textproduct: Central Illinois

This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.

KEY MESSAGES

- Warm temperatures will create a moderate heat risk this afternoon. Additionally, strong south winds gusting up to 35 mph could generate localized blowing dust, abruptly reducing visibility to under one mile near active farm fields.

- Multiple rounds of severe thunderstorms will move into the region Monday, bringing a primary threat of damaging winds and large hail. This hazardous weather impacts west-central Illinois starting Monday morning but could extend through the night. - Severe storms remain a threat Tuesday afternoon and evening, targeting areas near and south of Interstate 72. Heavy morning cloud cover introduces high uncertainty, which may dictate the ultimate strength and position of the Tuesday afternoon/evening storms.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 338 AM CDT Sun May 17 2026

Early morning satellite and radar trends depict an area of festering convection in the vicinity of a surface front extending from eastern Nebraska to western Illinois. Convective- allowing models (CAMs) remain in excellent agreement that this activity will hold north and west of the local forecast area, following the primary upper-level forcing as a shortwave lifts across eastern Iowa and into Wisconsin later this morning. As it does so, the feature will drag the effective surface boundary northward into northern Illinois by midday.

With central Illinois firmly entrenched in the warm sector, temperatures are forecast to surge well into the 80s this afternoon as skies gradually clear following the departure of early morning convective debris. The combination of intense solar heating and mid-60s dewpoints will yield a moderate heat risk, particularly impacting individuals sensitive to high temperatures or those lacking sufficient cooling and hydration.

Aside from the heat risk, a tightening pressure gradient and deep boundary layer mixing will support south wind gusts of 25 to 35 mph this afternoon. Given ongoing agricultural activity across the region, isolated channels of blowing dust could be a distinct hazard. This environment could locally and abruptly reduce visibilities to one mile or less in and near active field work.

The synoptic pattern evolves rapidly by Monday as a vigorous upper-level disturbance emerges from the Great Basin toward the Northern Plains. Ahead of this main trough, several shortwaves will track into the Corn Belt, potentially triggering multiple rounds of prefrontal storms throughout the day. This activity will be fueled by an influx of near-70 degree surface dewpoints along a veering low-level jet (LLJ), combined with steep mid- level lapse rates within an advecting elevated mixed layer (EML). These factors should sustain convective clusters as they move into central Illinois during the morning hours amid an increase in deep-layer shear (30-40 kts).

Current projections favor a linear storm mode for Monday due to the poor crossover flow angles between the 500-850 mb levels. Consequently, damaging winds are expected to be the primary threat, although large hail remains a possibility within the more vigorous updrafts.

The severe threat continues into late Monday night and Tuesday morning as additional shortwaves interact with a 40-50 kt LLJ core positioned over the forecast area, likely sustaining further convective development ahead of the approaching cold front.

Tuesday's outlook remains highly uncertain due to the potential impact of morning convection. If cloud cover and precipitation persist, afternoon destabilization could be limited, making the severe threat more conditional. The highest risk may ultimately focus south of Interstate 72 and across southeast Illinois, where the environment is most likely to recover ahead of the front. While initial development in this region could be discrete and supercellular given the instability and shear, the near-parallel orientation of shear vectors to the front suggests a rapid transition into a linear MCS as the boundary moves through Tuesday evening.

Mid-week guidance shows some minor discrepancies regarding the cold fronts exit speed. A slower progression could allow for lingering moisture to spark additional storms on Wednesday, primarily along and south of the I-70 corridor. However, a more stable, cooler post-frontal regime is expected to take hold by Thursday and Friday as continental high pressure moves into the Midwest. While deterministic models hint at another boundary passing through late in the week, moisture return appears insufficient to support significant precipitation chances at this time.

AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z MONDAY/

Issued at 522 AM CDT Sun May 17 2026

High-level cloudiness will linger through midday as a disturbance tracks just north and west of the central Illinois terminals.

Surface winds will remain breezy throughout this TAF cycle with south winds sustained between 10-15 kts and occasional gusts between 25-30 kts. Low-level wind shear has been added to all sites beyond 05z as a strengthening low-level jet core veers into the area overnight. Wind shear will become less problematic around sunrise Monday as the gradient wind begins to increase.

Otherwise, a PROB30 group has been added to the KPIA terminal, to indicate some potential for TSRA entering west- central Illinois by late in this TAF period.

ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

None.


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