Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Detroit/Pontiac, MI
Issued by NWS Detroit/Pontiac, MI
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805 FXUS63 KDTX 221722 AFDDTX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Detroit/Pontiac MI 122 PM EDT Sat Jun 22 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Flood watch this afternoon-tonight for Midland/Bay/Saginaw counties. - Slight risk of severe thunderstorms this afternoon into tonight over much of southeast Michigan, with damaging winds being the main hazard, but isolated tornadoes also possible. - Hot and humid today with high temperatures in the 90-95 range south of I-69 with heat indices peaking out just under 100 degrees this afternoon. && .AVIATION... Stalled frontal boundary has begun to lift north of the area early this afternoon leading to resultant convection likewise occuring north of the terminal corridor. Additional development over central MI is expected through the afternoon with MBS having the greatest chance to see scattered storms. Opted to keep the FNT Prob30 group as confidence is not high enough to make a change either direction (ie tempo or total removal) though trimmed the window given latest radar and model trends. Areas south still expected to remain dry through the daylight hours before the cold front crosses overnight. A decaying line of showers/storms looks favored late evening through overnight, though given the strength of the front, still worthy of tempo TSRA mentions for all sites. MVFR ceilings follow as cooler air filters in with a lift to lower VFR likely during the day Sunday. For DTW/D21 Convection... Showers and thunderstorms track north of D21 this afternoon and this evening. A cold front then generates storms as it sweeps NW to SE across Lower MI late tonight into Sunday morning. DTW THRESHOLD PROBABILITIES... * Moderate for thunderstorms late tonight and early Sunday. * Moderate to high for ceilings aob 5kft Sunday morning. && .PREV DISCUSSION... Issued at 1132 AM EDT Sat Jun 22 2024 UPDATE... Severe weather chances once again today, with SPC placing the area north of Pontiac and Port Huron in a Slight Risk for severe weather and outlining that all severe threats are possible. This area includes Flint, the Thumb, and the Tri-City area. While there is still a decent amount of uncertainty, the best chances for severe storms looks to be between 2pm and 8pm today. Wind damage is the greatest threat from this system, and DCAPE values range from 500- 1000 J/kg in the northern region where storms are expected. Values over 1000 J/kg will be in place to the south, and could provide greater potential for wind damage if either advected northward or a storm develops in the southern part of the CWA. A main limiting factor for this system will be CAPE. Values peak over 1000 J/kg of SBCAPE in the thumb, but the available instability is very narrow and will hug Saginaw Bay/Lake Huron. As such, initiation will be an issue in this environment, and anything that does get going will struggle to develop severe hail. Shear will be the key factor this afternoon that will support any developing storms. 30 knot bulk shear is expected across the northern part of the CWA, where chances for severe storms to develop are the greatest. Hodograph lengths at the 0-1km level are long, and the presence of low level shear means that an isolated tornado cannot be ruled out. 0-1km shear starts at around 20 knots in the Tri-Cities and Thumb, increasing this evening to upwards of 30 knots. Further south, models agree that CAPE is much lower, with much of the area not reaching 500 J/kg. A Flood Watch is currently in effect for Bay, Midland, and Saginaw counties from noon today through 6am tomorrow, which covers both the severe event outlined above and the passage of the cold front tonight. Flood watch is in place due to the potential for excessive rainfall, and the Tri-Cities are currently under a Marginal Risk of excessive rainfall from the WPC. Ensemble means give around a half an inch with the exception of the GFS, which has sustained means over an inch for the past few runs. Expected northward progression of the stationary front this evening may keep some of the evening showers originally expected to move over the Tri-Cities to the north. Model progression has shown increasing tendencies to break apart the line of storms along the front, leaving only scattered showers over the CWA overnight. These two factors in combination could reduce rainfall totals as far as 0.5-0.75" through both events. HREF guidance tends to agree, giving a sharp precipitation total gradient near that area between 0.5-1". Have kept some slightly higher precipitation totals in the official forecast, as a direct hit from a storm this afternoon could cause a significant local increase in precipitation and produce much spatial variability. PREV DISCUSSION... Issued at 300 AM EDT Sat Jun 22 2024 DISCUSSION... Jet forcing tracking through Central Lower Michigan yesterday afternoon allowed for convection to keep re-firing and track across the Tri-Cities region, resulting in localized rainfall amounts of 4+ inches. There remains potential training of storms today as the deep moisture plume hangs around Saginaw Bay (PW values aoa 2 inches) area and a surface wave then tracks through Central Lower Michigan this evening. Expecting MLcapes to build to around 1500 J/kg , which will lead to efficient rain producers, and easily could see 2-4 inches of rainfall, with isolated higher totals not out the question. Now, there is some uncertainty if the bulk of the storms will reside just north of the Tri-Cities, but this set up is worthy of a flood watch for this afternoon through tonight. Still looks like locations south of M-59 will be capped during the day as the mid level dry slot with 700 MB temps of 11 C tracks through, persisting into the early evening hours. This should allow the Detroit Metro area and points south to climb into the low to mid 90s with the favorable southwest flow, pushing heat indices to near 100 degrees. Deep moisture plume coming out the Plains will track through the rest of the CWA tonight. Significant differences amongst the models with the strength and placement of the low over northern Lower Michigan this evening/tonight, but there does appear to be a consensus with a strengthening low pressure system as it moves through northern Lake Huron/Georgian Bay. This is concerning, as low wind shear, both 0-6 km and 0-1 KM will be ramping up with low level jet in excess of 50 knots developing. Instability/capes may prove sufficient with 1000-850 MB cape progged to reside in the 500-1000 J/kg range, per NAM. If storms arrive earlier in the evening, organized severe storms with rotation are in play. SPC day 1 has upgraded much of southeast Michigan into slight chance. Hopefully, as the night wears on, the near surface layer will be just stable enough to keep stronger winds and any rotation above the surface, or instability could also end up being even more modest and we fail to generate thunderstorms all together as line approaches the Detroit Metro Area. Several solutions indicating the line dissipating, with just some leftover scattered activity along the cold frontal passage late tonight. However, preference will continue to skew the forecast toward a broken or solid line of showers/thunderstorms (see RRFS A) with the good large scale forcing/heights falls/PV advection for summer standards. Modest cold advection to follow for Sunday, with 850 MB temps progged to lowering into the lower teens by Monday morning per 00z Euro. None-the-less, the 500 MB trough axis swinging through the Central Great Lakes may still touch off a few showers, mainly over the Thumb region, as 500 MB cold pool (-15 C) tracks through Lake Huron. Warming back up early next week, as shortwave ridging arrives by Tuesday morning, ahead of a strong northern stream upper level wave/trough expected to sweep through on Wednesday, triggering storms and leading to modest cool down for end of the work week. MARINE... Stalled front that has been hovering around southern MI the last couple days will get pulled back north today generally across Mid MI which should result in more shower and thunderstorm activity lifting north today as well. This will also allow southwesterly winds to spread back across the southern Lakes ushering in another hot airmass keeping stable conditions across the waters. A stronger, more organized low pressure system will then track east across northern MI tonight which will pull a cold front through the region on Sunday. Increased winds ahead of the front have been topping out near 25 knots for a couple days now, and continue to do so but stable conditions and possibly short duration may limit the need for a small craft advisory but will continue to monitor. HYDROLOGY... Flood watch in effect for Midland/Bay/Saginaw this afternoon into tonight. The potential exists for repeated rounds of showers and thunderstorms. Total rainfall amounts of 2 to 4 inches possible with locally higher amounts not out of the question. With yesterday`s locally heavy rainfall, flooding would be likely if those totals verify. A line of showers and thunderstorms is then expected to spread east into the rest of southeast Michigan this evening and tonight, and if these storms hold together, rainfall amounts of half an inch to two inches can be expected, which may cause minor urban/low lying flooding. However, the activity may weaken significantly through the night, and lower rainfall totals under half an inch are not out of the question by the time the storms arrive over Detroit Metro Area. && .DTX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MI...Flood Watch through late tonight for MIZ047-048-053. Lake Huron...Small Craft Advisory from midnight tonight to 10 AM EDT Sunday for LHZ421-422. Lake St Clair...None. Michigan waters of Lake Erie...None. && $$ AVIATION.....KDK UPDATE.......BC DISCUSSION...SF MARINE.......DRK HYDROLOGY....SF You can obtain your latest National Weather Service forecasts online at www.weather.gov/detroit.