Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Jackson, KY

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926 FXUS63 KJKL 230245 AAA AFDJKL AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED National Weather Service Jackson KY 1045 PM EDT Sun Sep 22 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - A potential for showers and thunderstorms will persist through much of this week. - After high temperatures well into the 80s to near 90 earlier today, readings will trend downward through the week. && .UPDATE...
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Issued at 1045 PM EDT SUN SEP 22 2024 No significant changes to the forecast with mainly the adjustments to the PoPs and Wx grids per the latest radar and CAMs trends. The latest obs and tendencies were included in the T/Td/Sky grids. These minor adjustments have been sent to the NDFD and web servers along with a freshening of the zones and SAFs. UPDATE Issued at 910 PM EDT SUN SEP 22 2024 00Z sfc analysis shows eastern Kentucky southeast of a slowly approaching cold front. This allowed temperatures to approach record highs in the upper 80s to lower 90s for most of the area this past afternoon. This also allowed instability to build and, combined with relatively high PWs, resulted in slow moving and merging thunderstorms affecting mainly the area east of Corbin into the start of the evening. The initial merger was strong enough to blow down a tree on the powerlines near Rockholds. This cell then slowed to a crawl and brought heavy rains as it back- built for the next hour or so. This resulted in heavy rain and water flowing across highway 1064 in that same area. Now the convection in the south has mostly faded out while lighter amounts are streaming over the northern parts of the area. Currently, temperatures are running in the upper 70s to lower 80s outside of the rain areas and in the upper 60s to lower 70s within it. Meanwhile, amid light winds away from any convection, dewpoints are in the mid 60s to lower 70s, most places. Have updated the forecast to add in the latest obs and trends for the T/Td/Sky grids as well as adjusting the PoPs through the rest of the night per the current radar and tendencies of the CAMs. These adjustments have been sent to the NDFD and web servers along with a freshening of the zones and SAFs.
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&& .SHORT TERM...(This evening through Monday night) Issued at 302 PM EDT SUN SEP 22 2024 The frontal boundary that had been draped across far northern Kentucky has begun to move north into Ohio and West Virginia as warm advection increases across central and eastern Kentucky. Upstream over the mid-Mississippi River Valley, a disturbance continues to move east toward eastern Kentucky, and will be the primary trigger for shower and thunderstorm development later this afternoon into the early evening. The greatest instability will be over the southwestern quadrant of the forecast area, but there will be sufficient instability for thunderstorms anywhere across the forecast area into this evening. Additional rounds of showers and thunderstorms are possible into the overnight tonight, with the greatest instability over the southern half of the forecast area, as an active jet stream continues to usher disturbances across Kentucky. With at least broken cloud cover and continued warm advection, expect little in the way of any ridge- valley temperature differences. Fog will be dependent on the amount of cloud cover. A stronger southwesterly jet stream develops over Kentucky Monday, and this combined with stronger moisture advection into the area will result in MLCAPE values approaching 1500-2000 J/kg by early to mid-afternoon. The increasing shear and sufficient instability will mean a Marginal Risk for severe thunderstorms, with gusty winds and large hail the primary severe threats. A mitigating factor may be that the better shear does not arrive until after sunset, when instability becomes more limited, especially if earlier convective overturning has resulted in stabilization of the atmosphere. With the strong upper trough still approaching from the west, showers and thunderstorms are likely to continue through the overnight Monday night. Despite the recent dry conditions, isolated/localized instances of high water are possible where storms train across particular area. .LONG TERM...(Tuesday through Sunday) Issued at 335 PM EDT SUN SEP 22 2024 The latest run of the GFS has an active flow pattern aloft across the CONUS. A trough of low pressure is currently forecast to be coming onshore in central California on Tuesday, with another well developed trough positioned over the northern Plains. Another persistent trough is still in the picture off the eastern seaboard to begin the period on Tuesday, but looks like it will be a bit further offshore. Another feature of great interest in the extended will be the development of a tropical cyclone in the southern Gulf of Mexico toward the middle of the week. Based on the latest model runs, it is looking more and more likely that a tropical cyclone will form somewhere over the Gulf of Mexico, and perhaps rapidly intensify over those extremely warm waters as it moves northward toward the central or eastern Gulf Coast. There is quite a bit of uncertainty regarding how this system will evolve and progress once it moves inland, should it indeed form, and how it might affect the weather of eastern Kentucky, so we`ll be watching this particular feature quite closely over the coming days. Our first weather maker, however, will be the northern Plains trough and frontal systems that will be extending from it. The latest models suggest that a weak shortwave may also form along the leading edge of the approaching trough on Tuesday. This, along with the passage of a surface cold front, will act as sources of lift to support shower and storm formation across our area. Showers and storms will move in from the north and west, as the cold front moves through. With a potential tropical cyclone moving in from the south, the front could slow up greatly, or even stall, over our area. If this scenario occurs, it would mean an extended period of light to perhaps moderate rainfall across our area Tuesday through Thursday. As much one to three inches could fall over the area during that three day period. With extensive cloud cover and persistent precipitation expected across our area for at least a few days, temperatures should be near normal during the extended, and perhaps even a few degrees below normal at times. Daily highs will range from the low to mid 70s on the coolest days, to the mid to upper 70s or even lower 80s on the warmest day. As far as hazards go, we`ll be watching closely for the potential for locally heavy rainfall during the Tuesday through Thursday time frame, when the most widespread and persistent rain is expected to occur. There is also a marginal risk, or 10% probability, that severe storms will occur on Monday, as the cold front makes its initial push through the region. && .AVIATION...(For the 00Z TAFS through 00Z Monday evening) ISSUED AT 820 PM EDT SUN SEP 22 2024 Mainly VFR conditions will likely hold through the first part of the night. Scattered showers and thunderstorms may occur later overnight, but this is still a fairly low confidence situation. Any thunderstorm or heavy shower has the potential to bring sub-VFR conditions. Some fog and areas of low stratus could also impact the terminals late, but its extent is questionable and left out of the TAFs for now. Additional, more widespread, showers and thunderstorms are expected to develop on Monday and have been put into the forecast as VCTS from midday on. Away from any storms winds will be light and variable. && .JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NONE. && $$ UPDATE...GREIF SHORT TERM...CMC LONG TERM...AR AVIATION...CMC/GREIF