007 FXUS63 KBIS 151022 AFDBISArea Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Bismarck ND 522 AM CDT Mon Sep 15 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Dense fog in northwest North Dakota this morning.
- Showers and isolated thunderstorms continue today, lifting north into Canada this evening.
- On and off low to medium chances for showers and isolated thunderstorms remain in the forecast through the work week.
- Seasonable temperatures are expected this week, with the first half being warmer than the second half.
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.DISCUSSION... Issued at 521 AM CDT Mon Sep 15 2025
A negatively-tilted shortwave trough resides over the western Dakotas early this morning and is embedded in longer-wave troughing that also features a closed low between the Cascades and Northern Rockies and another one in northwest Saskatchewan. Broad surface low pressure is analyzed nearly underneath the negative-tilt shortwave from southeast Saskatchewan through western North Dakota. Bands of rain continue along the associated 700 mb trough axis early this morning from northwest to south central North Dakota. In the far northwest part of the state, dense fog prevails outside of steadier showers. A Dense Fog Advisory remains in effect until 10 AM CDT, but could be allowed to be cancelled early if more widespread persistent rain becomes established.
Surface low is forecast to deepen in the southwest corner of Manitoba today as the mid and upper trough axes pivot northeastward. High-resolution models remain in fair agreement that at least scattered showers will lift into north central North Dakota this afternoon. These should diminish or move off into Canada this evening. A few thunderstorms are also possible this afternoon, but CAPE and especially effective bulk shear are both projected to be much lower today. A period of gusty winds cannot be ruled out as the surface pressure gradient tightens across northern North Dakota late this afternoon. High temperatures today are forecast around 70 to 80, coolest north and warmest south.
The upstream low approaching the Northern Rockies is forecast to initiate convection off the higher terrain of southern Montana/ northern Wyoming this afternoon. Models favor this convection sustaining and propagating northeastward into southwest North Dakota late this evening as the upstream low begins broadening out and digging back into the Great Basin, forcing a new trough with positive tilt. CAPE and shear appear unsupportive of severe weather, but steep low and mid level lapse rates could trigger some strong downburst gusts. Isolated showers and an occasional thunderstorm could linger across parts of the state on Tuesday as the upstream low cuts itself off from the main flow but leaves weak vorticity advection over the region. Most locations though are likely to experience a dry and seasonably warm day on Tuesday with highs around 75 to 80.
By Wednesday, the aforementioned northwest Saskatchewan low is forecast to interact with the other two waves. This could result in a chaotic synoptic pattern, but one that is generally defined by central CONUS troughing. One possible outcome that is favored by 3 out of 4 clusters composing around 75 percent total ensemble membership is for the two western lows to cutoff into a Fujiwhara effect over the Northern and Central Plains Thursday and Friday. Regardless, all ensemble systems and clusters tend to favor a slight cool down and increased chances for rain for the second half of the week. Southern North Dakota has higher chances for rain over this time period compared to the north. The stagnant north central CONUS low/trough could get pushed eastward this weekend by upstream effects of a strong Gulf of Alaska low digging into western Canada. Despite the inherent ensemble uncertainty and typical low predictability of cutoff lows, clusters are in fairly good agreement for a brief period of anticyclonic flow this weekend with strong thermal ridging from the US Rockies through the Canadian Prairies. This would favor a period of drier weather and a slight warmup, moreso for western parts of the state.
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.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 522 AM CDT Mon Sep 15 2025
Showers with an occasional thunderstorm will continue across the western half of North Dakota this morning, slowly lifting north-northeast through the afternoon. Rain could reduce visibility as low as IFR levels at times. Dense fog and LIFR ceilings will also prevail in much of northwest and parts of north central North Dakota until later this morning. MVFR to IFR ceilings are otherwise expected for most areas this morning, improving from south to north through the afternoon. Central North Dakota will see southwesterly winds increase to around 10-15 kts Monday afternoon, with northwesterly winds around 10 kts farther west. A period of stronger gusts cannot be ruled out from KXWA to KMOT late this afternoon.
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.BIS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Dense Fog Advisory until 10 AM CDT this morning for NDZ001-002- 009-010.
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DISCUSSION...Hollan AVIATION...Hollan
NWS BIS Office Area Forecast Discussion