Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS St. Louis, MO

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914
FXUS63 KLSX 022344
AFDLSX

Area Forecast Discussion...Updated Aviation
National Weather Service Saint Louis MO
644 PM CDT Tue Jul 2 2024

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Several rounds of thunderstorms are expected tonight through Thursday.
  The first round is expected tonight with the potential for
  heavy rainfall and flash flooding across parts of northeast
  Missouri as well as west central Illinois. Additionally, some of
  the storms could be severe with damaging winds and possibly
  large hail.

- Additional rounds of storms are expected Wednesday night and
  again Thursday afternoon and Thursday night. Strong to severe
  storms are possible with each round.

- Hot and humid weather will continue through Thursday with heat index
  values around 100 degrees, mainly across east central and
  southeast Missouri as well as southwest Illinois.


&&

.SHORT TERM...  (Through Late Wednesday Night)
Issued at 331 PM CDT Tue Jul 2 2024

A short wave trough over the Great Plains is producing southerly
flow across the Mid-Mississippi Valley.  This is pulling warm moist
air back into the region ahead of the cold front associated with
this trough.  The trough will progress eastward tonight and will
drag the cold front into Missouri and Illinois.  GFS/RAP are showing
some respectable instability at 3000+ J/Kg MLCAPE ahead of the front
across northern Missouri and southern Iowa, and this is supported by
the HREF mean SBCAPE.  Guidance is also showing 35-40kts of deep
layer shear superimposed on that instability, so a round of severe
thunderstorms looks likely.  Damaging winds look like the most
likely threat, though with 0-1km shear around 20kts and helicity
between 100-200 m2/s2, there could be a few tornadoes as well. Hail
seems to be the lowest threat since freezing levels are forecast to
be between 12,000-13,000 feet.  Instability falls off fairly quickly
during the evening, however a 30-40kt low level jet will continue to
funnel moisture into the boundary tonight, and the high warm cloud
depth along with precipitable water values in excess of 2 inches
will produce conditions favorable for heavy rain. The HREF LPMM is
showing small patches of 3+ inches in northeast Missouri so 1-2
inches of rain with locally higher amounts across northeast Missouri
and west central Illinois looks likely tonight.  A Flood Watch is
therefore in effect in northeast Missouri and west central Illinois
for tonight.

Tonight`s convection drives the cold front southeast where it looks
likely to stall across southeast Missouri and southern Illinois.
Instability strengthens to 3000+ J/Kg in the vicinity of the
boundary although the 0-6km shear isn`t as strong at between 25-
30kts.  Though the severe threat may not be as widespread, damaging
winds will still be a possibility with Wednesday afternoon/evening`s
storms with that much instability.  Several CAMs show more
convection developing overnight over west central or southwest
Missouri and congealing into a squall line which races east into
east central and southeast Missouri by 10-12Z Thursday morning.
While storms do look likely overnight into Thursday morning as a
30+kt low level jet will be overrunning the low level boundary
producing moderate to high moisture convergence, I`m not confident
in the storm mode and severity as the deterministic models keep the
instability farther south than where the CAMs show the strongest
convection.

Regardless, the 4th of July will likely start out wet for the
majority of the forecast area.  Another short wave will move across
the Plains which will turn the surface flow across the Mid-
Mississippi Valley back to the south, pushing the front back to the
north through the day.  Instability jumps up again as the southerly
flow brings more warm, moist air back into the area, and another
round of severe storms with the potential for damaging winds will be
possible Thursday afternoon and evening. The timing of the storms
is uncertain, but 4th of July fireworks shows may be affected.

Carney

&&

.LONG TERM...  (Thursday through Next Tuesday)
Issued at 331 PM CDT Tue Jul 2 2024

The weather should be less active on Friday with the effective
boundary well south of the forecast area in Arkansas.  Models show
the actual synoptic cold front moving through between 12-18Z Friday,
and they do spit out some QPF Friday morning ahead of it.  2m dew
point temperatures do not really drop until after FROPA, and it
looks like there will be some low level convergence along the front,
so a few lingering showers or storms aren`t out of the question.
With that said, instability should be limited as the timing will be
well before peak heating and the deep layer shear will also be
limited to 15-25kts.  High temperatures behind the front won`t
really be that much cooler on Friday and Saturday, but there should
be a noticeable reduction in humidity as dew point temperatures
fall from the low to mid 70s into the low and mid 60s. The drier
air should allow overnight lows to fall into the low to mid 60s on
Saturday and Sunday morning in most locations outside of St.
Louis. The next upstream short wave dips into the northern Plains
and Upper Midwest Saturday night into Sunday. This will turn the
low level flow back around to the south which will bring higher
humidity back to our area, although current indications are it
won`t be quite as humid as this week ahead of the front. Along
with the humidity the chance for scattered convection will also
increase. Medium range guidance shows the synoptic cold front
moving through the Plains Sunday and slowing/washing out over
Missouri Monday. It`s tough to pick out in the data after that,
and triggering mechanisms for convection may be limited to outflow
boundaries and MCVs from nocturnal storms. With the potential for
scattered storms each afternoon, temperatures remain near or just
below seasonal normals.

Carney

&&

.AVIATION...  (For the 00z TAFs through 00z Wednesday Evening)
Issued at 644 PM CDT Tue Jul 2 2024

A broken line of showers and thunderstorms from IA to western MO is
expected to progress east-southeastward into the region this
evening, although weakening as it continues overnight. How quickly
thunderstorms weaken is unclear, but KUIN has the greatest chance of
seeing the strongest/most intense thunderstorms (relative to other
terminals) with bouts of IFR flight conditions and strong wind
gusts. Coverage and strength of showers and thunderstorms late
tonight into Wednesday morning is even more uncertain as they reach
St. Louis metro terminals and potentially linger at KCOU and KJEF.

After a return to dry conditions late Wednesday morning, additional
showers and thunderstorms will develop, with highest confidence in
development in southeastern MO and southwestern IL, south of all
terminals. Showers and thunderstorms will likely lift back northward
Wednesday evening into overnight, but largely near and after the end
of the current TAF period.

Pfahler

&&

.LSX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MO...Flood Watch through Wednesday morning for Knox MO-Lewis MO-
     Marion MO-Shelby MO.

IL...Flood Watch through Wednesday morning for Adams IL.

&&

$$

WFO LSX