Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Topeka, KS

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519
FXUS63 KTOP 150537
AFDTOP

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Topeka KS
1237 AM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Storms continue this morning, although intensity has waned. A
  strong storm or two remains possible which could produce small
  hail and gusty winds.

- Seasonal temperatures with periodic chances for showers and
  storms into next week.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 200 PM CDT Wed Aug 14 2024

Cloud cover has been slow to clear today in the wake of a
departing MCS that moved through Missouri. A quasi-warm front
has setup across northeast Kansas early this afternoon. The
boundary layer has been slow to mix out over most of the area,
thus, temperatures have not risen as quickly as earlier
anticipated. Only far southern/western areas are currently
seeing heat indicies rising to advisory levels, but as the warm
front retreats to the north and southerly flow increases,
temperatures, and therefore heat indicies, should quickly rise.
Therefore, will maintain the ongoing Heat Advisory.

A mid-level shortwave trough is moving into the central Plains
this afternoon, pushing a surface trough into central KS. Ascent
from the passing wave and convergence along the surface trough
will be sufficient for convective initiation to occur between
5-7PM across central Kansas. Large hail, damaging wind and heavy
rain are the main threats with storms that fire along the trough
with MUCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg, bulk shear around 30 knots, DCAPE
of 1000+ J/Kg and PWATS in the 2-3 inch range. Storm motions are
favored to be largely parallel to the surface trough which could
lead to training of storms unless the advancing shortwave keeps
the overall complex of storms progressing to east fast enough.
If storms train over the same areas, the flooding potential
increases with 2-3 inch per hour rainfall rates.

Another potential area of development is the retreating warm
front across northeast Kansas. Some of the 12z/18z CAMS are
suggesting some isolated cells could develop along the front,
or differential heating boundary, later this afternoon. If a
storm does develop along this boundary, all severe hazards will
be possible, including tornadoes due to a sharply turning wind
profile and locally enhanced SRH along the boundary.

The surface trough stalls across the area on Thursday with
several perturbations in the flow passing through. The first
wave could keep some showers and storms around through the
morning hours ahead of the next wave that moves through during
the afternoon and evening. Key mesoscale details such as how
much heating will take place after any morning convection are
uncertain, but the passing wave could generate additional storms
during the afternoon and evening. Shear is better, but
instability is weaker compared to the environment that is
expected this afternoon. If sufficient destabilization can
occur, strong to severe storms are possible with large hail,
damaging wind gusts, and heavy rainfall being the main hazards.

Several passing waves bring periodic chances for showers and
storms through the weekend. Temperatures remain right around
climatological normals for this time of year in the upper 80s to
low 90s.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/...
Issued at 1237 AM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024

VFR conditions outside of any TS that impact KTOP/KFOE over the
next couple of hours. Light south-southwest winds become
westerly this afternoon before going light and variable tonight.

&&

.TOP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Jones
AVIATION...Flanagan