textproduct: Central Illinois

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KEY MESSAGES

- Oppressive humidity will push heat index values between 100-105 F across central and southeastern Illinois. An Excessive Heat Warning remains in effect today, followed by a Heat Advisory south of Interstate 72 on Saturday afternoon.

- Isolated severe storms may develop this afternoon and evening, primarily north of Interstate 72. While widespread severe weather is unlikely, any storm could produce localized torrential rainfall and brief, damaging wind gusts.

- A front will push through the region on Sunday, bringing a welcome end to the heat wave. Cooler, less humid, and dry conditions are forecast Monday through Wednesday.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 223 AM CDT Fri Jul 3 2026

Heat and Humidity...

Summertime heat and humidity will continue to build across the region today as central Illinois remains positioned on the eastern periphery of a potent 594-mb upper- level heat ridge. Upstream convective debris may introduce more widespread cloud cover than previous days, which could marginally suppress deep boundary layer mixing this afternoon. While this may inadvertently cap afternoon highs in the upper 80s, the trade- off will be dewpoints pooling efficiently in the mid- to upper 70s. The net result yields another day of oppressive heat index values hovering around 100 F across central and southeast Illinois. Given the cumulative impacts of this prolonged heat wave, an Excessive Heat Warning remains firmly in effect through this evening.

By Saturday, a series of shortwave troughs exiting the Great Plains will begin flattening the persistent ridge, shunting it toward the Eastern Seaboard and pushing a weak surface front southward. If early afternoon convection dissipates or misses the area to the north, central and southeast Illinois will once again become entrenched in stagnant, tropical air with heat indices approaching 100 F. Due to this continued threat, a Heat Advisory has been issued for Saturday afternoon for locations near and south of a Danville to Interstate 72 line.

Convective Potential & Severe Risks...

The primary forecast challenge revolves around convective trends and mesoscale boundaries. Early morning radar reveals multiple convective complexes active across the Corn Belt near the Interstate 80 corridor, sending outflows diving southward. While these outflows are expected to stall and mix back northward under the influence of southerly mean flow, they-- along with differential heating boundaries--will serve as focal points for renewed development this afternoon. This is particularly true as a convectively-augmented shortwave trough tracks out of eastern Iowa and into northern Illinois.

Environments near and north of I-72 will be characterized by extreme instability, with MLCAPE values progged in the 30004000 J/kg range. While the ambient wind profile remains weak, the shortwave could locally enhance deep-layer shear toward 30 knots. Widespread organized severe weather is not anticipated; however, within a high-PWAT, tropical airmass, high precipitation efficiency will favor pulse convection or transient, disorganized clusters. The primary hazards will be localized torrential downpours and wet microbursts. Areas south of I-72 will likely remain too far removed from this mesoscale forcing, rendering them dry and hot.

A similar setup unfolds Friday night into Saturday. Nocturnal convection blossoming to our west will need to be monitored closely, as decaying MCVs or residual outflow boundaries could track perilously close to the FA ahead of the sagging surface front. The thermodynamic profile remains virtually identical for Saturday, maintaining a localized threat for heavy rainfall and localized damaging wind gusts in water-loaded downdrafts.

Next Week...

A pattern shift finally arrives by the latter half of the weekend. A stronger, much more progressive shortwave is forecast to emerge from the Northern Rockies on Sunday, providing the necessary steering flow to accelerate a secondary cold front completely through the state. This boundary will effectively scour out the multi-day tropical airmass, dropping dewpoints back into the comfortable mid-60s to lower 70s by Monday.

A welcome stretch of seasonable, dry weather is anticipated from Monday through Wednesday as a transient shortwave ridge builds across the Midwest. The respite looks to be short-lived, however, as long-range guidance hints at unsettled weather returning by late next week. A well-defined trough is projected to dig across the Upper Midwest, dragging its attendant cold front into the region and reintroducing chances for showers and thunderstorms.

AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SATURDAY/

Issued at 1245 PM CDT Fri Jul 3 2026

Carried PROB30 at PIA next few hours for TSRA with MVFR conditions possible. Brunt of convection so far today has been of the IL river, but we are starting to see isolated convection starting to develop in very unstable tropical airmass over central IL with a few cells SSW of Lincoln (AAA). Will keep an eye on this developing convection and may need to added TSRA over other central IL airports from mid afternoon into early evening. Latest CAMs showing some isolated to scattered convection developing over central IL starting between 05-08Z and ending from 10-12Z and have VCTS to account for this with best chances at northern airfields (PIA and BMI). SW winds around 10 kts with higher gusts near thunderstorms, to diminish south or variable around 5 kts at sundown and be SW 5-10 kts on Sat morning.

ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

Extreme Heat Warning until 7 PM CDT this evening for ILZ027>031-036>038-040>057-061>063-066>068-071>073. Heat Advisory from 11 AM to 7 PM CDT Saturday for ILZ049>057- 061>063-066>068-071>073.


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