HEADLINES
– Passing shower in the morning. Better chances in the afternoon and early evening. Maybe thunder. Nothing severe.
– Periodic shower and storm chances Tuesday and Wednesday.
– Hottest air of the year Thursday. Could be records. It will also be muggy.
– If storms get going Thursday afternoon and evening they could get severe.
TODAY’S MAP
NWS TECHNICAL DISCUSSION
5 A large mid/upper-level low is lifting northward out of the lower Mississippi Valley. The system is largely cut off from the polar jet, which resides well to our north over the US Canada border. With such weak steering flow, the system will move quite slowly and be the region for a could of days this week. Rich low-level moisture is advecting northward ahead of the approaching system. The low-humidity weather we`ve seen for the past few days will soon be a thing of the past as dew points steadily rise into the 60s today. The muggy air mass then persists through at least Thursday. Thankfully, abundant cloud cover and occasional rain showers should prevent temperatures and heat indices from becoming too high. Highs today should climb into the low to mid 70s. Speaking of rain showers, showers should arrive as early as sunrise this morning. Surface forcing is quite weak, so activity looks to be scattered in nature and fairly weak given minimal convective instability. Instability is weak, to start, but guidance shows CAPE increasing to about 1500 J/Kg by the afternoon. As such, some thunderstorms may develop as the day progresses. Model soundings show fairly uniform flow through the column resulting in minimal effective shear (under 20kt). Storms may be pulse-like or congeal into loosely organized clusters. Severe potential is low. Surface heating is lost at sunset and convective instability should wane, leading to any residual showers or storms dissipating during the night. A few isolated showers may persist but these will be far and few between. Overall, the night will be mild with thick low- level clouds hanging around. Lows should drop only into the 60s. && .LONG TERM (Tuesday through Sunday)... Issued at 328 AM EDT Mon May 12 2025 Tuesday and Wednesday... The decaying yet broad upper trough will continue to slowly track its western portions over Indiana...as its center spins from near Tennessee early Tuesday to around Lake Erie by late Wednesday. Overall resultant conditions for the local region will be above normal warmth and humidity as light southerly breezes maintain dewpoints in the low 60s...while providing afternoon highs in the upper 70s to lower 80s. Diurnally driven rain showers and a few non-severe thunderstorms will be most pronounced Tuesday afternoon...when the weak steering will allow locally heavier rain rates to possible promote isolated, at least moderate rainfall over the region`s southern third where a marginal risk of Excessive Rainfall is present. Lesser chances of widely scattered downpours on Wednesday with the axis of forcing drifting across Ohio, yet a non-zero chance of excessive rainfall should exist for eastern/northeastern zones. Can not rule out ponding of low-lying areas either day if caught under a stronger shower/long-lasting t-storm, but flash flooding is not expected. Most locations can expect a couple passing showers...outside of the Tuesday afternoon timeframe which should feature numerous, occasionally moderate showers. Thursday through Sunday... A taste of summer will be in store for the Midwest on at least Thursday when this week`s warm trend reaches its peak...courtesy of cyclogenesis over Minnesota coupling with an upper subtropical ridge building northward into at least the Ohio Valley...boosting readings to near-record levels in likely the upper 80s along with dewpoints approaching 70F. At least the southerly flow bringing this Gulf juice will be on robust gusts around 15-25 mph which will provide some relief to the tropical air. A conditional strong/severe storm threat is on the table for late Thursday into Thursday night as the relatively high theta-E boundary layer air will produce high instability relative to the decreasing mid-level heights amid the approaching northern system...along with ample vertical wind shear arriving from the west. Big question is if the capped thermal profile can be overcome...which may be determined by subtle changes in forcing aloft. SHould convection get going, a few severe storms could be possible especially during the late day hours. Details here will be refined through further updates this week. A more zonal upper pattern this weekend will follow the occluded system lingering near Ontario. Overall flat flow amid the rather weak cool frontal zone that should drag/stall near the CWA, under H500 heights near/above 570 dm...will promote more reasonable above normal warmth, perhaps following one more warmer day in the 80s Friday. Chances for occasional convection should linger through the long term`s final three days, especially around the late Friday/ early Saturday timeframe should a less-organized disturbance try to scoot from the southern Plains to the Ohio Valley.
INDY SEVEN DAY FORECAST
Today: Mostly cloudy, with occasional showers, mainly in the afternoon. Some thunder possible. High 74.
Tonight: Scattered showers in the evening. Some thunder possible. Low 63.
Tuesday: Partly to mostly cloudy. Scattered showers and storm chances in the morning. Likely in the afternoon. High 76.
Tuesday Night: Scattered showers and storms. Low 62.
Wednesday: Partly to mostly cloudy. Scattered showers and storms. High 80.
Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy. Low 64.
Thursday: Partly sunny , hot and humid. Spotty showers and storms in the afternoon, possibly severe. High 87.
Thursday Night: Spotty showers or storms in the evening, possibly severe. Low 67.
Friday: Mostly sunny and hot. Not as humid. High 85.
Friday Night: Clouds increase. Scattered showers and storms. Low 62.
Saturday Mostly sunny. High 79.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy. Low 57.
Sunday: Partly sunny. High 77.

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