Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS St. Louis, MO
Issued by NWS St. Louis, MO
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888 FXUS63 KLSX 221712 AFDLSX Area Forecast Discussion...Updated Aviation National Weather Service Saint Louis MO 1112 AM CST Fri Nov 22 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Seasonably cold conditions will continue through tonight before temperatures warm back up above normal by Sunday. A cold front moves through on Monday, cooling temperatures below normal for the remainder of the week. - An active pattern brings increasing chances of precipitation around the Thanksgiving holiday. Rain continues to be the most likely precipitation type. && .SHORT TERM... (Through Late Saturday Afternoon) Issued at 259 AM CST Fri Nov 22 2024 Broad cyclonic rotation over the eastern U.S. is resulting in northwesterly flow across the Midwest and seasonably cool conditions this morning. A mid-level stratus deck has been huddled over the region overnight, slowly inching to the southwest over the last several hours. Surface observations show the coldest temperatures at the top of the 09z hour were in the mid-30s over central Missouri where skies remained clear longer. Clouds have kept temperatures 5-7 degrees warmer to the east and will likely be prevented from falling too much further. The shallow, low level saturated layer of about 1.5-2k feet deep is centered round 2k feet, signaling much of the day will be spent under some degree of low clouds. The western edges are where breaks are more likely in the later part of the day. Much of this won`t be motivated to move out until ridging to the west nudges eastward late tonight into Saturday. While it keep conditions chilly today with highs in the 40s, winds will be far less of an issue. Light winds and partial clearing will allow temperatures to drop a few degrees cooler tonight with lows ranging from the mid-20s to low-30s. Saturday sees a bit of an uptick, however, as return flow rounds the departing surface ridge. Highs return to the 50s. Maples && .LONG TERM... (Saturday Night through Thursday) Issued at 259 AM CST Fri Nov 22 2024 Ridging over the southeastern U.S. and troughing over the central Plains will work in tandem to strengthen deep, southwesterly flow over the Mid-Mississippi Valley Saturday night into Sunday. Warm air advection is expected to push temperatures back above November norms (upper 40s/low-50s) with LREF ensembles showing 60-90% probabilities for highs exceeding 60 degrees along and west of the Mississippi River. Probabilities (<10%) drop off quite a bit when approaching the 65 degree threshold, suggest most locations will end up in this range Sunday afternoon. The trough to the west gives rise to a surface low that has shown a varying degree of deepening somewhere between the Mid-Mississippi Valley into the Great Lakes Region. This continues to result in an increasing spread in temperatures heading into Monday thanks to differences in strength and speed. One minor, promising sign is in the latest 00z LREF spreads showing a slight decrease not only between the 25th/75th percentile ranges, but also showing a narrowing in the geographic coverage in such spreads. Though still rather large (8-10 degrees or so), this trend is in the right direction. Precipitation will be highly reliant on timing as the system only becomes better organized as it move northeast late Monday. Saturation in the lowest 5,000 feet will be aided by convergence along the front that is departed from better mid/upper forcing well to the north. Even then, while a majority of ECM/GFS ensembles show precipitation, all but three members show less than 0.10" of an inch near STL with about one-third of the members near 0.10" near Salem, IL. Though spread decreases Tuesday, this signals higher confidence in a dry, seasonably cold forecast with highs back in the 40s. Focus shifts to the midweek period with holiday travel coming into view. Global guidance is coming into better alignment with the general synoptic pattern. However, finer details remain uncertain as zonal upper flow introduces additional shortwaves into the central U.S. with a north-south temperature gradient. These systems, while progressive and relatively weak, do have southern tracks with colder air moving in at the end of the period. While daytime temperatures currently favor rainfall as a predominant precipitation type, a handful of ensemble members show the potential for snowfall in the later half of the week. What has been notable is a persistent signal to what could be the year`s first real intrusion of very cold air from the north-central U.S. sometime late next week. Maples && .AVIATION... (For the 18z TAFs through 18z Saturday Afternoon) Issued at 1059 AM CST Fri Nov 22 2024 Cloud cover with MVFR and some low VFR ceilings continues to affect all of the terminals at midday and now is not is expected to move out of COU/JEF until after 00Z and at UIN/STL/SUS/CPS until after 12Z on Saturday morning. The ceilings at UIN will likely stay below 2000 feet AGL until at least mid morning on Saturday morning. Otherwise, dry weather is expected through the period with northwest winds into tonight before turning light and backing to the southwest on Saturday morning. Britt && .LSX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MO...None. IL...None. && $$ WFO LSX