Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Indianapolis, IN

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160 FXUS63 KIND 202255 AFDIND Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Indianapolis IN 655 PM EDT Thu Jun 20 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Hot and humid conditions persists into the weekend - Next chance for storms arrives Sunday morning - Heating back up into the 90s next week && .SHORT TERM (This evening through Friday)... Issued at 303 PM EDT Thu Jun 20 2024 Heat and humidity remain the story through the short term, with conditions stifling and uncomfortable but remaining well short of advisory levels. Experimental HeatRisk continues to highlight level 3 and 4 levels, primarily driven by duration of the recent heat and fairly warm overnight lows, though it remains important to remember that the product is, in fact, experimental, and may not best represent the risk profile at this time. That said, especially given the jump from quite cool to quite warm conditions, and the duration, there will at least be continued risk to sensitive and vulnerable populations. We have and will continue to emphasize and message this threat via multiple venues. Scattered-broken diurnal cumulus have developed today, which has slightly slowed warming, though we continue to creep toward or just past the 90 degree mark at this hour, on our way to the lower 90s most areas. This cloud cover will dissipate this evening, with mostly clear conditions expected overnight. The ridge remains overhead tonight, thus, expect winds to go light and variable to calm most areas. This should allow for solid radiational cooling conditions, and have cut blend numbers a few degrees toward MOS consensus, which tends to handle such situations more adequately. Some patchy fog may occur late tonight, though given the fact that little occurred last night in a similar situation, significant fog appears unlikely aside from some patchy dense fog in favored terrain areas. The ridge axis drops southward slightly tomorrow, though it still appears that peripheral convective activity should remain outside the area, though some more cumulus should develop. Winds will remain light, but some continued mixing down of dry air aloft will help to limit dewpoints a bit. Blend numbers have been running hot most of the week, and this appears to be the case tomorrow as well. Bias corrected grids should be catching onto the pattern by now, and the BC MOS consensus appears to support highs a bit cooler than NBM tomorrow, and were leaned on significantly. Still, given the lower dewpoints and solid insolation, low to mid 90s will be in play tomorrow, with afternoon peak heat index values into the upper 90s in spots. && .LONG TERM (Friday night through Thursday)... Issued at 303 PM EDT Thu Jun 20 2024 We continue to focus on heat in the long term period. Although our traditional Advisory or Warning criteria are not met, there are other factors that make the heat dangerous, especially to vulnerable populations (e.g., duration of the heat wave and warm overnight lows). So, we encourage our partners in media and emergency management to continue promoting precautions from heat-related illness. We are currently using the Special Weather Statement to convey concern over the heat and related impacts. Modest relief will arrive Monday. See analysis below for more details. NAEFS and EPS mean 500-mb heights Saturday morning will be close to climatological maximum for June just to our south. The ridge will be retrograding at that time and also dampening as a northern stream shortwave trough approaches Indiana late Saturday. This reorientation will continue to push more concentrated subtropical moisture within the mid levels to our north, so it should be a less cloudy pattern. Also, the approaching shortwave and associated shifts to the MSLP pattern will result in 10-15 mph winds, helping to keep wet bulb globe temperature out of the extreme category. Saturday has the potential to be the warmest day of the heat wave given veering low-level flow and more favorable trajectories of advection from semi-arid and hotter air mass to our west. This also could result in slightly more mixing of dry air downward during the afternoon, though the PBL in general is still quite moist and this probably won`t be very noticeable. All this considered, peak heat index values around 100F are likely Saturday. Mid-70s for minimums Saturday night/Sunday morning are likely though there may be a slight warm bias in blended and raw model guidance. Statistical guidance (MOS) is comparatively lower, and NBM percentile guidance is starting to recalibrate to recent warm bias with a cooler 50th percentile than NBM deterministic. Thus, will modify low temperatures slightly lower. This is still high enough for some concern for vulnerable populations especially, as overnight lows are an important component of overall heat risk. A ribbon of rich moisture through a deep layer ahead of the shortwave trough and attendant surface front will move into the area Saturday night into Sunday. There should be a clear diurnal maximum noted with convective coverage and intensity. Saturday night`s upstream convection may struggle to make it deep into Indiana, but the deep subtropical moisture plume may help maintain at least weak convection late into the night and into Sunday morning. The diurnal peak Sunday should result in reinvigoration of convection again Sunday afternoon either across the southern portion of the area or just to our south. Precision on frontal placement is tough at this range and we`ll be able to better refine precipitation probabilities in subsequent forecasts. Continental air mass that is drier and slightly cooler will arrive Monday behind the front. Rich PBL moisture is shown in the models to quickly return Monday night into mid-week. Veered flow aloft and approaching shortwave may lead to steeper midlevel lapse rates favoring moderate to strong instability. Stronger flow aloft and resultant shear for storm organization may be focused to our north precluding a more substantial threat, however. Nevertheless, likely largely driven by instability magnitude, CSU machine learning severe probabilities pick up on this with low probabilities. Behind the midweek front, another push of continental air will lead to pleasant conditions the later half of the week. There is some signal for at least periodic return of above average temperatures in the 8-14 day period, but the signal in the model suite isn`t particularly strong for impactful or long-duration heat at this time. && .AVIATION (00Z TAF Issuance)...
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Issued at 655 PM EDT Thu Jun 20 2024 Impacts: - Mainly VFR expected this TAF period. - MVFR fog possible late tonight, primarily at BMG. Discussion: Satellite trends continue to suggest dissipating CU as max heating of the day has passed. CU is expected to continue to vanish. High pressure across the area will lead to continued clear skies overnight. Although a few passing high CI will be possible, expect VFR conditions with light to calm winds. This may result in some ground fog as dew point depressions are suggested to be less than 2F overnight at some points outside of IND. On Friday, heating and mixing will resume with continued warm southwest flow and the development of scattered CU by late morning/early afternoon.
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&& .IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SHORT TERM...Nield LONG TERM...BRB AVIATION...Puma