Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Chicago, IL
Issued by NWS Chicago, IL
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
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
034 FXUS63 KLOT 302008 AFDLOT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL 308 PM CDT Tue Apr 30 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Wind gusts 50 mph or higher possible around/just after midnight as a line of decaying showers/isolated thunderstorms moves across the area. - Gusty westerly winds to 30 mph Wednesday. - A couple periods of showers and thunderstorms mid to late week, most notably Wednesday night into early Thursday morning, then again late Thursday night into Friday morning. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 308 PM CDT Tue Apr 30 2024 Through Wednesday Night: The primary forecast focus and concern is regarding what the HRRR and several other models are showing late this evening into the early overnight hours, which is the potential for wind gusts 50 mph or higher. As showers and a few thunderstorms move into the western area late this evening, they will be in a weakening phase and as they dissipate across the local area, the models are showing the potential for strong winds mixing to the surface. Of note with the HRRR is that it has been doing this consistently, run after run today. There is a narrow time window of strong winds via a low level jet and whether the models are mixing into this low level jet or trying to develop a wake low is not clear. Confidence is low for how this will evolve and trends with convection across IA will need to be monitored into this evening. Have bumped up winds tonight, with gusts into the 30-35 mph range but if what the HRRR and some of the models are showing does continue in later runs this evening, its possible a short duration wind headline may be needed. The models show these stronger winds diminishing in the predawn hours. Winds turn westerly Wednesday morning and now appear to be a bit stronger than previously expected, especially along and north of I-80 where wind gusts to 30 mph are possible. Winds slowly turn northwesterly Wednesday afternoon with speeds/gusts slowly diminishing in the mid/late afternoon. This may allow a lake breeze to develop into northwest IN by late afternoon but confidence is low for a lake breeze into northeast IL late Wednesday afternoon. The next system will bring a chance of showers and possibly a few thunderstorms to the area late Wednesday night into early Thursday morning. Confidence is fairly low for coverage and its possible that much of the area may remain dry, with the best chances across the northwest cwa. cms Thursday through Tuesday: Warm air advection driven showers (and some embedded thunderstorms) may be ongoing across portions of northern/northwestern IL at the start of the period Thursday morning as a surface warm front lifts northward into the area. However, the focus for this early morning warm air advection driven convection is expected to shift north of the area through midday as the surface warm front continues its northward shift towards the WI state line. Thereafter, a primarily precipitation free afternoon is anticipated, as we await our next good potential for showers and storms with an approaching cold front later Thursday night into Friday morning. While most areas may end up dry Thursday afternoon, temperatures could end up varying considerably across far northeastern IL (northern Chicago suburbs). This is due to fact that Lake Michigan may slow the northward progression of the warm front into WI near the lake, thus resulting in continued persistent cool east-southeasterly winds through the day. In such a scenario, temperatures Thursday afternoon would be held down in the lower 60s near the lake in far northeastern IL, while areas to the south of the warm front experience summer-like temperatures (in the low to mid-80s) and breezy south winds. Mild weather will continue into Thursday night as our area remains locked in the warm sector of the surface low tracking northward across the upper Midwest. This low is forecast to occlude over northern MN and far southwestern Ontario into early Friday morning. As it does so, the attendant surface cold front will slide eastward into our area very late Thursday night into Friday. A period of showers, and a few embedded thunderstorms, is likely to accompany this front, with the highest chances (60-80%) coming early Friday morning. We will need to continue to monitor the potential for any hydrologic concerns during this time frame, especially given the recent heavy rainfall the area has experienced. However, signs continue to point at the heaviest rainfall amounts potentially remaining west of the NWS Chicago forecast area in closer proximity to the track of the surface low. The rain threat is expected to end from west-to-east on Friday following the cold frontal passage. Thereafter, temperatures are favored to return closer to normal going into the weekend. Another approaching disturbance may result in another period of precipitation late Saturday into Saturday night, but the signal for this is not all that strong at this point. Otherwise, slightly warmer temperatures are favored into early next week with the overall weather pattern continuing to look rather active across the central CONUS. KJB && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z THURSDAY/... Issued at 105 PM CDT Tue Apr 30 2024 Main Concerns: - Wind shift to southeast early this evening - Decaying SHRA moving across the area late tonight - A period of strong (>40 kt) south-southwest wind gusts possibly accompanying the decaying SHRA, with at least 25-30 kt range gusts appearing probable - Potential for a period of MVFR CIGs early Wednesday, primarily at RFD West-southwest winds around 10 kt with occasional gusts will shift to southeasterly early this evening. A true lake breeze shift to easterly appears unlikely. Tonight, expected severe TS west of the MS River will weaken quickly as they move east-southeast across the region, with TEMPO mention in the TAFs. The HRRR model has shown a fairly consistent run to run signal for very strong south-southwest winds gusting to 40-50+ knots associated with the rapid decay of the SHRA. Change with this TAF issuance was to bump up prevailing south-southwest winds to ~15-20 kt with ~25-30 kt gusts, which appears probable, even if the HRRR scenario doesn`t pan out. Forecast soundings suggest MVFR CIGs are briefly possible behind an early morning cold front passage. Included TEMPO mention in the RFD TAF where confidence was a bit higher. Winds will shift to westerly with 20-30 kt gusts behind the front, strongest Wednesday afternoon. Castro && .LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IL...None. IN...None. LM...Small Craft Advisory from 11 PM this evening to 7 PM CDT Wednesday for the IL nearshore waters. Small Craft Advisory from 11 PM this evening to 1 PM CDT Wednesday for the IN nearshore waters. && $$ Visit us at weather.gov/chicago