Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Indianapolis, IN

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904 FXUS63 KIND 141323 AAA AFDIND Area Forecast Discussion...UPDATED National Weather Service Indianapolis IN 923 AM EDT Fri Jun 14 2024 .KEY MESSAGES...
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- Isolated showers across the southern half of Indiana through early afternoon - Dry and seasonable tonight and Saturday - Hot and humid trend starts Sunday...increasing confidence in potentially hazardous heat into next week
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&& .FORECAST UPDATE...
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Issued at 923 AM EDT Fri Jun 14 2024 Visible satellite shows a band of weak/shallow convection rooted in the midlevels from near Terre Haute eastward to Columbus. Radar shows a few light echoes coincident with this cloud band. This may continue head of the shortwave trough axis that is expected to pass through during the midday to early afternoon time frame. The chance for more substantial surface-based convective development before the shortwave nudges the front through is low, so we have precipitation probabilities at 10% through midday. Winds will trend toward northwesterly and drier continental air mass will arrive. The air mass may be slightly cooler, capping temperatures a degree or two lower than yesterday by comparison, but cold advection is minimal, so we should still peak in the mid to upper 80s this afternoon.
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&& .SHORT TERM (Today and Tonight)... Issued at 302 AM EDT Fri Jun 14 2024 Convection that has moved across the forecast area since late Thursday evening is finally weakening as it moves out of our eastern counties as of 0630Z. Despite the drier air and lack of extensive instability over much of the region as the storms moved in...a cluster of stronger cells produced pockets of likely 50-60mph winds tracked from near Crawfordsville southeast across the southwest Indy metro and into Johnson County before weakening. A noted rear inflow jet was a contributor to these stronger winds surging out at the surface as the storms tracked southeast. Temperatures were currently in the mid and upper 60s early this morning with additional scattered convection moving into the northern Wabash Valley. Scattered convection will persist over the next several hours with a low risk for a few showers or storms across southeast portions of the forecast area even into this afternoon as the weak frontal boundary lingers across southern Indiana. A large area of high pressure will expand into the region from the north by late today and bring seasonable temperatures into the first part of the weekend...before the hottest air of the season arrives Sunday into next week. This Morning Additional convection continues to fire across central Illinois and the CAMs are not doing a great job of capturing this. Appears the main catalyst for the renewed convective development is the presence of subtly stronger flow at 850mb with westerly winds near 30kts feeding into the showers and storms. With elevated instability in place and the stronger flow at 850mb expected to persist through daybreak...expect scattered convection to migrate into the forecast area and gradually sag southeast over the next few hours. Locally heavy rainfall will be the primary impact and considering the forecast going forward into next week...any additional rainfall will be welcome through later this morning. The weakening and veering of the 850mb flow as the morning progresses will largely diminish activity. This Afternoon and Tonight The front will be positioned somewhere across the southern half of the forecast area by the afternoon and despite better forcing aloft along the boundary to our east...enough instability and lift in the vicinity of the front to generate a few showers and perhaps a couple thunderstorms over southeast counties through late afternoon. Further north across the forecast area...a noted surge of drier air and subsidence in tandem with a well mixed boundary layer will support some wind gusts through the afternoon with mostly sunny skies developing. The remnant boundary will drop south of the Ohio River tonight with high pressure from the north taking over across central Indiana. Skies will be clear overnight with N/NE winds bringing a refreshing airmass as dewpoints fall back into the 50s. Temps...despite the passage of the front through the afternoon and the progressively drier airmass arriving in its wake...low level thermals are supportive of highs close to if not just a few degrees cooler than Thursday. Expect mid and upper 80s across the forecast area. Lows tonight will be comfortable...falling into the upper 50s and lower 60s. && .LONG TERM (Saturday through Thursday)... Issued at 302 AM EDT Fri Jun 14 2024 Saturday through Next Week **Increasing confidence in an extended period of very hot and humid conditions Sunday through much of next week** Looking back at maximum high temperatures for the month of June across Central Indiana, climatology shows that it`s relatively rare to see highs exceed 95 degrees. And 3 or more consecutive days at or above 95 degrees in June is exceedingly rare for Central Indiana, with only 3 occurrences of that happening in June at KIND (Indianapolis International Airport). The upcoming weather pattern does support consecutive days with highs potentially reaching and exceeding 95 degrees for all of Central Indiana in addition to warm nights in the 70s and humid conditions. Saturday will likely be the "coolest" day over the next week with highs in the mid 80s as the heat dome and best warm air advection still remain to the west across the Plains. 500mb ridging strengthens over the south on Sunday with 500mb heights reaching 593dm over Georgia. Through the rest of the week, upper ridging slowly shifts to the northeast CONUS while strengthening with 500mb heights potentially reaching 600dm, indicating an anomalously strong ridge taking hold of the eastern half of the country. The low level ridge and surface high pressure remain east of Indiana during this entire period keeping strongest warm air and moist air advection right over the Ohio Valley. One thing to note, with the center of the high pressure over the NE CONUS and Atlantic, the best subsidence and associated low level subsidence inversions will likely remain to the east. Forecast soundings Sunday into early next week show very steep low level lapse rates and deep mixing heights, further increasing confidence that high temperatures could exceed 95 degrees, despite such a humid airmass. The hottest days of the extended look to be Monday through Thursday, where high temperatures could reach or exceed 95 degrees. Historically, the NBM has been too hot with highs in the long term, so have kept max temps around the NBM25th percentile for now. However, this still keeps highs in the 95-98 degree range for the entire region Monday, and the 92-96 degree range the rest of the week. During this time period, strong moist air advection north on the west side of the low level ridge will bring moist gulf air into the region, with anomalously high PW and dew points hovering around 70 degrees. Heat indices at or above 100 degrees are possible during peak heating of the day Monday through Friday. Any potential relief from 90F+ temps would be limited to greater cloud cover should the increasing deep moisture be able to organize or getting caught under what should be a few showers and a stray thunderstorm through the mid-week. Unfortunately given lack of any approaching wave or forcing confidence in either opportunity for any location will be low. Any breakdown in the strong and broad ridge will likely follow the end of the long term. Monday and Tuesday afternoon look have at least a 15-20 percent chance of a rogue shower or thunderstorm developing. The low level jet increases to the west, but may be strong enough over Central Indiana around 10-20 kts to support a thunderstorm in such a hot humid environment with convective temperatures likely being met. Adding 15-20 PoPs Monday and Tuesday afternoon and evenings for now, but confidence remains low on coverage and exact location of development. Most places will likely remain dry through next week, so do not plan on a rogue thunderstorm providing much relief. Indianapolis has only reached 95F as early as June 17 on 11 occasions since 1871...and only twice since 1952 (95F on both 6/4/2011 and 5/28/2018). Indianapolis has only observed five days 92F+ during 6/1 - 6/20 on 11 occasions...and only twice since 1954 (6 in both 1988 and 1994). && .AVIATION (12Z TAF Issuance)... Issued at 557 AM EDT Fri Jun 14 2024 Impacts: - Isolated showers possible early this morning - Northerly winds may briefly gust this afternoon Discussion: Isolated convection lingers over central Indiana early this morning but is quickly diminishing as low level flow weakens. Not expecting any direct impacts to the terminals over the next few hours. Mid and high level clouds will shift south slowly through early afternoon as high pressure and drier air gradually press south in the area. Variable winds this morning will veer to northerly this afternoon and may briefly gust. Skies will clear this evening into tonight with winds veering from north to northeast and diminishing. && .IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ UPDATE...BRB SHORT TERM...Ryan LONG TERM...CM AVIATION...Ryan