Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Wilmington Ohio 428 am EDT Tuesday may 21 2013 Synopsis... a warm and humid air mass will remain in place through Wednesday. Occasional periods of showers and thunderstorms will be possible. A cold front will move through the region on Thursday...before cooler air settles in on Friday and into the weekend. && Near term /until 6 PM this evening/... significant changes were made to the forecast in the near term...as a ragged mesoscale convective system currently moving across central Indiana will continue its way into the iln forecast area this morning. All models...including convective allowing models...forecast a gradual weakening of this feature as it continues moving to the east. Mesoscale analysis shows the near-surface environment is very unfavorable for this line to maintain its strength...with much more inhibition (up to 100-150 j/kg) than when it was in central Indiana...and a near-surface inversion over the iln County Warning Area. However...as some elevated instability will remain in place...the convection is not expected to dissipate entirely. There is some shear in place in the low levels (30-40 knots from 0-1km...which is somewhat impressive). Winds ahead of the line are generally out of the south...and winds at 925mb are out of the southwest and up to 40 knots. This has led to some isolated pockets of stronger winds on the line. However...it is unlikely that this shear will be realized over the iln County Warning Area...given the more hostile thermodynamic environment. Thus...the severe threat this morning appears low...though some gusty winds will certainly be possible. The focus for the rest of the day is on the potential for additional storms this afternoon and evening. The first challenge is a near complete lack of proper modeling of the current convective complex. The hrrr appears to be the closest...though it is a couple hours behind. The NAM solution...which features precipitation moving through Indiana and Ohio during the late morning and early afternoon (3-6 hours behind the current activity) does not appear reliable. With a lack of synoptic scale forcing...mesoscale features will play a big role in the potential for storms...and these features will be highly dependent on the evolution of the morning convection (placement of outflow / cloud debris limiting destabilization). In general...the pattern will favor the greatest instability in the southern portions of the forecast area...perhaps as high as 1500-2500 j/kg of mixed layer cape. Still a ways removed from the brunt of the jet...the iln County Warning Area will not get into a great deal of wind shear today...perhaps up to 30 knots in the deep layer and not much at all in the lowest levels. The instability should be surface based and uncapped (rap13 forecasts show a 3 degree c drop in 700mb temperatures by afternoon)...and this appears to be enough to support some severe threat. The lack of stronger shear and organized forcing should be a limiting factor. It is possible that the morning convection may end up leaving a boundary that could act as the focus for convective development in the afternoon hours. The temperature forecast is also significantly dependent on the above factors...though the air mass is certainly capable of supporting temperatures as high as the middle to upper 80s. Raw model temperatures are in wide variance from model to model...with intense heating before precipitation forces drops in the surface temperature fields (and at different times and places). While a general consensus was used...in the interest of being a bit conservative given the uncertain convective forecast...the maximum temperatures were knocked down a couple degrees from there. && Short term /6 PM this evening through Thursday night/... convection will likely be ongoing for at least part of the forecast area during the Tuesday evening hours...with a diurnal min leading to more tranquil conditions overnight. However...by Wednesday morning...this may begin to change again. A shortwave moving out of the Southern Plains will eventually make its way just east of the iln County Warning Area by morning...with model agreement on an associated convective complex spreading into Indiana by then. Meanwhile...surface low pressure will strengthen as it moves through Illinois and into Michigan...with general surface troughing and height falls aloft spreading into the iln County Warning Area. This is a favorable environment for lift...and should support a likely pop forecast through most of the day Wednesday. Although generally unidirectional...the increasing pressure gradient and juxtaposition with the right entrance region of the upper jet will also support an increased bit of shear and forcing (respectively). The limiting factor for severe potential will be instability...which does not appear to be particularly strong (and this is not surprising given the lack of expected surface heating). Temperatures aloft will continue to drop...which should help generate 500-1000 j/kg if some sun can be realized. An alternate possibility would keep precipitation over the County Warning Area through the morning and early afternoon...essentially limiting destabilization to near-zero. The soundings look rather moist...leading to thin cape and low LCLs. It is an interesting contrast in severe potential from today (tuesday)...with different elements of the mesoscale analysis appearing favorable on either day. The large northern plains upper low will finally be on the move by late Wednesday...crossing the iln County Warning Area on Thursday. This will bring another high chance of probability of precipitation on Thursday...mainly in the north and generally with diurnal timing. Behind the axis of this trough...rapid drying is expected. Temperatures will begin a downward trend after the poorly-defined cold front (associated with the Wednesday surface low) moves through the region. A stronger change in near-surface air mass is expected behind the trough on Thursday night...with northerly winds advecting colder and drier air into the region. && Long term /Friday through Monday/... surface high pressure will build down from the north and into our area Friday into Saturday...keeping a seasonably cool airmass in place through the start of the weekend. Highs on Friday will be in the middle to upper 60s and with the surface high overhead...lows Saturday morning will dip into the low to middle 40s. The surface high will begin to shift off to the east through the remainder of the weekend as middle level ridging begins to establish itself aloft. This will result in a gradual return to warmer temperatures through the rest of the Holiday weekend. Models are still trying to suggest the possibility of some energy dropping down from the northwest late in the weekend. However...timing and placement are highly variable so will maintain a dry forecast at this point. && Aviation /07z Tuesday through Saturday/... large scale upper level low centered over the northern plains will make little eastward progression over the next 24 hours. Region will be located in a warm...moist south/southwest flow at the surface and aloft. First item of concern will be the qlcs to our west across western Indiana and eastern Illinois. Some models weaken this feature to the point that it is gone by the time it gets near our western taf sites between 09z and 12z. Other models try to hold it together into our western taf sites before completely weakening it. At this time...have not placed any convection in the tafs and will monitor line/trends and update/amend accordingly if necessary. Otherwise...the timing of convection for today is fairly murky as models are not handling mesoscale features at the surface and aloft well. Kept previous forecast trend to allow for showers and thunderstorms during the peak heating of the day followed by a lull in activity this evening. For late tonight into Wednesday...a more bonafide disturbance and developing low level jet will likely bring widespread precipitation to our area...but exact timing is still in question at this point. Winds today will be locally gusty from the southwest to 25 knots with gustiness subsiding toward sunset. Outlook...thunderstorms will be possible from Tuesday night through Thursday. && Iln watches/warnings/advisories... Ohio...none. Kentucky...none. In...none. && $$ Synopsis...hatzos near term...hatzos short term...hatzos long term...jgl aviation...Hickman