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Forecast Discussion for Indianapolis, IN
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721 FXUS63 KIND 061036 AFDIND Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Indianapolis IN 536 AM EST Fri Mar 6 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Dense fog will diminish by mid morning - Widespread minor/moderate flooding south of I-70, with major flooding on East Fork White River at Seymour into weekend - Another round of rain and thunderstorms late tonight into Saturday with an additional one half to one inch possible - A few strong to severe storms possible late tonight and early Saturday - Well above normal temperatures into next week, with record warmth today, and potentially next Monday-Tuesday - Additional rain likely next week, primarily Tuesday into Wednesday, which may prolong the flooding situation && .SHORT TERM (Today through Saturday)... Issued at 311 AM EST Fri Mar 6 2026 An area of showers was moving out of the southeast forecast area early this morning associated with a weak wave aloft. Fog had become widespread across much of the rest of the forecast area with visibilities at 1/2SM or less. 07Z temperatures were in the mid and upper 50s. An amplified regime aloft persists across much of the country with an upper level trough moving through the Rockies and a downstream ridge across much of the eastern part of the country. An upper low will develop as the western trough deepens and retrograde off the Baja California coast by Saturday evening. The remnants of the upper trough will gradually deamplify as it moves east into the weekend as an associated surface low tracks from the Missouri Valley later today into Quebec by late Saturday. Unseasonably warm temperatures will remain over the Ohio Valley into Saturday prior to the arrival of a trailing cold front as the low lifts off to the northeast. The primary issue early this morning is the expansion of dense fog that has encompassed most of the forecast area since 04Z as deep moisture is trapped beneath a shallow inversion. Introduced a Dense Fog Advisory for all but the far southeast part of central Indiana through 14Z as obs and webcams show the lowest visibilities have become widespread. The inversion will weaken as the morning progresses with fog diminishing by 14-15Z over most of the area. Model soundings continue to highlight subtle instability above the inversion which may be just enough to generate isolated to scattered showers moving northeast from the predawn hours into the morning but the overall trend into the early afternoon will be to mix out the stratus in addition to the fog dissipating as S/SW winds increase through the boundary layer. Peak wind gusts will increase to near 25mph by this afternoon in response to a tightening pressure gradient. Cannot rule out isolated convection this afternoon with modest lapse rates through 500mb with weak instability. Some of the short range guidance appears to be overdoing surface moisture later today...with the HRRR grossly so highlighting Tds into the upper 60s over southern parts of the forecast area. This is consequently producing SBCAPE values in excess of 2000 j/kg later today which appears unreasonable. With a lack of more appreciable forcing aloft will largely cap pops for the afternoon at 25 to 30%. The main focus later today will be on temperatures as the increase in warm advection along with some sunshine should enable temps to soar to record levels. Nudged highs a degree or two above model guidance with mid and upper 70s across the entire forecast area. A few locations over southern parts of the forecast area could make a run at 80 degrees. The record high of 75 from 1973 at KIND is likely to be met or broken. Convection that develops over the southern and central Plains late today will drift towards the region late tonight in a weakened state as it surges out ahead of the trailing cold front which will still be west of the Mississippi River by 12Z Saturday. Much of tonight will be dry and breezy with temperatures likely to remain in the 60s. Storms will approach the Wabash Valley shortly before daybreak Saturday then spread east across the forecast area through the first half of the day Saturday. The timing of arrival of the convection Saturday morning supports only a conditional threat for severe weather across the area with limited heating and instability. Cannot rule out isolated damaging winds with any stronger convection but additional rainfall on already saturated ground from rains the last few days will be the greater concern on Saturday with precip water values once again rising to above the climatological max for early March. There is potential for another half inch to inch over most of the area with locally higher amounts possible which could certainly exacerbate ongoing flooding. Temperatures will rise back to near 70 prior to the cold front sweeping across central Indiana during the late afternoon and evening. && .LONG TERM (Saturday Night through Thursday)... Issued at 311 AM EST Fri Mar 6 2026 A break from rain chances will come Saturday night into Monday as a broad surface high moves through the region in the wake of the departing front, but rain chances will return as early as Monday night and continue through mid week as the northern stream and a southwestern CONUS cutoff low combine to promote moisture transport back into the region along and ahead of a lengthy frontal zone stretching from a strong surface low over the eastern Canadian provinces back to an area of lee cyclogenesis over the high Plains. Guidance has trended toward less tendency of the cutoff low to rejoin the prevailing westerlies, and now move the frontal zone through the area more quickly, though substantial integrated vapor transport is noted along the boundary and a heavy rain threat will remain a concern, primarily late Tuesday into early Wednesday as the front moves through. Even with a short break from rain, antecedent conditions between the ongoing river flooding and waterlogged ground will mean that it will not take much in the way of heavy rainfall rates to produce renewed areal and perhaps flash flooding, as well as potentially prolonging if not exacerbating the river flooding situation, so this will need close monitoring as the situation evolves over the weekend into next week. Will have to keep an eye on potential for at least a marginal severe threat per experimental ML/AI severe guidance, though the hydrologic concerns would be the more pressing of the two at this point, obviously. The quasizonal flow along with broad warm advection ahead of the mid week front will keep temperatures well above normal throughout much of the coming week, with near record highs again not completely out of the question Monday and Tuesday. A bit of a cool down appears possible post front late in the period into next weekend and perhaps beyond, though uncertainty is high on just how long it lasts - but latest 8-14 day outlook does show a tendency toward below normal temperatures for the third week of the month. && .AVIATION (12Z TAF Issuance)... Issued at 536 AM EST Fri Mar 6 2026 Impacts: - Sub-IFR ceilings with dense fog through mid morning - Southerly winds gusting up to 25kts this afternoon - Showers arriving towards daybreak Saturday with periodic MVFR ceilings Discussion: Poor flying conditions will continue through much of the morning with rapid improvements to VFR into the early afternoon. Dense fog should begin to dissipate by 14-15Z with ceilings lifting out by 17Z as low level mixing commences. Southerly wind gusts will peak up to 25kts this afternoon before diminishing by this evening. Sustained winds will remain at 10-15kts however tonight with a tight pressure gradient developing as a cold front approaches from the west. Convection ahead of the boundary will arrive in the Wabash Valley in the predawn hours before spreading east across central Indiana Saturday morning. Most rain should hold off at the terminals until after 12Z Saturday but pockets of MVFR stratus will return to the region late tonight along with wind gusts at 20-25kts. && .IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Dense Fog Advisory until 9 AM EST this morning for INZ021- 028>031-035>049-051>057-060>062-067-068. && $$ SHORT TERM...Ryan LONG TERM...Nield AVIATION...Ryan |
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