textproduct: Wilmington
This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.
WHAT HAS CHANGED
No significant changes
KEY MESSAGES
1) Showers and thunderstorms expected into Saturday morning. Some storms may be strong to severe this afternoon and evening. The potential for heavy rainfall will increase Friday into Friday night.
2) Hot and humid next week.
DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE 1)
A weak front stretching across the lower Great Lakes will sag south into the region tonight and then stall. A jet streak associated with a disturbance passing north of the area has resulted in a strongly sheared environment with 0-6 km shear of 40 to 60 kt. Instability is forecast to settle in the 1000 to 1500 J/kg range but mid level lapse rates are expected to remain 5.5 to 6 C/km, which may limit the intensity and coverage of storms this afternoon into the evening. Certainly, many of the convective allowing models have been modest in their depiction of storms this afternoon. Nonetheless, if robust updrafts can develop and sustain themselves, then there will be the potential for storms to become severe with damaging wind the primary threat. There could also be some hail. The best juxtaposition of instability and hail will be in central Ohio, so the threat of severe storms is relatively greater there. In addition, there may be a brief period when low level shear could become favorable for tornadoes in central Ohio.
Storms will diminish this evening, although the scope may not quite become echo free. Increasing lift from a short wave moving out of the mid Mississippi Valley will cause showers and some storms to start to blossom, primarily near the stalled boundary, on Friday morning. Precipitation will increase in coverage area wide in the afternoon as the short wave moves across the area. A modest west southwest low level jet associated with this will advect in a very moist airmass with precipitable water approaching 2 inches. In addition, warm cloud depth will increase to 4 km or more allowing for efficient warm rain processes. Thus heavy to torrential rainfall will be possible with stronger convective elements. The potential for strong to severe storms will be less than today but non-zero. That will be contingent on how much instability is able to be realized with a relative maximum near and south of the boundary. The heavy rain threat will continue, and may even increase, on Friday night. Mid level forcing will be subtler but the low level jet will strengthen as it slowly translates eastward. There is the potential for repeated rounds of heavy rain. This will all wind down late Friday night into Saturday morning.
KEY MESSAGE 2)
Strong mid level high will expand northward early next week and then predominate through mid week and likely beyond. This will bring hot and humid conditions with a very low chance of any convection. Probability of the heat index exceeding 100 is only about 25 percent on Monday along and west of I-75. But those probabilities increase to 40 to 60 percent area wide on Tuesday and then peak at 70 to 80 percent on Wednesday. But the probability of a 105 or higher heat index is less than 15 percent. So there is a pretty high likelihood of a heat advisory at some point next week but very low that it will reach excessive heat warning thresholds.
AVIATION /00Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/
Weak frontal boundary will stall across the northern TAF sites this evening, eventually shifting south to near the Ohio River Friday. With instability weakening overnight, except a low coverage of showers and perhaps a storm or two. Based on this uncertainty (both in location and time), have left this potential out of the TAFs for now.
LAMP continues to show the possibility for low ceilings and visibility along the stalled boundary Friday morning. However, not all guidance is in agreement. Therefore, have decided to limit this until a shield of precipitation arrives ahead of a wave of low pressure around midday and into the afternoon hours. Thunder will be possible at times Friday afternoon and evening. IFR ceilings will be possible late in the period due to sustained showers and increasing depth of low level moisture -- especially along and north of the path of the surface wave.
OUTLOOK...Thunderstorms are possible through Saturday. MVFR ceilings and visibility are possible Friday evening into Saturday morning.
ILN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
OH...None. KY...None. IN...None.
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