I think today we will keep it mostly dry with some Partly cloudy skies over the WLFI viewing area........ Highs will be in the upper 70s to low 80s around 80* degrees. Lows still mild around 60* degrees possible. We will keep the winds light and calm between 5 and 10 mph with some more clouds moving in by later on this evening / tonight. Also we will see some rain possible later on tonight mainly into Wednesday morning / afternoon.
Tomorrow / Wednesday is when we will see even more rainfall across the area with scattered rain showers moving in along with this Low pressure system. We will be looking for rainfall anywhere between a quarter inch to a half inch possible with still some possible locally higher amounts to three quarters of an inch not being able to rule out. Highs will be in the middle to upper 70s around 78 degrees possible and lows still cool in the upper 50s around 59* degrees. Winds will be moderate between 20 and 25 mph. We will see the rain let up closer to that evening.......... I will have more updates on this later as we continue to get closer! (You can count on that) ;]
Now I did want to show you all this as I thought you might like to see this! Or find it kinda cool..... Check this out below....................
POSSIBLE IMPACT EVENT ON JUPITER: Did something just hit Jupiter? On July 19th, a black "scar" appeared in Jupiter's clouds similar to the Shoemaker-Levy 9 impacts of 1994. Veteran Jupiter observer Anthony Wesley photographed the feature from his observatory in Murrumbateman, Australia:"The jet-black mark is near Jupiter's south pole (south is up in the image)," says Wesley. "I have imagery of that same location from two nights earlier without the impact mark, so this is a very recent event. The material has already begun to spread out in a fan shape on one side, and should be rapidly pulled apart by the fast jetstream winds. I recorded a lot of footage, and will be generating more images and a rotation animation soon."
JUPITER UPDATE: New imagery of Jupiter from NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility in Hawaii suggests that something did indeed hit Jupiter. "It could be the impact of a comet, but we don't know for sure yet," says Glenn Orton, a planetary scientist at JPL. [more]
Alright Bloggers! I will check back real soon with more on your weather update coming here to the Indiana Weather Blog.......... Be sure to check back soon..... ;]
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