Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Sioux Falls South Dakota 639 am CDT Sat may 25 2013 Short term...(today and tonight) issued at 430 am CDT Sat may 25 2013 Thunderstorm complex over Nebraska overnight continues early this morning. Seeing showers and storms beginning to expand across northwest Iowa as well as low level thetae advection increases. High res model suite look to have a pretty good handle on this activity. Expect it to continue this morning and possibly expand a bit further north into portions of southwest Minnesota. Lowered probability of precipitation across southeast South Dakota...as all indications are that these storms will not develop northwest of their current location. Most of the storms should be east of the County Warning Area by 16z. Main impacts will be briefly heavy rain and possibly small hail with these cells...as effective shear and cape are too low for any severe threat. Much of the afternoon should then be dry across the County Warning Area with an area of subsidence likely behind this mornings shortwave. Warm frontal boundary will position itself south of the Missouri River this afternoon. Hrrr and rap try to break the cap their this afternoon...but both these models seem a bit overdone with dewpoints and instability. Feel more likely scenario is activity waits for the low level jet to kick in after 0z before it gets going. Other issue today is cloud cover and high temperatures. Interestingly the hrrr and rap are complete opposite of each other...giving around a 20 degree difference in highs...with the rap having more stratus and cooler temperatures. The Gem and European model (ecmwf) side closer to the rap...with the NAM in between. Since the areal coverage of low stratus is currently less than expected...did go ahead and raise highs several degrees for today in our central and west. Also the hrrr has a good handle on the current situation...so one would think its short range forecast should be somewhat reliable...and it has consistently been warm for today. Lowered highs a few in the east where it is raining...and where stratus should indeed hold in for much of the day. Again this is a pretty low confidence temperature forecast for anywhere east of the James River. But feel going forecast is a decent starting point...with the day shift likely having to adjust up or down depending on cloud cover trends. Quiet short term conditions from the afternoon hours should turn quickly to more stormy conditions overnight. Gave a fair amount of credit to the consistency of the 00z high resolution namdng5 and WRF-arw solutions...which fit the overall conceptual model for convective initiation tonight. Boundary from current night mesoscale convective system will be festering and drifting northward...with likely 1000 to 1500 j/kg elevated cape lifted from 1 to 1.5 km above ground level. As 35 to 40 knot low level jet develops tonight through the Central Plains... should become enough to initiate elevated thunderstorms near/north of the boundary which will be drifting northward of Interstate 80 during the evening hours. Effective shear in areas north of the boundary will be very concentrated in the 1-3km layer with strongest winds in low levels and weakening middle level winds roughly 20-30 knots...with lesser deep layer shear contributions from Above. All suggest at least a minimal threat for isolated larger hail or damaging winds through the Missouri River corridor and lifting somewhat northward through 066-08z. Other significant convective initiation is likely to occur back through the western High Plains where stronger shear exists with a bit stronger middle level winds to around 25 knots...as well as the deep upslope transport of moisture to result in stronger instability. Eventually...when supercell motions which will take action more southward than east start to ease...and low level jet veers eastward...will find a more linear mesoscale convective system likely taking shape. Many hi res models suggest this mesoscale convective system will zipper down the location of the warm advection Wing spreading northward...moving toward east central South Dakota and southwest Minnesota late night. Severe threat with this feature would seem to be somewhat lower...but likely to get some gusty winds and areas of heavy rainfall. Long term...(sunday through friday) issued at 430 am CDT Sat may 25 2013 Mesoscale convective system expected to weaken and shift east on Sunday...and with middle level forcing showing tendency to force subsidence around midday...again expect that much of the daytime period will probably end up precipitation free. However...clouds likely to persist with stratus developing in wake of system. Most likely to get breaks through the western and southern County Warning Area during the afternoon...and have pushed expected temperatures to near 80 there... while more middle to upper 60s linger in the far east. Result of this will be generation of decent potential instability of 1500-2000 j/kg across the area...with weakest of the capping inversion near the Missouri River corridor. Shear becomes a bit more distributed through the effective layer...and fairly close to those values from this evening from 30 to 35 knots. A few more severe storms would be possible mainly through the southwest half of the area during the later afternoon and evening hours...as initiation likely to be a result of weak impulse sliding up back side of ridge in the later afternoon and early evening. The further one GOES into the forecast...the less reliable any guidance becomes given the abundance of convection...and the increasingly great uncertainty as to where critical boundaries may lie. One thing for sure...given the closed low across the western U.S. And the southwest flow aloft...difficult to pinpoint any time from Monday on that one could say there was absolutely no chance for precipitation...but on the same front it certainly will not be an all time washout with many breaks defined on the mesoscale. Memorial Day and Monday night will place the area on the southern flank of a couple of waves moving over the ridge...so likely to have enhancement of precipitation in the nocturnally favored periods. While a few severe storms are again well within reason...high precipitable water and fairly slow moving wind profiles bring the concern of areas of heavy rainfall...at this range hard to define. At the moment...the Prospect for more significant convection and severe weather would appear to be late day Wednesday into Thursday...as deep western closed low kicks stronger jet energy into the plains. Moisture through lower levels /thus instability/ will continue to benefit from persistent southerly flow. Temperatures will likely gravitate to somewhat above normal readings through the upcoming week. && Aviation...(for the 12z tafs through 12z Sunday morning) issued at 619 am CDT Sat may 25 2013 Low confidence taf forecast. Many guidance solutions showing IFR to MVFR stratus this morning. These solutions show it developing over Nebraska and Iowa and advecting into our area. Winds are southeasterly from 1500 feet and below and southwesterly above that. That southwesterly wind is advecting in dry air...thus only stratus below 1500 feet would be able to advect into the area. Currently not seeing much of that out there. Thus cut back on the low ceilings and kept most of our area VFR. However will have to monitor things through the morning. Not out of the question that low stratus still forms...or that we get some MVFR stratocu after sunrise. Next problem is convection. This mornings activity should remain east of the taf sites and exit the County Warning Area by middle to late morning. Tonight...expect activity to get going in the vicinity of a low level warm front after 03z. Where this exactly happens remains uncertain. At this point it appear that areas near the Missouri River have the best shot. Also expect a thunderstorm complex to form to our northwest...and dive through the area after 7z into the morning hours. Main threats will be reductions to IFR visible/ceiling in the heavier rain...but some hail and gusty winds are also possible. Stratus may also try to form tonight...but that will be dependent on how well we mix out the low level moisture today. Did put MVFR ceilings in the tafs starting this evening...but this is also unfortunately uncertain. && Fsd watches/warnings/advisories... South Dakota...none. Minnesota...none. Iowa...none. NE...none. && $$ Short term...Chapman/chenard long term...Chapman aviation...chenard