Read the Hazardous Weather Outlook (click to read)
752 FLUS43 KJKL 301023 HWOJKL Hazardous Weather Outlook National Weather Service Jackson KY 523 AM EST Thu Jan 30 2025 KYZ044-050>052-058>060-068-069-079-080-083>088-104-106>120-311200- 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- 523 AM EST Thu Jan 30 2025 This Hazardous Weather Outlook is for a portion of eastern Kentucky. .DAY ONE...Today and tonight. Heavy rainfall is possible tonight, along with a slight chance of thunderstorms. .DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN...Friday through Wednesday. There is a slight chance of thunderstorms on Friday morning. .SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT... Spotter activation is not expected. $$ HAL/MARCUS
Read the Area Forecast Discussion (click to read)
024 FXUS63 KJKL 301555 AFDJKL AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Jackson KY 1055 AM EST Thu Jan 30 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Temperatures will average well above normal through early next week. - A cold front and an upper level low approaching the area will bring a soaking rain for most places from late today into Friday, with a few thunderstorms also possible. && .UPDATE... Issued at 1055 AM EST THU JAN 30 2025 Cloud shield is advancing northeast from the Cumberland/Tennessee Valleys into the Kentucky River basin late this morning as the well-advertised storm system approaches. The leading band of rain, mainly light, is now approaching an imaginary line from Knoxville, TN to Rockwood, TN to Bowling Green, KY. Latest hi- res guidance suggests that this band of rain will move into the Lake Cumberland area ~1230-130 PM EST and then intensify/expand as it spreads northeast through the afternoon/evening hours. Hourly forecast has been massaged to account for the latest PoP/T/Td/Sky trends through this evening but was overall still in good shape. UPDATE Issued at 758 AM EST THU JAN 30 2025 Early morning temps and sky cover have been blended into the forecast without substantive changes. && .SHORT TERM...(Today through Friday) Issued at 515 AM EST THU JAN 30 2025 A large closed upper low slowly moving out of the southwest CONUS will be our main feature during the short term period. The low will gradually open as it tracks from near the southeast corner of Colorado early today to the vicinity of IN/OH by late Friday. It will support a series of surface lows which will develop ahead of the upper low along a frontal triple point and then recess beneath the upper low. Large scale flow ahead of the low and its cold front will draw large amounts of gulf moisture northward. This will support soaking rain as it lifts over a warm front which will approach us from the southwest today and tonight. Exactly where the southern edge of this rain shield sets up is still in question, with the NAM suggesting it will be slightly further north than the GFS or ECMWF. In consideration of this, have held back on the POP for the southern edge of the forecast area today into tonight with only chance POP. Further north, confidence is higher that rain will develop eastward into the forecast area late today and this evening. The NAM shows elevated instability developing as the system`s cold or occluded front approaches from the west late tonight and Friday morning, with a low level jet bringing a surge of warm and moist air around 850mb. In light of this, have included a slight chance of thunder. Won`t rule out a few hydro issues as the rain falls on ground still fairly wet from snow melt and thawing, especially in the northern portion of the forecast area. The cold or occluded front (depending on whether the system`s warm front can make passage) will move east through the forecast area on Friday, but initial temperature change will be minimal. However, a dry slot will wrap around the low pressure system simultaneously and bring us significant mid level drying from west to east during the day, cutting off precip. .LONG TERM...(Friday night through Wednesday) Issued at 547 AM EST Thu Jan 30 2025 When the long term forecast period opens on Friday evening, the upper atmospheric ingredients responsible for the early-day activity will be positioned just to the west of the forecast area. The formerly-closed upper low will have evolved into a positively-tilted trough stretching from the southern Great Lakes down into the Tennessee Valley. Forecast guidance has trended this trough`s eastward ejection a bit slower compared to this time yesterday, which leads to a prolonged period of cyclonic vorticity advection into the region. This will provide just enough atmospheric lift for a second round of showers to develop late on Friday afternoon. The increasingly-positive tilt of the parent trough will reduce the amount of directional divergence aloft as the day progresses, and the potent 850mb LLJ will be displaced on the other side of the Appalachians by Friday evening. The loss of these two ingredients, alongside diurnally-decreasing temperatures and instability, will limit the intensity/coverage of this activity. Any showers that occur on Friday night would add an additional few hundredths to the early day event`s precipitation totals. Since the time-lagged NBM has struggled to resolve this second round of showers, slight chance PoPs were manually added to Friday night`s forecast grids. These precipitation chances spread across the area from west to east overnight, and then taper off by dawn on Saturday morning. A cooler and drier airmass will have moved into Eastern Kentucky by then, and forecast AM lows are accordingly in the upper 30s/lower 40s. The rest of the long term forecast features zonal flow aloft, meaning that the sensible weather specifics will largely be determined by the placement of smaller-scale surface features. For example, surface winds are expected to veer back towards the south on Sunday and then the southwest on Monday. This will foster warm air advection and some degree of moisture return into Eastern Kentucky, and temperatures accordingly moderate. Saturday`s highs in the upper 40s/lower 50s will rise towards the 60s on Sunday and Monday, with overnight ridge-valley temperature splits. A weak, northern stream disturbance will pass through the flow aloft on Monday night, but the lack of meaningful moisture return throughout the column will likely limit its ability to produce significant precipitation chances. A few showers cannot be entirely ruled out before dawn on Tuesday morning across southeastern KY, but the greatest effect from this system looks to be the slightly cooler temperatures forecast on Tuesday afternoon (highs back in the 50s). Model spread increases drastically beyond then. There are 15 to 20 degree differences between the 25th and 75th percentiles of the NBM temperature guidance for each mid-week forecast period. The LREF mirrors this heightened level of spread, and it appears that this uncertainty is related to disagreements on the timing and track of a late week storm system. The lack of well-defined upper level support could yield a prolonged period of precipitation as said system approaches, but it remains far too early to provide insight into any potential hydrological impacts. For now, this system is reflected in the grids as increasing rain chances throughout the day on Wednesday, with the greatest chances just beyond the end of the forecast period on Thursday. && .AVIATION...(For the 12Z TAFS through 12Z Friday morning) ISSUED AT 758 AM EST THU JAN 30 2025 VFR conditions present at the start of the period will persist into the day, but then deteriorate. Mid-high level clouds will arrive from the southwest during the day and lower with time. Rain is forecast to develop for most, if not all, locations in the afternoon. However, it is somewhat in question near the TN border. The greatest confidence for rain is roughly from a latitude around KJKL northward. That area can expect IFR conditions to develop late in the day and persist into the night. Where the outcome is more uncertain further south, largely VFR conditions are tentatively forecast into Thursday night. However, even those southern locales should expect rain and MVFR conditions by dawn. && .JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NONE. && $$ UPDATE...GEERTSON SHORT TERM...HAL LONG TERM...MARCUS AVIATION...HAL |