FXUS63 KIWX 180522 AFDIWX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Northern Indiana 122 AM EDT Mon May 18 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Severe thunderstorms Monday afternoon and evening. Heavy rain, damaging wind gusts, and hail are the the primary hazards. - Additional severe storms are anticipated on Tuesday. - Remaining warm and humid through Tuesday. Cooler and dry by Wednesday with highs only in the 60s. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 211 PM EDT Sun May 17 2026 The primary severe weather concern tomorrow evolves around what is expected to be an upstream, mature, MCS early Monday morning. MCS maintenance is dependent, in part, on mid-level lapse rates, instability, and bulk shear. Instability appears to be a non- issue across northern IL and even northwest IN on either side of sunrise Monday, with MUCAPE values of 1,000-1,500 j/kg. Lapse rates near 7C/km are also favorable, but shear magnitude of only 25 knots immediately ahead of the line is marginal at best, in contrast to increased shear values behind the line (which could be a result of the model-derived convection). Given the aformentioned nuances, and upper-level forcing lifting north of our area, an incoming MCS from Illinois in the morning will be in a weakening phase as it approaches northwest Indiana just after sunrise. The associated outflow boundary from this MCS is likely the catalyst for afternoon severe thunderstorms (best window of opportunity appears to be 1p to 10p EDT). Forecast soundings ahead of the line show bountiful SFC and MU CAPE in excess of 2,000 j/kg while bulk shear values is marginal near 25 knots. Steep low-level lapse rates suggest damaging winds are the primary hazard, as does the anticipated linear storm mode. A southwesterly low-level shear vector indicates a low tornado probability for the northern edge of any MCS that develops. Cannot rule out hail from any discrete storms that develop ahead of the line. A final plausible outcome for Monday is that the weakening MCS moves from west to east Monday morning through midday, resulting in abundant cloud cover and steady rain for a time which ultimately squashes the severe weather risk. Given the preceding instability (as noted above) this seems unlikely. Similarly, severe weather appears increasingly likely on Tuesday as the slow-moving cold front ultimately responsible for this active weather pattern moves through. Instability continues to be ample while 0-6km shear improves toward 35 knots. With the cold front in play, tornadoes are possible as well. Fine details remain to be seen, but early indications suggest a line of thunderstorms develops to our west and moves through Tuesday afternoon and evening. Notably cooler starting Wednesday with highs only in the 60s. High pressure promotes dry weather through at least Friday, perhaps into Saturday, depending on the timing of the next disturbance lifting in from the Southern Plains. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 117 AM EDT Mon May 18 2026 VFR conditions will continue through midday with the only concern being some marginal LLWS as the low level flow begins to ramp up somewhat. A decaying MCS out of Iowa, Missouri, and Illinois will be the focus for potential strong to severe storms today. This complex is expected to weaken over Illinois this morning and then reintensify across northern Indiana around 18Z. Breezy southerly wind will gust as high as 30 kts today, even outside of any showers or storms. The strongest storms may end up east of IN-15 towards KFWA, but have maintained a PROB30 at KSBN for 17-20Z and a few hours later at KFWA from 19-22Z. MVFR ceilings and visibilities possible within any storms. The main threats today will be heavy rain and damaging wind gusts up to 50kts. && .IWX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IN...None. OH...None. MI...None. MARINE...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Brown AVIATION...Johnson