Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Detroit/Pontiac, MI

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794
FXUS63 KDTX 192331
AFDDTX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Detroit/Pontiac MI
731 PM EDT Sun May 19 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Warm and muggy conditions are expected early this week with
  daytime highs in the 80s.

- Lingering showers and thunderstorms will end early this evening.

- Chances exist for additional thunderstorms Monday afternoon. There
  will be a potential for strong to severe thunderstorms, but low
  confidence exists with exactly the strong to severe threat will
  occur.

- A much less humid airmass is expected for the end of the week.

&&

.AVIATION...

Remaining convection may fester in the vicinity of I-94 for an hour
or so into the forecast, but expect activity to steadily dissipate
and/or settle southeast early this evening. East to northeast flow
will become established in the wake of weak frontal boundary that is
helping to drive this activity. There may be a period of minor fog
development, particularly where rainfall was most widespread along
the I-94 region. Scattered thunderstorms are expected again on
Monday afternoon with strong to severe thunderstorms possible.

For DTW/D21 Convection...While most convective activity will be
positioned off to the east and southeast, one or two small scale
cell may pop up along various convective and lake breeze boundaries
through 01z or so. Any such storm would be capable of producing
locally heavy rain which would reduce visibilities. Additional
scattered thundestorms will be possible Monday afternoon with some
strong to severe storms possibly bringing gusty winds and hail along
with heavy downpours. This activity will be tracking west to east at
30-40 mph as compared to the slowly meandering thunderstorms today.

DTW THRESHOLD PROBABILITIES...

*  Low in a thunderstorm impacting the terminal 00z-01z this
   evening. Also, lo for thunderstorms after 18z Monday afternoon.

&&

.PREV DISCUSSION...
Issued at 341 PM EDT Sun May 19 2024

DISCUSSION...

A weak frontal boundary moving through Michigan early today
supporting isolated showers and thunderstorms within the narrow
thetae plume mentioned in the morning update. A warm airmass remains
in place today with 850 mb temperatures to 14-15C. Forecast
soundings for this afternoon suggest mixing depths well up through
850 mb. This supporting high temperatures into the 80s again for
inland areas. Temperatures will be cooler and more in the 70s along
the lakeshore communities. The high mixing depths will not have any
significant effect on the winds as lower level column flow is at 15
knots or less.

Differential heating and surface convergence focused along the lake
breezes and remnant frontal boundary from around Port Huron through
the Detroit Metro region down to Monroe County is expected to
trigger additional convection this afternoon. Current observations
at 1930Z for KONZ show SSE wind and 76 degrees while nearby KDTW is
at a WSW wind at 88 degrees. Still, fairly good consensus amongst
the hi-res model suite for greater coverage of showers and
thunderstorms to develop later this afternoon. The narrow thetae
plume has now move into the eastern CWA shown well on visible
satellite with the afternoon agitated cumulus field. Activity picks
up over the next hour or so with isolated cells currently getting
underway along the I-69 corridor east of Flint and across southern
Sanilac County. Peak of activity develops southwestward between 4 pm
and 9 pm. The warm and moist airmass is supporting good instability.
Mesoanalysis showing upwards of 2500 J/kg of MLCAPE centered across
southeast Michigan. Mid level lapse rates are not too great at 6.5-
7.0 C/km with low level lapse rates where greatest convection is
towards 9 C/km or slightly better. Very little shear in place as
well at around 15 knots of bulk shear. This brings more pulse type
thunderstorms along these boundaries with any outflow boundaries
driving additional updrafts. High moisture is in place with PWATs to
around 1.25 inch. All of this brings potential for water loaded
downburst winds and brief heavy rainfall with any stronger
thunderstorm that can develop. CAPE from -10C to -30C is in the 500-
700 J/kg range with 50 dbz 1 inch hail heights at around 27kft to
30kft bringing potential for at least small hail with the
stronger updrafts. There are some limiting factors today that
bring uncertainty to the forecast. These are the ridging extending
into the central Great Lakes, the notable anticyclonic flow at
700 mb directly overhead where convection is being advertised, and
potentially some weak capping around 600-700 mb. All of this
could limit stronger convection or perhaps suppress wider spread
convection. There is moderate confidence that thunderstorms should
hold largely under severe criteria.

A shortwave trough will be lifting out of the central plains into
Wisconsin and through the northern Great Lakes on Monday. This will
lift a warm front northward and bring a renewed surge of moist
advection and a chance for showers and thunderstorms during the
afternoon. Daytime instability will be sufficient again to support
thunderstorms with 1500-2000 J/kg of MLCAPE forecast by the RAP.
Shear will increase to around 35 knots towards the evening hours.
Uncertainty remains as to what sort of coverage will look like
throughout the day. A Marginal Risk for severe weather exists across
most of southeast Michigan tomorrow. A more southerly track of the
vort max into northern lower Michigan will bring better strong to
severe thunderstorm chances to central portions of the CWA whereas
the northerly tracks focuses better severe thunderstorm chances
towards the Tri-Cities.

Active weather stretch continues on Tuesday as a more dynamic low
pressure system develops over the upper Mississippi River Valley.
Longer range models point towards precipitation potential downstream
of this strengthening low on Tuesday morning maybe into early
afternoon with a relatively brief dry period before activity moves
in Tuesday night well ahead of the main cold front. Slowing of this
front maintains shower and thunderstorm chances for much of
Wednesday with a continued risk of severe weather depending on
available instability. Cold front will cool things down out of the
80s for Thursday with surface high pressure likely bringing dry
conditions during the late week period.

MARINE...

A weak cold front eases across southern Lake Huron, Lake St. Clair,
and western Lake Erie through this evening with isolated to
scattered showers and storms possible in the nearshore waters.
Severe weather is not likely but localized downpours can be expected
where storms do occur. Winds remain light behind the front, veering
to north/northeast tonight before continuing around to
east/southeast Monday morning at 10 knots or less. The front lifts
back north as a warm front on Monday ahead of a low set to track in
Monday night into Tuesday. This will bring an area of showers and
storms mainly focused across northern/central Lake Huron. Winds and
waves remain below Small Craft Advisory criteria with this system. A
stronger low develops over the Plains on Tuesday, lifting into
western Lake Superior on Wednesday. This will send a cold front
across the region with stronger southerly winds to 20 knots or above
preceding it. Less humid air settles in on a westerly breeze
Thursday as high pressure builds in through the late week.

&&

.DTX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MI...None.
Lake Huron...None.
Lake St Clair...None.
Michigan waters of Lake Erie...None.
&&

$$

AVIATION.....DG
DISCUSSION...AA
MARINE.......TF


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