vector oriented parallel to it. 0- 3km CAPE values steadily increasing to over 100 J/kg ahead of the cold front (prior to any outflow boundaries shooting ahead of any QLCS/MCS). Therefore, both the synoptic pattern and potential mesoscale environment late Thursday into early Friday morning should support upscale growth, and enough shear to keep it organized over the Plains. Once again, our forecast area finds itself in a scenario where the QLCS may start to weaken, given the cold pool may start to get ahead of the better deep layer shear environment, which may be mostly post-frontal by the time it gets to our area. However if it is not outflow dominant, may be able to tap into some of the energy and have enough convergence to overcome the cap. If storm mode remains linear and and is not quite outflow dominant, severe winds of 60 MPH would be the primary concern. With preceding EML in place and if there is a large degree of boundary layer mixing, which a few model soundings have been hinting at, perhaps localized RIJ development could foster some wind gusts of 70 MPH+, especially for our northwest MO counties. However, a stabilizing layer boundary layer may greatly reduce this. Perhaps localized hail could be realized with steeper mid-level lapse rates but thinking linear storm mode inhibits this. With respect to tornado potential, the 0- 3km bulk shear magnitude sits right around 30-35 kts immediately ahead of the progged line and is oriented mostly parallel it, thus overall would make mesovortex genesis hard to come by unless a stronger RIJ surge can oriented a portion of the line from northwest to southeast. While typing this discussion, the 06z HRRR has been coming in, and noticing at least in the simulated reflectivity field, that most of the activity in southeast Nebraska dissipates while remaining portion of the QLCS moves into Iowa. However, will not buy yet into just one solution given the increasing synoptic support, LLJ this evening, and expected moisture transport preceding the cold front arrival. Friday morning into Friday afternoon, cold front continues to move through and is expected to continue to produce precipitation, though main QLCS/MCS complex at this point should be breaking apart and not posing a severe weather hazard. GEFS and other ensemble suites continue to paint 90+ percent probabilities for rainfall into Friday afternoon, with 40-50 percent probabilities for exceeding 0.10 through about 22z on Friday. 00z HREF mean QPF values hold generally around 0.75 to 1.00 inches for a 24 hour total from Thursday Night through Friday evening across our area, with our northwest counties with the heavier pockets. Localized probability matched mean values from the 00z HREF produce about 2.00 inch of QPF, which seems a reasonable high end if a few isolated cores become efficient rainfall producers. There may be some low end severe potential later into the afternoon on Friday mainly east of Interstate 35 if there is any kind of clearing that could help destabilize the boundary layer, our if a remnant outflow boundary promotes stronger differential heating. However, any severe threat for winds around 60 MPH and hail to around quarter size will be conditional on mesoscale factors modifying the environment. This is highlighted by the SWODY2 marginal risk for roughly the southeast third of our CWA. Main cold front should completely clear our area Friday evening. Another short- wave perturbation ejects across the Rockies and should help promote H5 height rises through the early afternoon on Saturday, providing a break from precipitation. However, heading into Saturday evening, this short-wave trough will be another opportunity for active shower and thunderstorm activity across our area. Short-wave trough Saturday morning over the Front Range results in compact mid-level vorticity maxima likely to promote stronger dCVA and robust ageostrophic motions developing a stronger surface cyclone across the Central Plains. Flow ahead of this will turn southerly again and provide stronger theta-e advection into our forecast area through Saturday afternoon. The bulk of the afternoon right now appears dry, as most deterministic model guidance depicts localized subsidence within the area of H5 height rises. Perhaps some light precipitation could be squeeze out within the WAA wing earlier in the day, but GEFS and other ensemble suites maintain very low probabilities for any measurable precipitation during this time frame, and focus higher probabilities late in the evening on Saturday through Sunday morning. Mid-level height falls and cyclonic vorticity advection should pick up in pace through Saturday evening, as surface cyclone tracks eastward across the Central Plains. Surface pressure falls and convergence increases late into the evening. Once again, a strong EML likely sits atop a moist boundary layer, with warm front positioned between Interstate 70 and Hwy. 36. If this positioning does not change, this could lead to some discrete convection that develops. However, this late in the evening, LLJ likely results in faster upscale growth into some kind of MCS. With the stronger kinematics and deep layer shear overspreading the progged warm sector though, would think an organized MCS could bring stronger winds and longer hodographs that could support maintenance for a longer period of time. We will have to see how the mesoscale pans out and the timing of the short-wave trough ejecting out of the Plains to better pinpoint the threat, but for right now would be concerned about the potential for warm front with stronger low-level vorticity being present at the onset of storms, and then robust upscale growth through the evening. Will also have to be on the lookout for hydrologic issues should an MCS stall, though with the stronger mid-level flow may help in making any kind complex progressive and reduce storm training. For right now, expect adverse weather late Saturday, and once we see how the Friday activity clears out may be able to better pinpoint more mesoscale details. In the extended, deterministic guidance continues to depict rather progressive flow through the middle of the week that will bring additional rain shower and thunderstorm chances. Deterministic GFS currently places a robust vorticity maxima with H5 trough Monday, though speed and phasing the the system is not totally in line with deterministic ECMWF. There are multiple periods of increase probabilities amongst ensemble members through next week. A box and whiskers and plot for temperatures through next week shows wider spread, which is likely attributed to timing differences in convection timing and when diabatic heating and evaporation cooling are dominant.
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&& .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 1121 PM CDT Wed May 22 2024 VFR conds are expected thru the pd with clr skies expected thru the overnight and increasing high clouds thru the day. Aft 02Z-04Z cigs around 5kft are expected to build into the TAF sites. Winds will be light out of the SE thru 15Z aft which they will increase to 8-15kts. && .EAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MO...None. KS...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Krull AVIATION...73