IWX discussion is solid. I found the bolded section especially interesting.
.SHORT TERM...(This Evening through Tuesday)
Issued at 313 PM EDT Mon Apr 3 2023
The forcing mechanism for rain chances these next 12 hours or so is
a little murky. As of this writing, a stationary front is bisecting
the area SW to NE, evident mainly in difference between temperature
and dew points over the area. Very little to speak of for surface
wind. Isentropic ascent on the 295K surface seems to line up ok with
current radar returns hugging the MI-IN line and IL-WI line. Rain
shower coverage is expected to increase through the evening and
overnight as lift along this isentropic surface amplifies.
Additionally, a secondary baroclinic zone at 850-mb lifts in
overnight. Lapse rates near 7.5C/km offer a slight chance of thunder
as the previous forecaster stated, so, no change to that piece of
the forecast.
Rain chances on Tuesday are expected to decline after sunrise as the
previously described forcing mechanisms continue to lift north.
Forcing is generally absent through the daytime hours on Tuesday,
thus making shower and storm chances uncertain. Therefore, the SPC
outlook for Tuesday seems to be nocturnal. After sunset, the 850-mb
jet intensifies according to the NAM and HREF and we're in the right
exit region which is not ideal for thunderstorm development. Dew
points will swell to near 60 degrees late Tuesday, indicative of
ample moisture. MUCAPE and shear will be ample as well. composite
reflectivity on a suite of CAMs show some discrete supercells
possible overnight, while others are quiet. I have asked for a
downgrade to a marginal risk for this uncertainty but was declined
with no further details. So, we'll continue to message a
lesser/uncertain threat Tuesday night while focusing more on
Wednesday.
&&
.LONG TERM...(Tuesday Night through Monday)
Issued at 313 PM EDT Mon Apr 3 2023
The risk of severe weather seems more likely on Wednesday as a 110kt
500-mb jet moves over Illinois and into Michigan. We'll be in the
right entrance region late in the day, offering favorable upper-
level support for storms. Forecast soundings show plenty of CAPE and
shear, and once again a risk for tornadoes via strong SRH (looping
hodographs). Storm mode is a little murky in the CAMs, with some
showing discrete storms ahead of the cold front. Others confine the
severe risk to just the cold front. I'd estimate the severe weather
risk to begin midday if the discrete storms are able to materialize.
The cold front looks to sweep from west to east and exit the
forecast area soon after sunset Wednesday.
A much welcome break from active weather arrives thereafter with
high pressure taking shape through at least Saturday. The next upper-
level low moves through the region early next week with significant
disagreement in guidance at this distance. this low could bring
cooler and rainy conditions.