Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Chicago, IL

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188 FXUS63 KLOT 231125 AFDLOT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL 625 AM CDT Sun Jun 23 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Today and Monday will be relatively pleasant with highs in the upper 70s to lower 80s (today) to mid to upper 80s (Monday). Lakeshore locations will be cooler. - Monday night through Tuesday night may feature several rounds of thunderstorms including the threat for severe weather and flash flooding. - Tuesday may be hot and humid with heat indices above 100, depending on the coverage and timing of thunderstorms. - Another period of pleasant conditions is expected Wednesday and Thursday before chances for thunderstorms return toward the end of the week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 253 AM CDT Sun Jun 23 2024 Through Tonight: Convection is currently clearing the southeast CWA as of 3am, with the majority of precip exiting to the east by around sunrise. Some residual flooding impacts are expected to continue for several hours in areas that experienced flash flooding last evening, so remain alert for areas of standing water this morning. Stratocumulus along and behind a passing cold front will yield mostly cloudy skies this morning before the cloud deck begins to break and lift into scattered cumulus through the afternoon. Drier and cooler air advecting into the area this morning will result in a substantially more comfortable day today as highs reach the upper 70s to low 80s. This will mark the coolest conditions for many in over 10 days. A compact mid-level low over southern Manitoba early this morning will slowly unravel while tracking across the Great Lakes region through tonight. Steepening low-level lapse rates under a 10-12kft isothermal layer will likely generate isolated showers and sprinkles across Wisconsin and Lake Michigan. The light showers may ultimately brush far northeast Illinois this evening, so have included a slight chance of sprinkles north of a line from downtown Chicago to Antioch roughly in the 6-10pm window. Kluber Monday through Saturday: Upper-level shortwave ridging will build into the Great Lakes on Monday as a surface high pressure system moves overhead. Monday is accordingly looking pleasant with plenty of sunshine, light winds, relatively low humidity levels, and highs in the mid to upper 80s. A lake breeze should move inland during the afternoon leading to cooler temperatures in the low to mid 70s shore-side. Monday night through Tuesday night continues to be a time period to watch for waves of thunderstorms in the general region as a series of upper-level shortwaves propagate within the jet stream located near the US/Canadian border and provide glancing blows to an extensive plume of instability across the Upper Mississippi River Valley. Determining when and where individual convective episodes will develop in this kind of pattern can be tricky, as there is often an underlying influence of each convective event on the next (e.g. placement of an effective instability gradient, and so on). In addition, other forecast elements (such as temperature, sky cover, wind speed and direction, and so on) will be prone to busting depending on where and when convection occurs. With all of that said, deterministic model guidance exhibits a signal for the first shortwave to swing through Minnesota and northern Wisconsin Monday evening. With a plume of steep mid-level lapse rates >8 K/km, and a seasonably moist airmass characterized by PWATs nearing 2" contributing to a reservoir of MUCAPE >5000 J/kg, any convection that develops in central Minnesota would be prone to growing upscale into a large mesoscale convective system (MCS). Assuming this occurs, our area will be in a precarious position as the arcing instability gradient and southwest to northeasterly- oriented LLJ would direct the MCS right into northern Illinois early Tuesday morning. It is for this reason that the SPC Day 2 outlook has our entire area in a Level 1/5 threat level for severe weather (damaging winds being the main threat). With the threat for an MCS to roll through early Tuesday morning, the forecast for the rest of the day isn`t clear cut. In scenarios where there is minimal convective coverage Tuesday morning, the rest of the day would be poised to be hot and humid with highs in the low to mid 90s and rising humidity levels with corresponding heat indices above 100F. Meanwhile, in scenarios where convective coverage is high in the morning, there could be a play for regenerating convection over at least part of the area or to our south which would limit afternoon high temperatures and humidity levels. Then, there`s the threat for another round of thunderstorms in the evening along a southward-moving cold front that would have to be sorted out, with all sorts of questions ranging from the rate of recovery (if needed at all), where any effective instability gradient would be located near or in our area, and to the extent to which forcing will be strong enough to overcome low-level capping. Interestingly, blended NBM guidance came in hot with 60-70% PoPs Tuesday evening, which appears to be supported by a majority of individual ensemble members from the EPS/GEFS showing measurable QPF (which would almost certainly be thunderous). And, with PWATs hanging around 2" once again and MUCAPE potentially >4000 J/kg, any thunderstorm Tuesday evening would be prone to becoming severe and producing prolific rainfall rates in spite of otherwise meager deep-layer shear. This is all to say, Tuesday has the potential to be busy with plays for headline-worth heat, severe weather, and flash flooding for parts or all of our area. (Note that SPC and WPC do have our entire area in a threat level 2/5 for severe weather and flash flooding, respectively). Now, the forecast Wednesday and Thursday is a little more straight forward as the instability axis will be shunted southward and a surface high pressure system moves through the Great Lakes. Daily highs in the low to mid 80s (cooler lakeside due to lake breezes), relatively low humidity levels, light winds, and plenty of sunshine would be the norm. Chances for thunderstorms look to return Friday and into the weekend, however, as a series of upper-level shortwaves lift northeastward toward the Great Lakes. Borchardt && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/...
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Issued at 625 AM CDT Sun Jun 23 2024 There are no major aviation concerns through the TAF period. Scattered to broken MVFR stratus should gradually lift throughout the morning. Northwest winds will prevail through the day, though winds near Lake Michigan may tend to turn more northerly or even northeasterly this afternoon. For now, MDW/GYY will feature a northeasterly wind shift (though it may be more gradual than abrupt), and will keep ORD northwesterly. Tonight, winds will become light and variable as a surface high slides overhead. A few sprinkles cannot be ruled out. A few areas of shallow ground fog may develop in the vicinity of RFD/DPA after the end of the TAF period. Borchardt
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&& .LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IL...None. IN...None. LM...None. && $$ Visit us at weather.gov/chicago