![National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration](/build/images/header/noaa.d87e0251.png)
![National Weather Service](/build/images/header/nws.4e6585d8.png)
![United States Department of Commerce](/build/images/header/doc.b38ba91a.png)
Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Central Illinois
Issued by NWS Central Illinois
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
605 FXUS63 KILX 050616 AFDILX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Lincoln IL 116 AM CDT Fri Jul 5 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated (30% coverage) thunderstorms will exit eastern Illinois mid to late morning, with the next chance (40-50%) for scattered storms arriving Sunday and lingering into Tuesday. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 113 AM CDT Fri Jul 5 2024 Two areas of thunderstorms continue approaching central Illinois at this early hour: one lifting quickly across the Ozarks via warm advection that noses into the Prairie State south of I-70, and another being dragged along slowly by a seasonably sharp cold front across central and eastern Iowa. While most locations in central Illinois will be missed by each of these waves, we`ve maintained 20- 40% PoPs to account for an isolated shower/storm along the cold front near and north of I-72, while PoPs are a bit higher (40-50+%) further south where the most persistent of the Ozarks storms could make an appearance near dawn. Meanwhile, patchy fog has developed across our east, where dewpoint depressions are generally less than 2 degF thanks to light winds and a lack of appreciable cloud cover. CAMs suggest this will continue at least the next several hours, perhaps becoming locally dense (HREF probs for sub 1/2 mile vis briefly climb to 20-30%), though the incoming convective clouds may help offset radiational cooling near dawn. Looking at the corridor of maximum dew point and theta-E spread from the HREF, it appears the cold front will reach the I-57 corridor mid- late morning and finally exit the CWA to the east-southeast sometime early afternoon, by which time our PoPs come to an end everywhere except along and north of I-74. There, low level cyclonic flow and steep low level lapse rates amidst the drier airmass may prove sufficient for a stray shower or two, although the better chance will definitely be further north where NAM and GFS forecast soundings appear more favorable. It`ll be a breezy Friday by July standards as momentum is transferred well to the surface via convection given the aforementioned steep low level afternoon lapse rates, with gusts reaching the 25+ mph range if forecast soundings` winds at the top of the mixed layer materialize. In the wake of the upper low, surface high pressure will build into the Ozarks, Midwest, and Ohio Valley heading into the weekend, theoretically keeping the area dry. However, a couple mid-upper level shortwaves lifting northeast across the Plains may graze us with showers/storms Sunday into Monday, with the highest chances across our west; there`s not going to be much in the way of instability or shear which should maintain a low (<5%) severe risk, though the feistiest cells might bring some gusty (mainly sub- severe) winds to the surface given the dry mid level air in place and steep low level lapse rates contributing to efficient evaporational cooling and hence negative buoyancy of downdrafts. Sometime Tuesday into Wednesday, the deterministic models suggest the parent upper level trough will shift east toward New England. However, the Midwest should generally remain beneath weak and stable flow heading through mid-late week as a ridge of high pressure becomes anchored across the West. Bumgardner && .AVIATION... (For the 06z TAFs through 06z Friday Night) Issued at 1143 PM CDT Thu Jul 4 2024 VFR conditions will prevail through the entire 06z TAF period. Winds will initially be S/SE at around 5kt, then will veer to SW after midnight as a cold front approaches from the northwest. Once the front passes, winds will become W/NW and gusty on Friday...with forecast soundings and numeric guidance suggesting gusts in the 20-25kt range. FEW-SCT clouds between 5000 and 8000ft will persist through tonight, then will clear out after FROPA. With a pocket of cold air aloft dropping southeastward out of the Northern Plains, steep lapse rates will develop by peak heating Friday. NAM Cu-rule indicates SCT-BKN diurnal clouds at 3500-4000ft during the afternoon. Barnes && .ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$