Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Chicago, IL

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787
FXUS63 KLOT 041806
AFDLOT

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL
106 PM CDT Thu Jul 4 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Showers/rain this morning, highest coverage along/south of
  I-80. Diminishing threat for late-PM/early-evening storms.

- Mostly dry conditions for the weekend, but there will be increasing
  rain chances late Sunday through Monday.

- Seasonable temperatures will continue through next week.

&&

.UPDATE...
Issued at 1029 AM CDT Thu Jul 4 2024

A respectable mid-level wave/remnant MCV continues to shift
across central Illinois late this morning--a northward jog from
earlier expectations. The result of this has been to toss a
shield of stratiform rain into our area, and earlier updated
PoPs to reflect greater coverage/chances, particularly south of
about I-80 this morning. Farther to the north, a more
appreciable dry layer under 10,000 feet as seen on Davenport`s
12z sounding has helped curtail the northward progression of the
stratiform precip shield, although have recently seen evidence
of sprinkles/light rain breaching this dry layer up towards
about I-88. The latest forecast will reflect 20 to 50 percent chances
north of I-80 into the early afternoon, with likelies and
categoricals farther south towards central Illinois. The main
area we`ll be monitoring for an embedded thunder threat will be
across our far south (Ford - Benton counties) early this
afternoon in the vicinity of a weak meso low which may drag a
higher theta-e airmass northward. Latest observations and
satellite imagery, however, suggest the main corridor of concern
may remain south of the forecast area entirely.

Based on the current wave`s progression, it looks like the bulk
of precipitation should come to an end through the mid
afternoon, which may end up leaving us with a quiet late
afternoon and early/mid evening across the entire area. Given
the expansive cloud cover, temperatures may struggle to get into
the mid 80s, which will result in much lower instability and
increased MLCIN. This, in combination with likely mesoscale
subsidence on the backside of the departing wave suggests very
limited to nil storm coverage into the mid evening.

Carlaw

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 309 AM CDT Thu Jul 4 2024

Through Friday:

The first weather feature of interest for Independence Day is a
convectively induced vort/MCV across northern Kansas/western
Missouri. Satellite/radar depiction also nicely portrays some
warm advection induced showers and thunderstorms ahead of a
broad upper trough axis back across the northern Rockies. At the
surface, a cold/stationary front extends from southern Missouri
northeastward to the southern/eastern Great Lakes, with a high
PWAT airmass along and south of the front feeding into the
southwest flow.

The lead upper jet core will drive through northern IL this morning
and with the continued southwest flow this morning, the frontal
boundary will lift a bit farther north as well and try to bring some
precipitation with it. Upper air analysis depicts a relatively dry
airmass below 500 mb, and there is some ridging closer to the
surface, analyzed in the 850-925 mb and surface charts. A bit deeper
saturation is forecasted to be focused south of I-80 in response.
There may be a decent amount of echoes on the radar later this
morning initially with the warm advection, however with the dry air
coupled with mid level lapse rates being quite poor and not very
strong low level winds, whatever reaches the ground will be more
showery/sprinkely in nature. The main convectively induced wave
may try to drive some of this farther north in the late morning
to early afternoon. Whatever does make it through could have
some brief moderate rainfall given PWATs around 1.75",
especially along and south of Highway 24. With the passing of
the main wave, nebulous forcing would then be limited to the
front and the lake breeze boundary. Thus we would expect
precipitation coverage would still be somewhat limited, and
thunder coverage would not be high either - isolated at best.

For tonight, the mid/upper level trough axis will encroach on the
mid Mississippi Valley. Associated height falls and upper jet
segment look to lead to an expansion of showers and potentially a
few thunderstorms along the frontal boundary. There is some
uncertainty as to how quickly this will expand into northern
Illinois, plus the better warm advection  Chances look to be
around 15-30% by mid evening (9 PM) along the I-39 corridor,
with higher chances later. Coverage would expand more so late
in the evening and overnight toward the Chicago area.

The main low will pass to our north and the stronger warm
advection will be across central Illinois in Indiana, thus we
get somewhat dry slotted, but will need to maintain some widely
scattered shower chances into Friday morning mainly along and
east of I-55. Scattered showers would then spread in from the
northwest to areas north of I-80/88 in the afternoon as the
trough axis will be passing over area. The core of colder
temperatures aloft do slide by across Wisconsin, thus the
thunderstorm probability is low (20% or less). It will also be
breezy behind the system as the surface low continues to deepen
across lower Michigan.

KMD


Friday Night through Wednesday:

The upper-level trough that brought us the rain chances on
Friday will begin to pivot into Lower Michigan and the eastern
Great Lakes Friday night. As this occurs, modest upper-level
height rises are expected to develop overhead by Saturday
morning which will diminish any lingering showers Friday evening
and promote rain-free conditions through the day on Saturday.
Given that the area will also be behind a cold front during this
time, dew points should fall into the lower 60s generating
modest humidity levels. Though temperatures are still expected
to be in the seasonable category with readings forecast to be in
the upper 70s and lower 80s Saturday afternoon and low to
mid-60s both Friday and Saturday nights.

The modest ridging is forecast to drift eastward Saturday night
into Sunday as an upper-level shortwave trough ejects into the
upper Midwest. While initially it looked as if this trough would
struggle to have much rain with it, guidance has started to
show a complex of showers and thunderstorms developing over the
northern Plains Saturday night and moving eastward towards IL by
Sunday morning. However, the dry low-levels and resultant
sparse instability forecast to be over northern IL Sunday
morning should weaken (and possibly erode) any showers/storms as
they cross the Mississippi River. Thus, suspect that any rain
chances Sunday morning will remain low (<15%) for areas east of
I-39, but a stray shower in our far western CWA (west of I-39)
cannot be ruled out.

Heading into Sunday afternoon, the aforementioned shortwave is
forecast to pivot into the northern Great Lakes as a secondary
trough pivots into southern WI. This second wave is what
previous forecasts have been noting could bring us some
scattered showers and/or thunderstorms Sunday afternoon. While
guidance does continue to produce some slight chance to chance
POPs (20-30%) across northern IL and northwest IN, the limited
low-level moisture and dry mid-levels may prove sufficient to
hold any rain off until better moisture arrives Sunday evening.
Therefore, expectation for many dry hours on Sunday remains
valid with temperatures forecast to be slightly warmer than
Saturday as highs warm into the low to mid-80s.

Rain chances are expected to increase Sunday night as the
aforementioned trough becomes more situated overhead and better
moisture filters in at the surface. This trough looks to be
notably slower moving with guidance continuing to fester showers
and storms overhead through much of the day on Monday and
possibly into Tuesday. Therefore, have maintained the 40-50%
POPs offered by the NBM for this period which looks reasonable.
While rain chances should diminish on Tuesday as the core of the
trough pushes east, guidance does show at least broad troughing
hanging around the Great Lakes through much of next week. So
additional periods of showers and/or thunderstorms may linger
throughout the week depending on available moisture and
instability. Otherwise, expect temperatures to remain near
typical early July readings in the low to mid-80s.

Yack

&&

.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY/...
Issued at 1247 PM CDT Thu Jul 4 2024

The primary aviation weather concerns for the 18Z TAF period
include:

* On and off pockets of non-impactful rain throughout the period

* The likelihood of MVFR cigs beginning early Friday morning

Intermittent periods of light rain or sprinkles will continue
through this afternoon and into this evening with no related impacts
expected. Additional pockets of light rain will be possible
overnight, although perhaps the most appreciable chance comes ahead
of an impending cold front in the roughly 08-12Z timeframe. At RFD,
this potential will arrive closer to 06Z and a light thunderstorm
cannot be ruled out up that way tonight either. Confidence is rather
high in a several hour period of MVFR cigs beginning predawn on
Friday and lasting through the bulk of the morning. Most models
suggest the MVFR should clear away by noon but will likely return
during the latter part of the afternoon as more pockets of rain look
to move in. There is also a signal that the cigs refuse to budge
during the afternoon and we remain MVFR throughout the day.

Meanwhile, light southeasterlies will persist into this evening.
Confidence on wind direction takes a tumble for the overnight
period, but best guess is SSW while magnitude should remain below
10 kt. It`s very possible winds even go variable for several hours
overnight. Winds will build through the morning on Friday as they
establish a WSW direction and get gusting to around 20 kt by late
morning.

Doom

&&

.LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
IL...None.
IN...None.
LM...None.

&&

$$

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