Read the Hazardous Weather Outlook (click to read)
809 FLUS43 KJKL 172116 HWOJKL Hazardous Weather Outlook National Weather Service Jackson KY 416 PM EST Sun Nov 17 2024 KYZ044-050>052-058>060-068-069-079-080-083>088-104-106>120-181200- Fleming-Montgomery-Bath-Rowan-Estill-Powell-Menifee-Rockcastle- Jackson-Pulaski-Laurel-Wayne-McCreary-Whitley-Knox-Bell-Harlan- Elliott-Morgan-Johnson-Wolfe-Magoffin-Floyd-Lee-Breathitt-Knott- Owsley-Perry-Clay-Leslie-Letcher-Martin-Pike- 416 PM EST Sun Nov 17 2024 This Hazardous Weather Outlook is for a portion of eastern Kentucky. .DAY ONE...Tonight. No hazardous weather is expected at this time. .DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN...Monday through Saturday. There is a slight chance of thunderstorms on Tuesday, mainly near and west of Interstate 75. Light snow accumulations are possible Thursday into Friday, especially over the highest elevations near the Virginia border. .SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT... Spotter activation is not expected. $$ HAL/MARCUS
Read the Area Forecast Discussion (click to read)
331 FXUS63 KJKL 172329 AFDJKL AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Jackson KY 629 PM EST Sun Nov 17 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Precipitation is expected at times over the next week, mainly Tuesday through Friday night. - Above normal temperatures will persist into Wednesday, with any precipitation occurring as rain. - Colder temperatures arrive Wednesday night, and much of the area could see precipitation occur as snow at times after that point, but little or no accumulation is expected. && .SHORT TERM...(This evening through Monday night) Issued at 452 PM EST SUN NOV 17 2024 Surface high pressure near the southeast coast, along with ridging aloft, will keep our weather dry through into Monday night. However, we will be having effects from a system further west. A strong upper level closed low currently just south of AZ will track northeast to MN by Tuesday morning, supporting a deep surface low on a similar track. A broad area of warm air advection will persist east of the low and around the western and northern side of the surface high. The isentropic lift will bring varying amounts of clouds to our area. We are already seeing high, thin clouds spilling through the upper level ridge. Increasing lower level moisture has resulted in clouds as far east as central KY this afternoon. Further advection/lift will probably bring lower clouds to our area overnight and into Monday, but the extent of the clouds is still in question. As the aforementioned storm system tracks northeast across the upper Midwest, flow off the gulf coinciding with sufficient upper level support will result in an area of showers progressing east over KY ahead of the system`s cold front. They will most likely be entering our western counties by dawn. For temperatures, light winds and warm air advection will be favorable for another night of ridge/valley differences tonight. However, should low clouds become prominent enough, it would temper the differences. Monday will be another mild day, with the amount of sun factoring into exactly how mild. Strengthening low level flow (as well as increasing clouds) will keep the ridge/valley low temperature differences more limited on Monday night, with the eastern and southeastern valleys the most likely places to decouple and chill. .LONG TERM...(Tuesday through Sunday) Issued at 503 PM EST Sun Nov 17 2024 The long term forecast period continues to be characterized by a rather active weather pattern with two distinct periods of precipitation. At the start of the forecast period, an occluded surface low pressure system will be ejecting out of the Northern Plains and into Canada. The cold front associated with this system is expected to outpace this low, and it will be on our doorstep by Tuesday afternoon. Out ahead of it, showers appear likely, and PoPs between 80 and 90% are in the forecast grids accordingly. Temperatures during this first round of precipitation will be the warmest that they will be for the duration of the long term forecast period. This means that all precipitation in the first round of activity will fall as rain, and there may be just enough instability out ahead of the front to squeeze out a few rumbles of thunder. Expect afternoon highs in the mid 60s and overnight lows to drop into the 50s. The upper level support for this first round of rain is expected to phase with a potent Pacific trough throughout the day on Tuesday. By Tuesday evening, these features will have consolidated into a closed upper level low, which is then anticipated to strengthen and shift southeast towards the Ohio River Valley/Great Lakes on Wednesday. Post-FROPA, strengthening westerly surface winds and strengthening flow aloft associated with this upper low will advect cooler and notably drier air into the region. Wednesday`s forecast guidance continues to trend drier, and some degree of clearing appears likely (especially across our southwestern counties) during the late afternoon and evening hours. Chance PoPs remain in the grids for now, but it is beginning to look like the area could see a lull in precipitation on Wednesday evening. Wednesday`s afternoon highs will be a few degrees lower than they were on Tuesday, but the potency of the cold air advection associated with this system becomes more noticeable. Aided by relatively clearer skies, temperatures will dip into the 30s across the entire area on Wednesday night into Thursday morning and set the stage for some potential winter weather. As this cooldown materializes, wraparound moisture and lobes of favorable cyclonic vorticity will wrap around the upper level low and advect into the forecast area early Thursday morning. These ingredients will combine to produce a second round of precipitation chances, which will linger around throughout the end of the work week. With the colder air in place, brief periods of wintery precipitation are possible, but there a great deal of model uncertainty continues to shroud this forecast. Around sunrise on Thursday, surface temperatures will flirt with the freezing line, and some guidance continues to resolve favorable thermal profiles aloft for snow. Snow appears most likely in the higher terrain, such as up on Black Mountain along the Virginia border. For the rest of the forecast area, a cold rain mixed with some snowflakes is currently the mostly likely solution, and the grids reflect this. With blustery winds out of the northwest, ongoing precipitation, and plentiful cloud coverage, temperatures on Thursday afternoon will struggle to warm above 40 degrees. Gusty winds and antecedently warm ground temperatures will limit snow accumulation. As temperatures cool off to near freezing again on Thursday night/Friday morning, another switchover to mixed snow/rain showers is possible, but aside from the colder mountaintops, most precipitation on Friday afternoon should fall as rain under a slightly warmer airmass. At this temporal range, however, it should be noted that future changes to this forecast are possible. Interested parties should pay close attention to forecast updates in the coming days accordingly. By the weekend, the upper low will eject up into the Northeastern states, and drier air should advect back into the forecast area on its backside/ahead of a building ridge. Precipitation tapers off on Saturday from SW to NE as a similar clearing trend emerges. Under the clearer conditions, Saturday night could be the coldest night in the period, with lows in the upper 20s possible, especially in valleys. However, the return of partially sunny skies during the daytime hours will allow high temperatures to moderate back towards the low/mid 50s this weekend. This would be a welcome relief from the rather dreary/windy/chilly conditions forecast with this late week system and a return to the climatologically-expected conditions of Eastern Kentucky in late November. && .AVIATION...(For the 00Z TAFS through 00Z Monday evening) ISSUED AT 628 PM EST SUN NOV 17 2024 VFR conditions are forecast at least through late tonight. Localized valley fog may occur in southeast KY overnight, but shouldn`t affect TAF sites. Low clouds are forecast to develop from northwest to southeast tonight, but there is uncertainty regarding the extent of clouds and their height. NAM BUFR forecast soundings suggest ceilings at least as low as MVFR, while the GFS forecast soundings are less aggressive and generally suggest low-VFR conditions. NAM MOS guidance holds off on MVFR conditions until around dawn. Have generally followed the NAM MOS, but confidence is not high. && .JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NONE. && $$ SHORT TERM...HAL LONG TERM...MARCUS AVIATION...CMC |