Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Chicago, IL

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251 FXUS63 KLOT 151951 AFDLOT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL 251 PM CDT Wed May 15 2024 .KEY MESSAGES...
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- Scattered thunderstorms are expected area-wide Thursday afternoon and evening. A few of these storms could become strong to severe and contain hail and gusty winds late afternoon and early evening northwest of a Mendota to Chicago line. - Periods of showers and storms may occur Friday into Saturday, but looking mostly dry for the weekend. - Active pattern looks to develop next week bringing several opportunities for showers and thunderstorms.
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&& .DISCUSSION...
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Issued at 250 PM CDT Wed May 15 2024 Through Thursday Night: With the recent upper-low around our region finally drifting southeast this afternoon, dry conditions are expected through tonight amid passing mid to upper-level clouds. Focus then turns to developing convection over northeast NM and southeast CO this afternoon as it grows upscale across the central Great Plains overnight. A resulting convectively- enhanced wave should traverse somewhere across central Illinois late Thursday morning into mid-afternoon. Potential for the coverage of convection into our area will hinge both on the degree of low-level moistening as well as any changes in the expected timing/location of the wave. The expected late morning arrival of the wave will align with gradually increasing surface-based instability, so any delay in arrival of the wave would further support increasing coverage of convection. As for the low-level moisture profile, surface high pressure still anchored over LA this afternoon has continued to suppress low- level Gulf moisture return. Therefore, most of the increase in low-level moisture into the CWA will be highly driven by ET and from recent rainfall. Given only modest mid-level lapse rates and dew points struggling to rise much above 60F, CAPE profiles support more of a scattered pulse-like set-up during the afternoon hours. If the convective wave remains well south or does not fully materialize during the morning, the thermodynamic and kinematic field will become increasingly favorable for a few strong to possibly severe storms with small hail and gusty winds across the northwest third of the CWA ahead of a late-arriving cold front. This scenario remains conditional on several of the above factors as well as the ability for any storms to stave off mid- level entrainment. Chances of convection will wane after sunset and with the passage of the slowing cold front from northwest to southeast Thursday night. Kluber Friday through Wednesday: In the wake of Thursday`s showers and thunderstorms a separate disturbance moving across the southern CONUS may be expansive enough on the north side for renewed shower and thunderstorm development into portions of the area on Friday, particularly south of I-80. Depending on how how slowly this feature drifts east, precipitation may linger into Saturday morning. The GFS continues to be most favorable for precipitation lingering into Friday with a broader extent to precipitation north of the low. Meanwhile higher-res guidance starting to capture this time range has precipitation shifting east a bit more quickly and keeps much of the precipitation south of the area. Accordingly, PoPs have been lowered a bit with this update to account for this trend. Nevertheless, there remains a window for a few thunderstorms to develop in our south in the afternoon on Friday. Other than a few showers potentially lingering into Saturday, dry weather is forecast for the weekend with surface high pressure settling over the region in the wake of a dry cold frontal passage late Saturday. This will set up what looks to be a great late-spring weekend with temperatures warming into the upper 70s to lower 80s inland from the lake (expect upper 60s to near 70 near the shore). Confidence is increasing in a return to a more active pattern early to mid next week as the upper jet begins to orient southwest to northeast across the western half of the CONUS. This would allow for multiple disturbances to potentially lift across the region. Accordingly, long-range ensemble meteograms highlight this as a period favorable for accumulating precipitation paired with a signal for an unstable air mass building across the region. While there is still plenty of time for the details to be ironed out, this will be a time to watch for severe weather and heavy rainfall somewhere in the region. Petr
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&& .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 1238 PM CDT Wed May 15 2024 Key Aviation Messages: - Scattered TS potential mid-afternoon into early evening Thursday. Dry and VFR conditions are expected through Thursday morning. NE winds around 15 knots early this afternoon will diminish to around 5 knots or less this evening before gradually veering SE by sunrise Thursday. Winds will then continue to veer SSW while increasing to 10-15 knots by mid-morning. Developing convection across central KS/OK this afternoon and evening may grow upscale into a convectively-induced wave that would lift NE through across Illinois and induce convection into the Chicago metro Thursday afternoon. TS potential into ORD/MDW could occur as early as 18Z, but favors from 20Z through the end of the period (00Z Friday). Kluber && .LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IL...None. IN...None. LM...None. && $$ Visit us at weather.gov/chicago