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| 108 FXUS63 KLOT 120717 AFDLOT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL 217 AM CDT Thu Mar 12 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Strong to very strong winds develop overnight tonight and especially Friday morning/early afternoon with a potential for 60 mph wind gusts during this time. Wind Advisories and High Wind Watches issued for the area. - Small potential for snow/graupel squalls with a cold front late tonight, mainly across far northern Illinois. - Strong storm system may bring a threat for strong storms to the region on Sunday, followed by accumulating snow and another round of very strong winds Sunday night into Monday. - Turning much colder early next week with Monday morning and Tuesday morning wind chills below zero. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 216 AM CDT Thu Mar 12 2026 Through Friday Night: A roughly 1030 mb surface high across southern Oklahoma will continue to build eastward across the ArkLaTex today and this afternoon. Lingering breezy westerly winds have continued to subside early this morning, but some additional west to northwesterly breezes will develop later this morning and afternoon. Regional water vapor loops reveal a small but fairly robust vort max pushing across Iowa and into Wisconsin at this hour, with some corresponding scattered mid-level cloud cover and radar echoes. Other than tossing perhaps a little more mid deck across our north this morning, this shouldn`t amount to much in our area. Cloud cover will thicken up late this afternoon and evening in advance of the next disturbance. Model guidance is in good agreement depicting a surface low deepening towards the mid 980s mb range at is quickly scoots east across central Minnesota and eventually into northern lower Michigan late tonight and on Friday. An very impressive low- level mass response is progged to materialize across the region late this evening and overnight as a 70-80 knot southwesterly LLJ spins up. As is typical during the overnight hours, some degree of near-surface static stability will keep the vast majority of this flow out of reach, but the presence of a tightening pressure gradient and persistent pressure falls will likely yield a gradual uptick in the frequency and intensity of gusts through the night. Additionally, an area of showers will develop along the nose of an incoming upper jet streak. Lapse rates above 600 mb become fairly steep after about midnight tonight as forcing intensifies. Have painted high-end chance to likely PoPs across the northern half of the area, and some guidance trends would suggest we may need to continue boosting PoPs a bit even across our far south. Can`t rule out the potential for a few lightning strikes given the steep lapse rates, but chances at this time appear a bit too low to warrant adding a formal mention to the grids. The intense surface low will eventually drag a cold front through the region sometime around or just prior to daybreak Friday morning. Forecast soundings reveal a modest uptick in low-level instability ahead of the front, although whether or not there`s any true surface-based instability remains in doubt. Nonetheless, given the magnitude of low-level forcing in place, there`s a small potential that a few shallow/low-topped showers develop along/ahead of the front. While air temperatures are forecast to be at or above freezing, wetbulb zero heights are forecast to fall to under a few hundred feet. If robust convective elements can develop, couldn`t entirely rule out a threat for some snow and/or graupel squalls as the front comes through. Regardless, it will be windy, and the front itself will likely be accompanied by a fairly sharp uptick in wind gusts. Through the rest of Friday morning, low-level lapse rates are forecast to steepen as cold advection spreads across the region. This will begin to allow for more efficient and persistent momentum transfer out of a 50-60 knot 850 mb jet, leading to another likely surge in wind speeds and gusts through midday. Regarding wind headlines: somewhat of a tricky scenario in this case. At least sporadic wind advisory-level gusts (around 45 mph) will be possible after about midnight tonight, with more of a notable increase likely not occurring until well after midnight and especially along and behind the cold front with the strongest gusts focusing primarily in the 7 AM to 1 PM timeframe. Forecast soundings are fairly concerning during this time window, revealing mean boundary layer winds easily over 40 knots and at times nearing 45 knots. With strong pressure rises developing in the cold advection regime, it certainly seems plausible that at least sporadic 60+ mph wind gusts materialize through the morning across parts of the area. One fly in the ointment is the potential for expansive lower stratus to develop, particularly across northern Illinois, through Friday morning. This can limit the degree of mixing from time to time (not always), but regardless is a source of some uncertainty in how strong winds will get. That said, concern and confidence was high enough for a period of very strong winds to justify the issuance of a High Wind Watch for the northeastern half of the forecast area from late tonight through mid afternoon Friday. In this area, the longest overlap of steepening BL lapse rates and lingering strong 925-850 mb flow will lead to the highest chances for peak gusts to exceed 55 mph at times. Periodic wind gusts this high are possible elsewhere, but may not be as frequent. Have confined the time window of the High Wind Watch to encompass the period of worst conditions (rolled a little earlier to capture the cold frontal passage), while the Wind Advisory runs a bit longer to encompass the potential overnight, LLJ-induced gusty winds and the late-afternoon ramp down. Winds will ease sharply Friday evening as the pressure gradient relaxes. Carlaw Saturday through Wednesday: The active stretch of weather looks likely to continue over the weekend and into the start of next week, potentially including a low to non-negligible threat for strong to severe storms, accumulating snow, and strong to very strong gradient/non- thunderstorm winds. Model guidance is coming into better alignment regarding the evolution of a diving/digging shortwave trough and subsequent cyclogenesis across the central plains Saturday night into Sunday. As this occurs, intensifying warm advection/southerly low-level flow will impinge on a remnant 850 mb baroclinic zone which should result in blossoming frontogenetically-enhanced precipitation into early Sunday morning. At this time, deterministic and ensemble guidance suggests that the majority of this precipitation may focus north of the Wisconsin state line, but there will be some threat for snow or a mix across northern Illinois Saturday night. Thereafter, a break in the action is possible as the fgen zone rolls northward and a deepening surface low tracks somewhere near or just north of Kansas City. Guidance is reasonably well clustered with the low track immediately to our west on Sunday. Unfortunately, this track would slingshot the system warm front northward into our region, potentially as far north as I-80 on Sunday afternoon/early evening. With less of a EML in place and generally lower dewpoints compared to this Tuesday`s severe weather episode, instability is not nearly as significant. Most soundings generally hold onto some level of surface convective inhibition, but with such robust forcing and a rapidly- intensifying wind field, this will be a period to monitor closely with a potential for low-topped strong convection. Eventually, the surface low will push north and east of the region allowing a much colder thermal profile to spill in from the north and west. The trend in the guidance lately is towards more of an accumulating snow potential in our region Sunday night into Monday as a result (particularly west of the Fox Valley and across northwest Illinois), with surface temperatures potentially falling through the 20s with increasingly strong north to northwesterly winds. Will start to beef up the accumulating snow mention a bit in our graphical messaging today. If trends continue, this has the potential to be an impactful episode of winter weather somewhere in the region. A much colder airmass will descend on the region through Tuesday as this storm system pulls away. 850 mb temperatures falling to around -20C may support some lake effect snow into Tuesday morning, but likely to focus mainly north and east of our region given WNW/NW boundary layer flow. Thereafter, active and very dynamic synoptic flow will continue through the rest of the week with notable ridging developing across the western CONUS. Associated downstream troughing may guide continued disturbances through the region, although generally quieter conditions look to develop locally with moderating temperatures through the end of next week. Carlaw && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 1236 AM CDT Thu Mar 12 2026 Primary forecast concern this period is very strong winds tonight into Friday. Westerly winds under 10kts are expected early this morning. Speeds may increase into the 10-12kt range later this morning with some higher gusts at times through early afternoon. Winds will turn southerly late this afternoon and may briefly become south/southeast early this evening, before turning back to south/southwest during the evening. Speeds will steadily increase this evening and will be in the mid 20kt range by late evening into early Friday morning, as gusts increase into the mid 30kt range. Higher gusts, possibly into the mid 40kt range are possible after daybreak Friday morning behind a strong cold front that will turn wind directions westerly. There will also be a chance of showers early Friday morning, with the highest coverage near the IL/WI state line, but a few of these showers may spread across all the terminals in the early morning hours. cms && .LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IL...Wind Advisory from 1 AM to 6 PM CDT Friday for ILZ003-ILZ004- ILZ008-ILZ010-ILZ011-ILZ019-ILZ021-ILZ032-ILZ033-ILZ039. High Wind Watch from late tonight through Friday afternoon for ILZ005-ILZ006-ILZ012-ILZ013-ILZ020-ILZ023-ILZ103-ILZ104- ILZ105-ILZ106-ILZ107-ILZ108. IN...Wind Advisory from 2 AM to 7 PM EDT Friday for INZ019. High Wind Watch from late tonight through Friday afternoon for INZ001-INZ002-INZ010-INZ011. LM...Gale Warning from 10 PM this evening to 10 PM CDT Friday for the IL and IN nearshore waters. Small Craft Advisory until 4 AM CDT early this morning for Northerly Is. to Gary IN. Small Craft Advisory until 10 AM CDT this morning for Gary to Burns Harbor IN-Burns Harbor to Michigan City IN. && $$ Visit us at weather.gov/chicago |
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