Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS North Platte, NE

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685
FXUS63 KLBF 140907
AFDLBF

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service North Platte NE
407 AM CDT Fri Jun 14 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

-  Strong to severe thunderstorms are possible across much of
   western and central Nebraska this evening into tonight, with
   damaging winds as the main hazard. Large hail and locally
   heavy rainfall may also accompany the strongest storms.

-  The active weather pattern persists into next week, with
   near daily rounds of thunderstorms. Strong to severe
   thunderstorms are possible again Sunday across northern
   Nebraska.

-  Temperatures warm into the weekend before a cold front
   brings cooler temperatures for the middle of next week,
   though confidence remains lowered for now.

&&

.SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
Issued at 406 AM CDT Fri Jun 14 2024

Currently, scattered showers and thunderstorms are moving eastward
across northeast Colorado and the Panhandle, in association with an
increasing east-southeasterly low level jet. Aloft, an upper low is
progressing east across Arizona, with broad upper ridging centered
across the southern Plains. Temperatures ranged from the upper 50s
to low 60s across the area, with light and variable winds.

For today, will be watching the progression of a cold front,
currently positioned across central into western Kansas, as it
slowly lifts northward this afternoon as a warm front. This is in
response to increasing surface cyclogenesis across Wyoming. At the
same time aloft, the aforementioned upper low will begin to
eject eastward across the Rockies, with increasing southwest
flow across the Plains. Ongoing showers and thunderstorms will
persist at least through this morning, with broad southeasterly
warm advection continuing at H85. In fact, cannot rule out
scattered showers and storms lingering this afternoon, though
these should pose little to no severe risk. Exactly how long
precipitation lingers will also play a role in the severe
weather threat later this evening. The bulk of this morning and
afternoon`s activity will largely be north of the aforementioned
lifting warm front, though could slow its progression.
Additionally, destabilization remains somewhat uncertain, with
any leftover cloud cover playing a role today. That said, still
expect increasing instability this evening across much of
western and southwest Nebraska, as the surface warm front lifts
into the area and increases surface dewpoints into the lower
60s. Temperatures remain somewhat low confidence today with the
aforementioned cloud cover concerns, though look to climb at
least into the low to middle 80s. This should promote MLCAPE
values climbing to ~1000-1500J/kg, with higher amounts across
far southwest Nebraska and northeast Colorado. Lapse rates do
steepen aloft somewhat with the approach of the upper low,
though forecast soundings do point to the lack of a robust
elevated mixed layer and increased mid-level moisture. In fact,
PWAT values look to approach the 99th percentile climo across
southwest Nebraska by late this evening.

The approach of the upper low and increasing surface convergence
should lead to widespread thunderstorm development across eastern
Colorado late this afternoon. Deep layer shear remains largely
supportive of multicellular convection, and this looks to be
the predominant storm mode. Agree with the previous shift that
brief transient supercell structures could evolve at times,
though this remains somewhat uncertain. High-res guidance
continues to come into better agreement with rapid upscale
growth as convection pushes northeast into southwest and western
Nebraska later this evening. This should lead to the formation
of a cold pool and an increasing threat for damaging winds,
especially for areas south of HWY 2. Guidance hints at least a
local threat for significant damaging winds (75+ mph), and
convective trends will need to be monitored closely this
evening. This is supported by inverted-v thermodynamic profiles
and ample DCAPE (1000+ J/kg) indicated in forecast soundings.
Some hail threat may exist as updrafts remain more discrete,
though this largely looks to occur across northeast Colorado.
Heavy rainfall will also be a threat where the convective
complex tracks given the anomalous background environment, and
localized flash flooding cannot be ruled out across southwest
into portions of central Nebraska.

&&

.LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
Issued at 406 AM CDT Fri Jun 14 2024

The active weather regime persists into this weekend, as southwest
flow continues aloft. The aforementioned upper low for Friday`s
thunderstorms will eject into the Plains Saturday afternoon,
with an associated surface low ejecting across the Dakotas. The
poor timing of this wave should keep the bulk of thunderstorm
chances across eastern Nebraska, though some risk will exist for
weaker high terrain convection to survive into the Panhandle
into Saturday evening. By Sunday morning, a surface cold front
will push through the area from north to south, as a surface low
moves into Minnesota. It appears this front will stall across
southern Nebraska during the early afternoon, then lift
northward as a warm front, then be in the vicinity of the I-80
corridor during the evening. This boundary will have to be
monitored very closely, as dewpoints in the upper 60s to
potentially the low 70s pool near the frontal boundary. Very
robust instability and concerning shear profiles exist near this
warm front, and should any storms look to quickly become
supercellular should they initiate along the boundary.
Lingering CIN could inhibit development, though this remains low
confidence. A subtle shortwave looks to progress northeastward
in the mean flow aloft, and this combined with the increased
surface convergence along the front could be enough to get a
robust supercell or two across southwest Nebraska. A low
confidence, but potentially high impact scenario exists, and
this will be monitored very closely. More widespread
thunderstorm development is expected north of the surface warm
front across northern Nebraska, in the easterly upslope flow
regime. Some instances of large hail will be possible with the
more robust updrafts.

The southwest flow aloft looks to persist across much of the Plains
into next week, with near daily threats for thunderstorms persisting
across western and north central Nebraska. Frontal passages should
lead to temperature fluctuations, though timing of these boundaries
lend to a low confidence forecast. The threat for additional severe
weather chances remains low confidence as well, though at least some
threat looks to persist given the background synoptic regime.
&&

.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY/...
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.

&&

.LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...Brown
LONG TERM...Brown
AVIATION...CDC