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Forecast Discussion for Indianapolis, IN
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413 FXUS63 KIND 160531 AFDIND Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Indianapolis IN 1231 AM EST Tue Dec 16 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated freezing drizzle possible Tuesday night generally along and north of I-70. - Widespread moderate rain likely Thursday with minor flooding possible. - Strong winds Thursday evening/night with gusts over 35 mph possible. - Flash Freeze threat Thursday night/early Friday as temperatures fall 30-40 degrees in 6-8 hrs. - Above normal temperatures expected next weekend into Christmas week. && .FORECAST UPDATE... Issued at 1000 PM EST Mon Dec 15 2025 Quiet zonal ridge will prevail through the overnight with recent arctic ridge having slid to the southeastern CONUS, and any gradient from next northern system holding off until Tuesday. Temperatures are holding steadier than originally expected with ample mid/high cloud providing adequate insulation...so have delayed decrease of readings over next few hours and made slight upward adjustments to low temperatures tonight. Dry column and lack of forcing amid modest differential NVA to maintain precipitation-free conditions tonight. && .SHORT TERM (This evening through Tuesday)... Issued at 316 PM EST Mon Dec 15 2025 Tonight. High clouds will continue to stream in from the northwest with coverage gradually decreasing into the evening as the upper level flow gradually becomes more westerly vs northwesterly. Wind gusts of 20-25 mph will continue through the remainder of the afternoon with a 40kt LLJ at 3kft. Weak lapse rates up to this level will help to limit down the frequency of gusts, but do think at least occasionally we will see those stronger winds. Dry and quiet weather is expected for the overnight hours. There may be some low clouds across the far northwestern counties and the far south towards daybreak, but coverage will be minimal with a fairly dry near surface airmass. Tuesday. Main focus for Tuesday will be tracking the potential for a very light precipitation event across southern Indiana towards the late afternoon and evening hours. Higher resolution models have been picking up on an area of saturation near the surface with weak lift in the cloud layer, mainly across southern Indiana which may be just enough to squeeze out some drizzle or light rain towards the evening hours. Surface temperatures are expected to be in the mid 30s, but with a frozen ground there could be some minor impacts on untreated surfaces due to the recent cold. With plenty of sun expected tomorrow, the impacts may not be more noticeable until the overnight, but it will be something that needs to be monitored going into the day Tuesday. && .LONG TERM (Tuesday night through Monday)... Issued at 316 PM EST Mon Dec 15 2025 Persistent southwesterly flow will advect deeper low level moisture noted on satellite imagery over the southern plains into the region. As we go into Tuesday Night a glancing blow of a shortwave trough moving through the Great Lakes and a weaker shortwave trough moving across the MS valley, with an attendant low-mid level deep convergence zone, may be sufficient to generate light drizzle. Operational 3km NAM continues to show and several other CAMs are also showing light QPF Tuesday night. Freezing drizzle will be possible where surface air temperatures are expected to range from 30-32 in areas generally along and north of I-70. Thanks to the recent cold spell experimental NWS road temp forecast indicates road temps are expected to fall below freezing by 02Z Wednesday (9 pm Tuesday). The potential exists for minor ice accumulations on any untreated roads into the early morning hours on Wednesday before the forcing moves east of the forecast area. At this time, this freezing drizzle potential will be mentioned in the HWO with no headlines being issued. With the continued persistent deep southwesterly low level flow the warmer/moistening airmass moving over a receding/melting snowpack is a recipe for fog both late Tuesday night/early Wednesday but even more so going into Wednesday night. Have added patchy locally dense fog Wednesday night as snowmelt/cold ground temperatures occur beneath surface dewpoints in the 30-35F range. Drizzle/light rain will develop late Wednesday night as low level jet/forcing increase. Forecast soundings show temperatures just barely above freezing (33- 34) in northern forecast area through 06Z before rising between 06- 12Z Thurs. There is a very slight chance of freezing drizzle during the 00-06Z period, however will leave this potential out of the grids/forecast for now given the degree of uncertainty. A much more pronounced/larger shortwave will move out of the Rockies into the Plains Wednesday and into the Ohio Valley/Great Lakes region on Thursday. Strong height falls, ample low level moisture and a strong cold front spell widespread precipitation Thursday across the area. NBM pops from 90-99 look very reasonable. Questions remain on the degree of cooling and any anafrontal forcing that would support a mix of rain/snow before precip ends Thursday night, although recent model trends are showing a little better chance of minor snow accumulations (less than 1 inch) between 00-06Z Friday before precip ends. The biggest concerns with this system will be hydrologic, strong winds and transportation impacts. The hydrologic concerns are focused on the intensity and amounts of rainfall /pwats near the 90th percentile for Mid-December/. Consensus in model guidance indicates anywhere around 0.50 to 0.75 inch of QPF, with the recent runs of the GFS showing up to 1.25 inches for portions of the forecast area. This moderate to heavy rainfall falling in less than 6 hrs with the main frontal passage Thursday afternoon combined with the cold ground will aid in enhanced runoff into streams and potential for some ice jams, as most if not all area creeks and rivers frozen over at this moment. The saving grace for more widespread flooding is the lower than average river levels thanks to the long term drought over much of the area as well as the degree of ice thickness. Gradient winds are expected to increase Thursday morning ahead of the cold front, but the strongest winds are expected to occur Thursday evening in the wake of the front. GFS model soundings show momentum transfer of. 35-40 kts winds in the boundary layer to the surface. Have bumped up wind gusts in NBM to account for this potential, and headlines for a wind advisory look possible. Lastly, the transportation concerns are focused on the rainfall washing off salt on area roads, ponding of water and the increasing threat for a flash freeze potential Thursday night with temperatures quickly falling into the 15-20 F range by early Friday morning. After colder and drier conditions return Friday, another warmup commences going into next weekend with highs expected to approach 5- 10 degrees above normal Saturday. Deterministic models are in good agreement with another shortwave increasing rain chances across the region Saturday night into Sunday. However, spread in ensembles has been increasing, therefore low end pops seem reasonable. The warmer than normal temperatures will continue going into Christmas week, with some indications of highs 20 deg above normal right before Christmas. Thus the chances of a white Christmas for central Indiana are looking very very low indeed. && .AVIATION (06Z TAF Issuance)... Issued at 1229 AM EST Tue Dec 16 2025 Impacts: - MVFR stratus possible from BMG to IND - Low-level wind shear after 00z Discussion: A trough passing over the northern Great Lakes will promote increasing southwesterly flow through the TAF period. By tonight, a strong low-level jet is expected which will result in some low-level wind shear at all terminals. At the surface, SW winds around or a little above 10kt are expected as well. Moisture advection northward by the low-level jet is ongoing from about St Louis southwestward. There are some indications within guidance that these clouds make it into Indiana later this morning. Upstream observations show MVFR ceilings in the 2000-2500ft range. Guidance shows similar ceilings across Indiana, perhaps dropping a bit below 2000ft due to a cooler boundary layer with northward extent. && .IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ UPDATE...AGM SHORT TERM...White LONG TERM...Crosbie AVIATION...Eckhoff |
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