Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Tulsa, OK

Home |  Current Version |  Previous Version |  Graphics & Text |  Print | Product List |  Glossary On
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
669
FXUS64 KTSA 032346
AFDTSA

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Tulsa OK
646 PM CDT Wed Jul 3 2024

...New AVIATION...

.SHORT TERM...
(The rest of this afternoon and tonight)
Issued at 148 PM CDT Wed Jul 3 2024

An Excessive Heat Warning is in effect for portions of eastern OK
and west-central AR with a Heat Advisory in effect for the remainder
of the area. Heat indices are currently in the 100-110F range,
and will climb to 105-115F. A few lingering showers will remain
possible into this evening near the KS border by a stationary
boundary. CAM guidance remains inconsistent, but does indicate at
least a 10-20% chance of a few showers and storms forming farther
south towards a line from roughly Tulsa to Miami later this
afternoon or evening. Otherwise, tonight will be another unusually
mild night with lows in the mid 70s to near 80 F.

&&

.LONG TERM...
(Thursday through Wednesday)
Issued at 148 PM CDT Wed Jul 3 2024

Excessive heat continues south of the previously mentioned boundary
near the KS border into Independence Day (Thursday). Reissued
Excessive Heat Warnings for portions of eastern OK and west-
central AR with Heat Advisories elsewhere. A cold front will
overtake and advance the stationary boundary during the evening
with a good chance of thunderstorms developing at that time,
especially for northeast OK and northwest AR. The setup will favor
storms capable of producing heavy rain and strong downburst
winds. The SPC has noted a 15-30% chance of damaging wind gusts in
the area with the WPC showing a 5-15% of excessive rainfall
leading to flash flooding. Considering the PWAT values of near 2",
low level water vapor near the 99th percentile, strong CAPE, and
weak wind shear, these outlooks make sense. The storms and
associated outflow will move into southeast OK Friday morning and
out of the area by the afternoon.

Behind the front we can expect a reprieve from the heat and humidity
with high temperatures falling into the mid 80s to low 90s (Friday
and Saturday). Low temperatures will get into the 60s to low 70s. As
southerly flow returns Sunday, temperatures and moisture levels
will try to climb again. However, there is uncertainty with how
quickly this will occur, with the NBM temperature probabilities
showing a relatively large spread Sunday. Even so, considering we
will have a cooler upper atmosphere and a renewed chance of rain
as the upper level trough axis digs favorably into the region,
high temperatures will most likely stay confined to the mid 80s to
lower 90s. In terms of timing, rain will be possible for most of
the Saturday night to Tuesday period, but ensemble guidance shows
later Sunday and Monday as the most likely (30-50% chance of
rain). Ensemble cluster analysis depicts sizable uncertainty with
how far south the trough will dig during this period, but the
more it can dig to the southwest the higher our probability for
rain will be. For the middle to end of next week we look to keep
the upper level trough overhead so near normal temperatures with
at least some chance of rain will continue.

&&

.AVIATION...
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 646 PM CDT Wed Jul 3 2024

Scattered convection along and near a boundary stretched across
northeast Oklahoma will remain possible into mid evening before
weakening with the loss of daytime heating. Thus...will continue
with VCTS for northeast Oklahoma TAF sites. Overnight
tonight...few to scattered mid clouds and few to broken high
clouds are forecast to remain common across the CWA while a
second boundary and potential precip move into northeast Oklahoma
again late tonight. Current thinking is the greater precip chance
overnight looks to be just north of the CWA. During the day
Thursday...scattered to broken mid and high clouds are forecast to
develop over the CWA ahead of a cold front forecast to move into
the CWA just outside of this TAF period. A surface boundary across
northeast Oklahoma and northwest Arkansas could be the focus for
convection during the afternoon hours. Will add a Prob30 group for
timing for these locations.

&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
TUL   78 100  69  89 /  30  40  50  10
FSM   80 100  74  91 /   0  20  60  20
MLC   79  99  72  88 /   0  20  60  20
BVO   73  97  65  87 /  40  40  40  10
FYV   75  97  68  86 /  10  30  60  10
BYV   74  97  68  86 /  30  40  60  10
MKO   77  98  70  88 /  10  30  60  10
MIO   74  96  66  85 /  40  50  50  10
F10   77  99  69  88 /  10  30  70  20
HHW   77  97  73  90 /   0  10  50  30

&&

.TSA WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OK...Heat Advisory until 9 PM CDT this evening for OKZ049-053>059-
     063>065-068-069-073-075.

     Heat Advisory from noon to 9 PM CDT Thursday for OKZ049-053>059-
     063-064-068-069-075.

     Excessive Heat Warning until 9 PM CDT this evening for
     OKZ060>062-066-067-070>072-074-076.

     Excessive Heat Warning from noon to 9 PM CDT Thursday for
     OKZ060>062-065>067-070>074-076.

AR...Heat Advisory until 9 PM CDT this evening for ARZ001-002-010-011.

     Heat Advisory from noon to 9 PM CDT Thursday for ARZ001-002-010-
     011.

     Excessive Heat Warning until 9 PM CDT this evening for ARZ019-
     020-029.

     Excessive Heat Warning from noon to 9 PM CDT Thursday for ARZ019-
     020-029.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...06
LONG TERM....06
AVIATION...20