HEADLINES
– Surface cold front and upper level low pressure=scattered showers Thursday.
– Briefly cooler Thursday and Friday, then a sunny, above-average weekend.
– Rain chances return next Monday night through Wednesday.
RAIN AMOUNTS TOMORROW:
TODAY’S MAP
NWS TECHNICAL DISCUSSION
An mid/upper-level low sits to our northeast and another is taking shape to our southwest. With Indiana currently between systems, subsidence has lead to clear skies and relatively light winds. A cirrus shield from the low to our southwest is gradually overspreading the area, however, and most locations will see a thin cloud cover by morning. Skies should remain clear long enough to potentially promote some patchy fog formation early this morning. Despite increasing cloud cover, temperatures should rise well into the 70s today for most. Some locations may even push 80 degrees, though this depends a bit on how thick the cirrus deck is. Right now, it looks to be thick enough to prevent widespread 80 degree temps from occurring. A cold front gradually advancing southward will arrive late this afternoon causing winds to turn northwesterly and eventually northeasterly overnight. Highs may be 10 degrees cooler on Thursday due to this front. It is interesting to note that there may be enough instability this afternoon for a few showers to develop. Guidance seems to focus this activity along a surface convergence zone separating northeasterly flow associated with the low to our northeast, and southerly flow associated with the one approaching from the southwest. Model soundings show very shallow CAPE profiles with little flow in the effective layer. As such, any showers should be short-lived and likely too weak to generate lightning. Activity should begin to initiate around peak heating (late afternoon/early evening). Shower activity may continue into Wednesday night as the mid/upper low arrives from the southwest. Moisture advection ahead of the system should allow instability to gradually increase as well, at least to the point where thunder may start being possible. Overall, forcing and instability look weak, and shear appears low...so severe thunderstorms are not currently expected. However, storm motion looks rather slow...and there is a possibility that a few locations see heavy rainfall between 1-2 inches. This may lead to a very localized minor flooding threat. Greatest likelihood of thunderstorms Wednesday night into Thursday is over southern Indiana. && .LONG TERM (Thursday through Tuesday)... Issued at 303 AM EDT Wed May 7 2025 Quiet weather begins the long range as a split flow pattern takes hold over the CONUS. Temperatures start off cool under persistent northeasterly surface flow, but gradually rise as the mid/upper low featured in the short term gradually drifts southward. Surface high pressure and ridging aloft (within the northern jet) should promote quiet conditions with large diurnal curves. Temperatures warm into the 70s again by Friday and Saturday, and potentially into the 80s Sunday. The mid/upper low, to our south by this point, is modeled to drift northward early next week...once again bringing active weather to Indiana. Given the feature`s weak surface reflection, moisture advection northward looks to be modest at best. Together with weak/broad forcing, precipitation will be scattered in nature. Some members of guidance show CAPE values as high as 1200 J/Kg by Monday with a deeply saturated profile, so precipitation will likely be convective with the potential for heavy downpours. The slow-moving system begins to depart mid next week. Day 8-14: ensemble guidance is hinting at a shift away from blocking/cut-off slow-moving lows to a more dynamic and progressive flow pattern. As of right now, ensembles show more troughing out west with east coast ridging. Such a pattern favors warmer-than- average conditions with near-normal precipitation. && .AVIATION (12Z TAF Issuance)... Issued at 650 AM EDT Wed May 7 2025 Impacts: -Patchy fog at KBMG -Very isolated showers possible around 00z -Showers possible after about 09z Thursday Discussion: VFR conditions expected through today. MVFR conditions possible Thursday with rain showers and lower ceilings. Winds initially out of the WSW should gradually become northwesterly as a front approaches from the north. Winds may go light and variable as the front slows down this afternoon. Eventually, this boundary will progress southwestward leading to winds becoming northeasterly at all terminals tonight. Guidance is hinting at the possibility of isolated showers developing during the late afternoon hours (around 00z). These, should they occur, will be short-lived and relatively weak. Thunder is not currently expected even if showers develop. There is a better chance of showers arriving after about 09z Thursday, mainly across southern Indiana. HUF and BMG have the best chance of a shower Thursday morning. There is also a low chance of thunder with Thursday`s shower activity.
INDY SEVEN DAY FORECAST
Today: Partly sunny. High 76.
Tonight: Partly cloudy evening. Clouds increase overnight. Low 55.
Thursday: Partly to mostly cloudy, with scattered showers. Thunder possible south of Indy. High 68.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy. Low 44.
Friday: Mostly sunny. High 68.
Friday Night: Mostly clear. Low 45.
Saturday: Mostly sunny. High 73.
Saturday Night: Mostly clear. Low 52.
Sunday: Mostly sunny. High 77.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear. Low 56.
Monday: Mostly to partly sunny. High 79.
Monday: Partly to mostly cloudy. Spotty showers. Low 61.
Tuesday: Partly to mostly cloudy. Scattered showers and storms. High 78.

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