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6 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1150 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
No changes are necessary, and please see the previous discussion.
..Nauslar.. 02/15/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0132 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025/
...Synopsis...
Behind a departing trough, high pressure will build in aloft with
height rises across much of the western/central US. In addition, a
post-frontal cool air mass will be in place across much of the
central US on D2 - Sunday, supporting higher relative humidity
across the southern Plains. This pattern will keep fire weather
concerns low across the CONUS.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1150 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
No changes are necessary, and please see the previous discussion.
..Nauslar.. 02/15/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0132 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025/
...Synopsis...
Behind a departing trough, high pressure will build in aloft with
height rises across much of the western/central US. In addition, a
post-frontal cool air mass will be in place across much of the
central US on D2 - Sunday, supporting higher relative humidity
across the southern Plains. This pattern will keep fire weather
concerns low across the CONUS.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1150 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
No changes are necessary, and please see the previous discussion.
..Nauslar.. 02/15/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0132 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025/
...Synopsis...
Behind a departing trough, high pressure will build in aloft with
height rises across much of the western/central US. In addition, a
post-frontal cool air mass will be in place across much of the
central US on D2 - Sunday, supporting higher relative humidity
across the southern Plains. This pattern will keep fire weather
concerns low across the CONUS.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1150 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
No changes are necessary, and please see the previous discussion.
..Nauslar.. 02/15/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0132 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025/
...Synopsis...
Behind a departing trough, high pressure will build in aloft with
height rises across much of the western/central US. In addition, a
post-frontal cool air mass will be in place across much of the
central US on D2 - Sunday, supporting higher relative humidity
across the southern Plains. This pattern will keep fire weather
concerns low across the CONUS.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1150 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
No changes are necessary, and please see the previous discussion.
..Nauslar.. 02/15/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0132 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025/
...Synopsis...
Behind a departing trough, high pressure will build in aloft with
height rises across much of the western/central US. In addition, a
post-frontal cool air mass will be in place across much of the
central US on D2 - Sunday, supporting higher relative humidity
across the southern Plains. This pattern will keep fire weather
concerns low across the CONUS.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1150 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
No changes are necessary, and please see the previous discussion.
..Nauslar.. 02/15/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0132 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025/
...Synopsis...
Behind a departing trough, high pressure will build in aloft with
height rises across much of the western/central US. In addition, a
post-frontal cool air mass will be in place across much of the
central US on D2 - Sunday, supporting higher relative humidity
across the southern Plains. This pattern will keep fire weather
concerns low across the CONUS.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1150 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
No changes are necessary, and please see the previous discussion.
..Nauslar.. 02/15/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0132 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025/
...Synopsis...
Behind a departing trough, high pressure will build in aloft with
height rises across much of the western/central US. In addition, a
post-frontal cool air mass will be in place across much of the
central US on D2 - Sunday, supporting higher relative humidity
across the southern Plains. This pattern will keep fire weather
concerns low across the CONUS.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1150 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
No changes are necessary, and please see the previous discussion.
..Nauslar.. 02/15/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0132 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025/
...Synopsis...
Behind a departing trough, high pressure will build in aloft with
height rises across much of the western/central US. In addition, a
post-frontal cool air mass will be in place across much of the
central US on D2 - Sunday, supporting higher relative humidity
across the southern Plains. This pattern will keep fire weather
concerns low across the CONUS.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
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6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 161200Z - 171200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN
GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
Mid-Atlantic region.
...Synopsis...
A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
evolve across much of the rest of the country.
At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
Northeast.
...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.
Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
offshore through mid afternoon.
..Goss.. 02/15/2025
Read more
6 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1042 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025
Valid 151630Z - 161200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...MID-SOUTH...AND SOUTHEAST...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are expected from parts of far east Texas into
much of the lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast this afternoon
through the overnight. Several tornadoes and scattered to numerous
damaging wind gusts should be the primary threats. A few strong
tornadoes are also possible.
...Synopsis...
Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a potent mid-level trough
over the Permian Basin pivoting east through the base of a larger
scale trough forecast to shift from the Rockies east into the MS
Valley. A complex surface pattern is evident with a low over OK
with an accompanying trailing cold front, while a maritime
boundary/residual frontal zone is draped over east TX arcing
northeastward into the MS/AR/TN border region and then southeastward
into the northeast Gulf of America. As the cyclone consolidates and
moves eastward this afternoon into AR, the aforementioned composite
boundary will advance northward as a warm front into the Mid South
and towards the southern Appalachians late. The cold front is
forecast to push southeast and overtake the western portion of the
warm sector late today into tonight and provide a focus for numerous
developing thunderstorms in the form of a squall line.
...East Texas into the Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast...
Strong low-level warm advection has resulted in scattered
showers/thunderstorms mainly north of the warm front from AR east
into TN. Southerly flow will promote poleward moist advection with
60s deg F dewpoints spreading north across the lower MS Valley into
parts of the Mid South. The destabilizing warm sector will remain
capped during the day before stronger large-scale ascent approaching
from the west results in a extensive thunderstorm development from
the Ark-La-Tex northeast into eastern AR/western TN/KY. Filtered
daytime heating and low-level moistening will aid in the development
of around 500-1000 J/kg of MLCAPE by mid to late afternoon.
Surface-based thunderstorms are forecast to develop by mid afternoon
near or on the cold front from east TX into the Mid South. Only a
narrow window of opportunity for supercells will likely occur before
rapid upscale growth into an extensive squall line by early evening.
Strong 0-3 km shear, aided by a 45-55+ kt low-level jet, will easily
aid updraft rotation and organized severe thunderstorms.
Ample low-level shear will support a threat for several
line-embedded tornadoes beginning from late this afternoon through
early Sunday morning. The potential for supercells ahead of the line
will likely remain limited but will be greatest perhaps over the
southern parts of MS/AL tonight. However, if cellular structures
are maintained in the large-scale thunderstorm band, an accompanying
risk for tornadoes may focus there and with any bowing inflections
in the line. Given the low CAPE/high shear setup with relatively
modest lapse rates and moist profiles, scattered to numerous
severe/damaging winds will likely occur with the squall line as it
matures. Have increased damaging wind probabilities from parts of
MS into AL where confidence is greatest for damaging gusts later
tonight. A continued tornado/damaging wind risk will become
increasingly confined to the Gulf coastal plain late tonight into
the early Sunday morning hours.
..Smith/Supinie.. 02/15/2025
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Checked
5 years 10 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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