Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS North Platte, NE

Current Version |  Previous Version |  Graphics & Text |  Print | Product List |  Glossary Off
Versions: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43
-- Remove Highlighting --
-- Discussion containing changed information from previous version are highlighted. --
662 FXUS63 KLBF 112047 AFDLBF Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service North Platte NE 347 PM CDT Tue Jun 11 2024 .KEY MESSAGES...
-- Changed Discussion --
- Growing concerns for heat on Wednesday with forecast highs in the mid 90s through low 100s expected. Current heat indices remain below Advisory criteria. - Recurring rain and thunderstorm chances Wednesday through Saturday with the greatest potential being late Friday into early Saturday. An isolated strong storm or two will be possible Wednesday and Thursday with the threat becoming more uncertain Friday into Saturday. - Temperatures will favor near to above normal values in the extended.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
-- Changed Discussion --
Issued at 346 PM CDT Tue Jun 11 2024 General zonal flow remains prevalent across the central CONUS as low- amplitude ridging sets up across the Desert Southwest. Troughing continues to hang out across the Northeast CONUS with another system tracking into the upper Mississippi Valley and far southern Canada and the next system approaching the Pacific northwest as of Tuesday afternoon. At the surface, broad high pressure was situated in the Ohio Valley with a mid-level disturbance off the Baja of California that will come into play later on in the forecast. Today, a warm front will lift north through the area as modest low pressure develops across Wyoming. This warm front and moisture advection has led to a few isolated light rain showers across portions of the Sandhills. What few radar echoes that did crop up did not manage to last long and likely didn`t produce much more than virga as surface dew point depressions approach 20 to 25 degrees across the area. This warm front should lift north through the day and exit into South Dakota by late tonight. Continued warm air advection behind this front will potentially lead to low-end precipitation chances. With the nose of the developing low-level jet focusing near if not north of the Nebraska/South Dakota state line, expecting most if not all locations to remain dry. Lows tonight will only fall into the upper 50s to lower 60s or nearly 10 degF above normal.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
-- Changed Discussion --
Issued at 346 PM CDT Tue Jun 11 2024 Wednesday...The hottest day of the weekend and likely to have at least some moderate heat concerns. Surface low will track east across South Dakota through the early morning hours. This will draw a surface trough extending from the NE/SD border invof Keya Paha County south through MCK and into far western Kansas. Ahead of this, strong southerly flow will continue to reinforce rich low-level moisture with a fairly unimpeded Gulf of Mexico tap at least early in the day. Behind this, west-northwesterly downsloping flow will establish itself across the western forecast area in a fairly dry environment. This will not only help promote compressional warming but also deeper mixing into the heart of the thermal ridge where h85 and h7 temperatures will both exceed the 90th percentile. Have boosted highs slightly as a result, with a few locations now forecast to break the century mark across far southwest Nebraska. While heat will be of great concern given ongoing outdoor activities, limiting overall concern will be the relatively limited overlap of hottest temperatures and greatest low-level humidity. Because of that, forecast heat indices fall short of Advisory (100 degF) criteria though upper-90s should be prolific for areas south of Interstate 80 and east of Highway 183. Back east in the richer moisture quality, the Storm Prediction Center (SPC) maintains a Marginal Risk (Level 1 of 5) for areas east of Highway 183. A moderately unstable atmosphere will be in place as MLCAPE values range from 1500-2500 j/kg in a strongly sheared environment, the forcing necessary to overcome strong capping is hard to find. This is largely due to lack of an appreciable shortwave aloft within an environment with steady h5 height rises and such anomalous warmth in the h85 to h7 layer. It doesn`t appear that capping fully erodes in the immediate area and with little in the way of surface convergence due to veered surface flow in the warm sector, anticipating dry conditions to largely win out. Thursday into Friday...recent trends have decreased heat concerns for Thursday. An early morning cool front will drop south out of the northern Plains. This is being propelled as high pressure shifts out of western Canada. Though h5 heights remain at anomalous levels, surface flow shifting to northeast and eventually easterly is not supportive of intense heat. Temperatures at h85 look to fall 5 to 10 degC across the board. Temperatures will still push the upper 80s to low 90s in our furthest south counties but should remain in the mid 80s or cooler elsewhere. As the surface front stalls south of the area, it`ll provide the focus for afternoon rain and thunderstorm chances. This will be aided by eventual easterly upslope flow. Where this boundary ends up will play a large role in where thunderstorms develop and subsequently if they were to impact portions of western Nebraska. For now, will maintain the inherited Slight Chance to Chance (< 35%) PoPs from the NBM blend. Various deterministic solutions show limited coverage of any precipitation chances and only the GEFS appears to match the coverage and magnitude of these PoPs so confidence remains low. The SPC maintains a Marginal Risk (Level 1 of 5) for the Highway 23 corridor and south. Believe this is adequate given MLCAPE values surpassing 1500 j/kg and 0-6km BWD of 40 knots. Strong capping will likely need to be overcome and this should limit more expansive coverage. An increasing low-level jet late Thursday should provide the focus for more rain and thunderstorms across our far northwest zones. The nose of this feature will track west to east across much of western and central Nebraska taking with it increased PoPs (up to 40%) as it does. The previously mentioned system off the Baja of California will, by this time, have reinserted itself into the flow aloft and begin to exit the Desert Southwest into the Great Basin by early Friday. Trends have been to slow ejection slightly but overall timing still favors late Friday into Saturday. Greatest height falls/DCVA will favor peak heating. Flow aloft will support a severe threat but casting some uncertainty is the anticipated narrow corridor of any warm sector. Deterministic solutions depict a fairly small swath of 60+ degF dew points but all output shows this nosing into southwest Nebraska. While the SPC shows "Predictability too Low", thoughts are we should see at least an isolated severe threat materialize during the late afternoon and evening with large hail and damaging winds the main concerns. Convection will continue to blossom into the overnight as greater forcing arrives from the southwest. PoPs peak around 70% (Likely categorical) but given signals from NBM, GEFS, and EPS guidance believe these could increase further. Probabilities of exceeding 0.10" QPF exceed 60% for all locations in the County Warning Area and latest NBM probabilities for exceeding 0.25" at almost 50%. This supports a fairly widespread wetting rain event with localized higher amounts due to convection. Daytime highs Friday are likely to remain in the 80s for all. Saturday into early next week...height falls peak around the middle of the day with fairly widespread rain and thunderstorms persisting into the first half of the day. This should quickly wane as the trough axis clears and shortwave ridging builds in behind. Ensemble guidance shows a quick east progression of greatest precipitation potential through the day Saturday and into early Sunday. Deterministic solutions suggest airmass recovery allowing for additional thunderstorm development across central Nebraska but confidence in this is low at this time. Overall, low amplitude southwesterly flow appears probable with increasing amplitude possible as another mid-level disturbance approaches the West Coast. The southwesterly flow will support low-level southerly flow which should prolong seasonable to slightly above normal temperatures in the extended. More precise timing of the next big disturbance early next week is greatly in doubt at the current time as evolution varies greatly across NWP output. For now, the day-to-day Chance (up to 40%) represent current thinking fairly well.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z WEDNESDAY/... Issued at 1220 PM CDT Tue Jun 11 2024 VFR conditions are expected to prevail through tomorrow afternoon across western and north central Nebraska. Cumulus development will persist this afternoon as well, though CIGs will remain well into VFR. Variable winds early this afternoon become southerly into this evening, at around 5 to 15kts. && .LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SHORT TERM...NMJ LONG TERM...NMJ AVIATION...Brown