Palatine, Illinois 7 Day Weather Forecast
Wx Forecast - Wx Discussion - Wx Aviation
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NWS Forecast for Palatine IL
National Weather Service Forecast for:
Palatine IL
Issued by: National Weather Service Chicago, IL |
Updated: 2:42 pm CST Nov 23, 2024 |
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Tonight
Patchy Drizzle and Patchy Fog
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Sunday
Partly Sunny
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Sunday Night
Areas Drizzle
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Monday
Patchy Drizzle then Chance Rain
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Monday Night
Mostly Cloudy
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Tuesday
Mostly Sunny
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Tuesday Night
Mostly Cloudy then Chance Snow
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Wednesday
Chance Snow
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Wednesday Night
Chance Snow
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Lo 34 °F |
Hi 50 °F |
Lo 44 °F |
Hi 50 °F |
Lo 26 °F |
Hi 35 °F |
Lo 27 °F |
Hi 37 °F |
Lo 29 °F |
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Tonight
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Patchy drizzle between 11pm and 1am. Patchy fog between 9pm and 4am. Otherwise, cloudy, with a low around 34. Southwest wind around 5 mph. |
Sunday
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Partly sunny, with a high near 50. South southeast wind 5 to 10 mph, with gusts as high as 15 mph. |
Sunday Night
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Patchy drizzle before midnight, then areas of drizzle with scattered showers after midnight. Cloudy, with a low around 44. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph becoming south southwest after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 40%. |
Monday
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Patchy drizzle before 9am, then a chance of rain after noon. Cloudy, with a high near 50. West northwest wind 5 to 10 mph increasing to 10 to 15 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 25 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%. |
Monday Night
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Mostly cloudy, with a low around 26. West northwest wind around 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph. |
Tuesday
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 35. |
Tuesday Night
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A 30 percent chance of snow after midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 27. |
Wednesday
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A chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 37. |
Wednesday Night
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A chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 29. |
Thanksgiving Day
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A chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 38. |
Thursday Night
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A chance of snow showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 26. |
Friday
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 33. |
Friday Night
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Partly cloudy, with a low around 17. |
Saturday
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Partly sunny, with a high near 29. |
Forecast from NOAA-NWS
for Palatine IL.
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Weather Forecast Discussion
062
FXUS63 KLOT 232028
AFDLOT
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL
228 PM CST Sat Nov 23 2024
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Low clouds will continue overnight with areas of fog,
potentially dense, developing by midnight.
- Sunday will be noticeably warmer with highs in the 50s, though
showers and drizzle will develop Sunday night and continue
into Monday morning.
- Potential for travel impacts from accumulating snow in the
Tuesday night to Thanksgiving Day period appears to be
increasing.
- Below normal temperatures will prevail Monday night through
Thursday, followed by much below normal (true mid-winter
cold) Friday-Saturday and beyond.
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 228 PM CST Sat Nov 23 2024
Through Monday Morning:
We remain stuck under a low-level stratus deck.
Neutral to modestly positive mid-level height tendencies and
associated subsidence are forcing the inversion to lower and cloud
layer to thin. Indeed, recent AMDAR soundings from aircraft
arriving/departing MDW indicate that the base of the inversion has
lowered some 1000 feet in the past 3 hours, and forecast soundings
suggest the cloud depth is a mere 1000 feet deep. It is thus not
surprising that recent satellite imagery across eastern Iowa and
southwestern Illinois (where inversion heights/cloud depths are even
lower/shallower) is depicting an erosion of the stratus layer thanks
to the mechanical entrainment of dry air via the warming boundary
layer. As steering low-level flow become southwesterly this
afternoon (thanks to the center of a surface high positioned just to
our southeast), the clearing line should sneak into northwestern
Illinois and central Illinois by this evening.
Where the clearing line is at sunset may be fairly important to how
the night will go. As low-level warm-air advection gradually
increases, the strength/depth of the inversion will correspondingly
increase. With a lack of mixing beneath the inversion to erode
stratus, cloud bases along the southwestern edge of the stratus
layer will be encouraged to quickly "build downward." Now, it`s
always tough to know if dense fog or just very low clouds will be
favored anytime low-level flow is non-negligible in these regimes.
For now, felt there was enough justification to introduce a
northeastward-moving area of low clouds/fog across our area tonight.
Overnight lows should settle in the low to mid 30s.
Tomorrow, aggregate zonal upper-level flow with consolidating
shortwaves traversing the Rocky Mountains should induce the
development of a broad surface low in the central Plains. As a
result, southeasterly winds will increase locally after daybreak and
erode any lingering fog/low clouds. Robust warm-air advection (950mb
temperatures rising ~7C in 24 hrs) will facilitate to a jump in
afternoon temperatures to the low to mid 50sF in spite of overcast
skies (upper-level clouds).
Tomorrow night, the surface low will lift northeastward toward the
Lower Great Lakes. The passage of a low-level warm frontal zone and
aggressive warm-air advection facilitated by an intensifying 925-
850mb low-level jet will set the stage for widespread drizzle and
rain showers. (Forecast BUFKIT profiles exhibit a classic
"crosshairs" signature of lift within a deepening low-level stratus
layer and a double-inversion temperature profile). Accordingly,
opted to aggressively increase PoPs and collaborate the introduction
of QPF with WPC tomorrow night to offset the deficient QMD bias
correction scheme from which the NBM suffers. Drizzle and rain
showers will be poised to continue unabated until the cold front
associated with the surface low surges through after daybreak on
Monday. As a result, Sunday night through Monday morning look rather
dreary.
Borchardt
Monday Afternoon through Saturday:
In the wake of the cold front, Monday afternoon will feature
blustery winds (westerly gusts up to 30 mph) and falling
temperatures. The guidance continues to exhibit run to run
variance with the extent of post-frontal light rain Monday
afternoon and early evening. Over the past few cycles, the GFS
has been the most consistent in sufficient moisture for a
footprint of QPF to traverse southeast in response to short-wave
impulse crossing the mid and upper MS Valley. PoPs in the 30-40%
range continue to appear reasonable given the lingering uncertainty.
Skies might *finally* clear out in the continued blustery cold
advection Monday night into Tuesday. Despite chilly temps only
topping out in the mid to upper 30s, Tuesday may have the only
real chance for an all too fleeting glimpse of the sun through
Thanksgiving Day.
For the all important busy Thanksgiving travel period, there are
a few features of interest. The past few model cycles have shown
an increasing signal for warm advection and frontogenesis driven
period of snow (modest accumulations) and associated travel
impacts late Tuesday night into/through the Wednesday morning
commute. In collaboration with neighboring offices, adjusted
PoPs into the (30%) chance range across the area.
Even more notably, a fairly moisture laden southern stream wave
is likely to emerge from the southern Rockies during this period.
Strongly confluent flow over northeastern North America caused
by a deep PV lobe near James Bay will tend to cause more zonal
flow less prone to strong amplification of the southern stream
wave. With that said, one of the key sensitivities in the
forecast is the potential for a northern stream wave crossing
the northern Rockies to phase with the southern stream mid-level
wave. This constructive interaction (or lack thereof) has major
implications on the track, strength, and wintry impacts caused
by the surface low pressure system passing to our south later
Wednesday into Thanksgiving Day.
Given the noteworthy increase in ensemble membership for a
stronger system tracking farther north near the Ohio River
Valley, increased PoPs into the 30-50% range area-wide Wednesday
afternoon into Thanksgiving. The higher PoPs are still indicated
south of I-80 to account for the slightly more suppressed
solutions that comprise a sizeable ensemble membership of their
own. Lower-level thermal progs appear cold enough for a
primarily wet (due to temps generally near/above 32F) snow
event, barring a much stronger solution which would bring the
rain/snow line farther north. For this reason, did hold onto a
chance of rain primarily south of I-80 Wednesday evening/night.
Northeast winds off the mild waters of Lake Michigan may pose
some p-type and/or accumulation efficiency issues along the
lakeshore, including Chicago, if the stronger/wetter outcome
comes to fruition. Nevertheless, the Wednesday afternoon into
Thanksgiving period bears close watching for accumulating snow
and travel impacts in the general region. Regardless of how
Wednesday PM-Thanksgiving Day plays out, another northern stream
trough could bring a chance of light snow/snow showers
Thanksgiving night into early Friday.
In a stark change from recent cool seasons, looking ahead into
the beginning of December, the decidedly cold and wintry
pattern will persist. Pronounced high latitude riding over the
northeast Pacific near Alaska will allow for plenty of cold air
to surge southward from our source region (Canada and the
northern Plains) later week and beyond. Friday looks to be
blustery and cold (highs only in the upper 20s-lower 30s!) for
the busy holiday shopping day. The lake effect machine will
undoubtedly get going in this pattern, though likely focused
primarily east of our CWA on Friday-Friday night due to west-
northwest flow. Following lows in the teens to lower 20s (Brr)
Friday night, highs on Saturday may not get out of the 20s, with
even colder air waiting in the wings for the rest of the weekend!
We`ll have to keep an eye on any low amplitude clipper-type
waves in the upcoming pattern for additional opportunities for
periods of accumulating snow.
Castro
&&
.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z MONDAY/...
Issued at 1156 AM CST Sat Nov 23 2024
The main aviation weather concerns for the 18Z TAF period
include:
* Continued MVFR cigs today dropping to IFR/LIFR for this
evening into early Sunday
* A period of fog possibly impacting vsbys this evening and
tonight
MVFR cigs will remain parked over the terminals for the
remainder of the afternoon. RFD is expected to see cigs drop
to IFR later this afternoon, while the Chicagoland sites will
lag behind until the early-mid evening. IFR then looks to hang
on through tonight and beyond daybreak tomorrow before cigs
should scatter around mid- morning. A period of LIFR cigs may be
in the cards tonight, with the best odds at seeing LIFR being
from mid-evening into the earlier part of the overnight at all
sites. A period of fog may also develop, again with the greatest
potential from mid-evening into the early overnight, although
there is lesser confidence in impacts to vsbys tonight.
Meanwhile, SW winds largely below 10 kt will subside to near 5
kt tonight and back to SSE during the early morning. SSE winds
to near 10 kt can be expected during the better part of Sunday.
Doom
&&
.LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
IL...None.
IN...None.
LM...None.
&&
$$
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