Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Bismarck, ND

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896 FXUS63 KBIS 151938 AFDBIS Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Bismarck ND 238 PM CDT Sat Jun 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across western and central North Dakota late this afternoon through early Sunday morning. Expected hazards include damaging winds up to 70 mph and hail up to tennis ball size, with a tornado or two possible. - The highest risk for damaging winds is across northwest and north central North Dakota this evening through early Sunday morning, where isolated gusts to 80 mph are possible. - Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across south central and southeast North Dakota Monday through Monday night. - Warm and humid today, followed by below normal temperatures through the first half of next week. Windy in the northwest on Sunday. && .DISCUSSION...
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Issued at 238 PM CDT Sat Jun 15 2024 Upstream troughing digging into the Pacific Northwest places the Northern Plains under southwest flow aloft this afternoon. At the surface, a lee trough is developing just west of the ND/MT border. The air mass downstream of the lee trough is capped, but low to mid 60s dewpoints coupled with strong diurnal heating has already resulted in 2000 J/kg SBCAPE. A gradual lowering of mid level heights combined with low level convergence could provide enough forcing for convective initiation to overcome the capping in western North Dakota late this afternoon, and there are already signs for a sustained storm on satellite imagery along the MT/ND border near Trotters. Bulk shear through all layers AGL is forecast to increase this afternoon and especially this evening. Any storms that develop along the lee trough later this afternoon are favored to remain discrete, with long hodographs supporting very large hail up to tennis ball size. With a weakening of the capping inversion and an increase in the low level jet with poleward moisture transport early this evening, convection should become more widespread across western North Dakota. The enhanced southerly return flow could introduce a brief tornado threat with any discrete storm, with 0-500 m SRH increasing to 100-200 m^2/s^2 and 0-1 km bulk shear increasing to 15-25 kts. This may be especially true for the northwest due to a deepening northeast Wyoming low augmenting the surface wind field to a predominant easterly direction. Later in the evening and into the early overnight hours, several CAMs bring severe storms that originate in central Montana into northwest and north central North Dakota as an intense bowing complex. Simultaneously, existing convection could grow upscale and merge into a forward-propagating linear complex. The kinematic environment over northwest and north central North Dakota looks favorable for a higher-end damaging wind threat, with 0-3 km shear exceeding 40 kts and near surface winds directly opposing storm motion. This is where the highest potential for significant severe winds of 75 to 80 mph exists. Later tonight, following the convection, a deepening low over southern Saskatchewan will drive a cold front across the state. This will result in a cooler, drier, and windier Sunday. The strongest winds are expected in the northwest, where afternoon gusts could approach 45 mph. Outside of the southern James River Valley which could approach 80 degrees, high temperatures will primarily be in the upper 60s to mid 70s on Sunday. Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms are expected over the north central CONUS Sunday night through Monday night as a longer wave trough translates across the Northern Rockies. For Sunday night into Monday morning, there are medium chances (40 to 70 percent) for showers and storms across the southern half of the state, including a lower probability risk for elevated strong to marginally severe storms posing a large hail threat along the South Dakota border and east of the Missouri River. This will be conditional on the northward advancement of elevated buoyancy into a a highly sheared environment. For Monday afternoon through Monday night, there are high chances (70 to 90 percent) for showers, with thunderstorm chances ranging from low northwest to high southeast. All convection over this time frame looks to be elevated, but MUCAPE around 1000- 2000 J/kg paired with effective bulk shear of at least 50 kts could support a severe threat with any storm whose elevated inflow layer contains no CIN. Buoyancy prognostics limit this threat spatially to south central and eastern North Dakota. Showers remain in the forecast for Tuesday as the base of the shortwave trough swings through, though thunderstorm chances will be much lower. A southwest flow aloft regime is favored to continue through the week, with low confidence in the timing of shower and storm chances. Temperatures are favored to remain below through at least the middle of next week before warming back closer to normal by next weekend. The coolest time period is expected to be Tuesday through Tuesday night, with highs mainly in the 60s and lows mainly in the 40s.
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&& .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SUNDAY/... Issued at 1238 PM CDT Sat Jun 15 2024 Scattered showers and a few thunderstorms will remain possible across northwest North Dakota early this afternoon, but VFR conditions should prevail. Later this afternoon and evening, chances for thunderstorms will increase across western North Dakota, shifting into central North Dakota later in the evening and overnight. Some storms could be severe with very large hail and damaging wind gusts as high as 60 kts. The highest probability for storms is from northwest to north central North Dakota during the late evening and early overnight hours. A TEMPO group has been introduced to the KXWA and KMOT TAFs for TSRA with IFR visibility and 45 kt gusts. A brief period of lower ceilings is also possible with any storm. A cold front trailing the storms later tonight into Sunday morning will shift winds to the west-northwest around 15 kts. Prior to the frontal passage, KMOT could have enhanced low level wind shear overnight. && .BIS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Hollan AVIATION...Hollan