The latest details from the National Weather Service office in Indy.

Area Forecast Discussion

National Weather Service Indianapolis IN

952 AM EST Wed Feb 10 2021


.UPDATE...


The Near Term section has been updated below.


.SYNOPSIS...

Issued at 408 AM EST Wed Feb 10 2021


Today will bring chance for snow across the area with total

accumulations of 1 to 2 inches possible in northern central

Indiana and up to an inch in the south. More chances for snow are

possible this weekend and again early to mid next week. Below

normal temperatures will continue throughout the forecast period

with the start of next week set to be some of the coldest days.


&&


.NEAR TERM /Today/...

Issued at 952 AM EST Wed Feb 10 2021


Going forecast is in fine shape and required only minor adjustment -

regional radar mosaic shows plenty of light returns across the area

but little reaching the ground just yet as dry low level air causes

some evaporation/sublimation of precipitation. Should see returns

expand in coverage and intensity as the day wears on per high res

model solutions, and this is in line with the going forecast.

Previous discussion follows.


Issued at 408 AM EST Wed Feb 10 2021


Radar and surface observations show that scattered light

precipitation is starting to move into southern Indiana as of the

early morning hours. This precip will expand northward through the

morning.


An upper jet over the Ohio Valley will interact with a baroclinic

zone and subtle isentropic lift in the mid to low levels that is

bringing in the precipitation today. Warm moist air from the south

will overrun cold northerly air at the surface. For most of central

Indiana, temperature profiles will remain entirely below freezing

but in the south freezing rain may mix in at times where the warm

nose aloft has a better chance of getting above freezing. The more

significant impacts with this system are slated to stay further

south, for our neighbors in Kentucky. While our souther tier of

counties could see some ice mix in, we are not expecting much in the

way of ice accumulations. Will continue to monitor conditions

through the day, keeping an eye on how far north above freezing

temperatures reach. If they do push further north than currently

forecasted, icing impacts could creep into our forecast area.


Later in the day, a deformation band is expected for form north of I-

70. This band will create an area of enhanced lift and higher QPF

and snowfall totals, of 1 to 2 inches, for the northern half of the

forecast area.


At the surface, temperatures today will range from the low 20s in

the north to the upper 20s in the south.


&&


.SHORT TERM /Tonight through Thursday Night/...

Issued at 408 AM EST Wed Feb 10 2021


The system impacting the region today will start to slowly push

out of the area tonight into Thursday. Light snow will continue to

be possible into Thursday but with minimal moisture, additional

snow accumulation is not really expected beyond tonight. Models

show that the band of moisture will stay to the south in Kentucky

and Tennessee during the short term period as the surface boundary

becomes more stationary across the SE states.


Any lingering precipitation should completely move out by tomorrow

night as the boundary pushes further SE and surface high pressure to

the NW stretches into the area and dries up the atmospheric column.


Below normal temperatures will continue through the period with

highs in the 20s and lows in the teens.


&&


.LONG TERM /Friday through Tuesday/...

Issued at 240 AM EST Wed Feb 10 2021


The main storyline for the extended remains focused on the continued

cold and active pattern for much of the eastern part of the

country...with another surge of bitterly cold air for the weekend

into early next week as a piece of the polar vortex swings across

the Great Lakes along with the potential for additional wintry

mischief into early next week.


A continued blocky and amplified flow pattern aloft will keep the

region stuck in a pattern conducive for continued cold and multiple

opportunities for snow into early next week. The two lobes of the

polar vortex over central Canada late this week will eventually

coalesce then swing south and east across the Great Lakes and

northeast by early next week...carving out a deeper parent trough

across the eastern half of the country and essentially opening the

door for a renewed push of bitterly cold air to advect south

into the region for this weekend and early next week.


At the surface...the Ohio Valley will remain between a large area of

strong high pressure dropping down the east side of the Canadian

Rockies and a stagnant frontal boundary over the Southeast states

early in the period with the high becoming the primary feature

influencing our weather by late Saturday into early next week.

Extended model guidance continues to struggle with the level of

phasing between energy diving south with the PV lobe and just how

much it interacts with the leftover boundary extending from the Gulf

Coast to the Mid Atlantic region. At this point...think potential

certainly exists for some snow at times over the weekend but leaning

towards a less phased setup with lighter snows and accumulation.


A more interesting setup begins to take shape early next week as the

PV lobe kicks out to the northeast and focus turns towards an upper

wave amplifying over the Intermountain West this weekend. As this

feature traverses east into Monday and Tuesday...there does appear

to be a higher ceiling for energy phasing aloft between the polar and

subtropical jets and subsequently...a potential for a deeper surface

wave over the region. With the strong surface high still present

north of the Ohio Valley...there is a threat for a more substantial

winter storm to impact the area with snow and/or ice as plenty of

the remnant arctic airmass from the weekend remains. Another factor

that will likely influence how this plays out is the position of the

southeast ridge and whether it flexes enough to draw warmer air

aloft into the region above a shallow cold airmass. There are a lot

of moving parts here and we remain several days out...but the

potential for a higher impact winter storm does appear to be growing

for early next week.


Temperatures over the weekend will rival the cold blast from this

past weekend with highs bottoming out in the single digits and teens

on Sunday and subzero lows possible in some parts of the forecast

area both Saturday and Sunday nights. Some temperature recovery will

develop by early next week but the overall temperature trend will

remain well below normal for mid February.

 

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