Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Topeka, KS
Issued by NWS Topeka, KS
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749 FXUS63 KTOP 181950 AFDTOP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Topeka KS 150 PM CST Tue Nov 18 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Some patchy fog could redevelop late tonight and into Wednesday morning. - Rain chances increase Wed night and through the day Friday. The highest chances (70-80%) look to be late Thu night and Fri morning. - Next weekend is shaping up to be dry with seasonal temperatures. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 150 PM CST Tue Nov 18 2025 19Z water vapor imagery showed an active pattern with a closed upper low over the southern CA coast with shortwaves over the Upper Midwest and the Northern Rockies. Surface obs placed the center of low pressure over central MO with a trailing cold front into the Red River valley. Surface high pressure was gradually building into the forecast area. For tonight and Wednesday, shortwave ridging with little or no dynamics for vertical motion is expected to keep things dry. So the main concern turns to fog potential late tonight and Wednesday morning. Models show the center of a surface high setting up over northeast KS Wednesday morning. This should allow the boundary layer to decouple with winds becoming light and variable. However increasing high clouds from the southwest should inhibit some of the radiational cooling. There is enough signal from the models of fog potential and have maintained some patchy fog wording in the forecast. However the 12Z HREF has come in with lower probabilities for fog than it had yesterday and this along with the expected high clouds limits confidence in how dense or widespread it may be. So this will be something for later shifts to keep an eye on. Lows tonight are forecast to drop into the middle and upper 30s. A little more cloud cover through the day Wednesday may keep highs a few degrees cooler in spite of a return to southerly low level flow. There is reasonable agreement from the models with the upper low over the southwest lifting out into the central plains Thursday night and Friday as an open wave. Ahead of the wave, mid level warm air and moisture advection could cause some showers to develop Wednesday evening. But the main forcing for precip is expected to impact the area late Thursday night and through the day Friday. Mid level lapse rates could be steep enough Wednesday night for a rumble or two of thunder across east central KS. Otherwise models show the forecast area remaining north of the surface low and on the cool side of the system. This should bring periods of rain to most areas late Thursday night and Friday morning. Rain amounts look to range from around a half inch north to an inch and a half over east central KS. These amounts from the NBM are closer to the 75 percentile of the 00Z ensembles, so there is some room for these amounts to end up lower. This is especially the case across the northern counties where a northernly wind and some low level dry air advection could create a sharp gradient in rainfall. The clouds and precipitation should make Friday feel pretty cool and highs should be in the 50s. Shortwave ridging is progged to redevelop for the weekend before another upper wave lifts out from the southwest. Models have converged somewhat on timing of this cutoff low. Although there doesn`t appear to be a kicker immediately upstream, so I wouldn`t be surprised with the system progresses a little slower than the GFS shows. Think the better chances for more rain look to be Monday night and Tuesday. Temps to start off next week look to be seasonable with precip remaining liquid. A quick look towards Wednesday and Thanksgiving have the models showing a colder airmass moving in with a hint at some potential for wintery weather Wednesday night. The 00Z ensembles showed the probability for measurable snow was around 10 percent. So we`ll watch later runs for some consistency, but it is hard to have much confidence in an embedded wave and mid level frontogenesis this far out in time. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z WEDNESDAY/... Issued at 1052 AM CST Tue Nov 18 2025 The center of a surface ridge is forecast to setup over the area Wednesday morning. This should allow the boundary layer to decouple with winds becoming calm. However increasing high clouds this evening may inhibit ideal radiational cooling and FG potential. The 12Z HREF shows a lower potential for restricted visibilities at around 10 percent. But MOS guidance and forecast soundings from the RAP are signaling some FG potential. With the expected high clouds, will keep visibilities in the MVFR range and base timing off the RAP soundings. && .TOP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Wolters AVIATION...Wolters