Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Louisville, KY

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277
FXUS63 KLMK 251936
AFDLMK

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Louisville KY
336 PM EDT Wed Sep 25 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

*  Widespread moderate to heavy rain and windy conditions on Friday
   as the remnants of Hurricane Helene move through the Lower Ohio
   Valley.

*  Potential for 2 to 4 inches of rain from late Thursday night to
   early Saturday morning. Locally higher amounts are possible.

*  Wind gusts of 35 to 45 mph are possible during the day Friday as
   the center of Helene works into KY and the Ohio Valley.

&&

.SHORT TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY/...
Issued at 336 PM EDT Wed Sep 25 2024

A weak north-south oriented cold front will remain over eastern
Kentucky tonight as its parent low moves NNE through western Quebec
and a 5H low spins in place near the confluence of the Ohio and
Mississippi rivers. Moisture ahead of the front and the upper low
will bring widespread clouds to the region, along with some
scattered light rain showers east of I-65 closer to the surface
boundary. Any rain tonight would be very light.

The upper low will sink slightly south toward Memphis tomorrow as
the surface boundary to our east remains roughly in place and
continues to weaken. Similar to today, widespread clouds and
scattered light rain showers can be expected, with only light
precipitation amounts while breezes come in from the east around 5
to 10 mph. The effects from Helene`s remnants will hold off until
just after the Short Term period.

&&

.LONG TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
Issued at 336 PM EDT Wed Sep 25 2024

The main focus in the long term will be Helene and how it impacts
our region for the end of the week and into the weekend. Main
impacts continue to be the potential rainfall as well as strong
gusty winds associated with the system as it moves into the Ohio
Valley.

As of the 11am EDT update, Helene had become a category 1 hurricane
with the National Hurricane Center forecast anticipating Helene to
rapidly intensify into a potential category 4 hurricane over the
next 36 to 48 hours before making landfall along the FL Panhandle
Thursday evening. The current NHC track for Helene appears to be a
bit further west and south compared to the 12z run of the
deterministic models, which brings the center of the storm northward
through GA then more into eastern KY before hooking it to the west
and meandering over the area into the weekend as it weakens further.

Our first impacts from Helene will be felt Thursday night into early
Friday morning as moderate to potentially heavy rain work in from
the south as the system quickly works through GA as it slowly
weakens. Rainfall amounts could range from a quarter of an inch near
and just south of the Parkways to nearly an inch along the KY/TN
border. Rain will continue during the day on Friday as Helene works
into the Ohio Valley then starts to hook and loop back to the west
Friday night into Saturday. An additional 1 to 2 inches will be
possible across our CWA from 12z Friday to 12z Saturday. Total
rainfall from Helene is still anticipated to range between 2 to 4
inches with locally higher amounts possible.

The second impact will be the potential for strong advisory criteria
wind speeds and gusts during the day on Friday. NBM has continued to
trend too low on its wind values for Friday and with the 12z HREF
Ensemble probability of wind gusts equal or greater than 40 mph by
12z Friday is between 80-100% with EURO Ensemble showing the same
during the day on Friday. While confidence is becoming high we will
likely need a wind headline in the form of a Wind Advisory on
Friday, locations needed in the advisory remain in doubt. Like the
rain mentioned above, the wind forecast will be determined on how
much Helene weakens as it works northward through GA and where the
center of the storm will be located as it reaches KY and the Ohio
Valley on Friday. Given this uncertainty, opted not to issue any
weather headlines at this time.

As Helene transitions into a post-tropical cyclone over the weekend,
showery weather will linger as it merges with the upper low over the
Ohio Valley. It will then open up and exit off to the east northeast
as we start next week.

&&

.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY/...
Issued at 128 PM EDT Wed Sep 25 2024

Moisture streaming northward ahead of a cold front reaching from the
eastern Great Lakes to the central Gulf Coast and an upper low
spinning over southern Illinois will bring clouds to the region
through the TAF period, along with a couple chances of scattered
showers. Generally VFR conditions are expected until lower clouds
move in early Thursday morning.

&&

.LMK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
KY...None.
IN...None.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...13
LONG TERM...BTN
AVIATION...13