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11 months 2 weeks ago
WW 0680 Status Updates
STATUS FOR WATCH 0680 HAS NOT BEEN ISSUED YET
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
WW 680 SEVERE TSTM NM TX 212030Z - 220400Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED
Severe Thunderstorm Watch Number 680
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
230 PM MDT Sat Sep 21 2024
The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a
* Severe Thunderstorm Watch for portions of
Eastern New Mexico
West Texas South Plains and Panhandle
* Effective this Saturday afternoon and evening from 230 PM until
1000 PM MDT.
* Primary threats include...
Scattered large hail and isolated very large hail events to 2.5
inches in diameter possible
Isolated damaging wind gusts to 65 mph possible
A tornado or two possible
SUMMARY...Severe storms are expected to develop initially across a
broad north/south part of eastern New Mexico this afternoon, as well
as near the New Mexico/Texas border vicinity. This includes the
potential for some supercell storms.
The severe thunderstorm watch area is approximately along and 105
statute miles north and south of a line from 50 miles west northwest
of Roswell NM to 55 miles southeast of Amarillo TX. For a complete
depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update
(WOUS64 KWNS WOU0).
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
REMEMBER...A Severe Thunderstorm Watch means conditions are
favorable for severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch area.
Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for threatening
weather conditions and listen for later statements and possible
warnings. Severe thunderstorms can and occasionally do produce
tornadoes.
&&
AVIATION...A few severe thunderstorms with hail surface and aloft to
2.5 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind gusts to 55 knots. A
few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 500. Mean storm motion vector
25030.
...Guyer
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
No watches are valid as of Sat Sep 21 20:16:01 UTC 2024.
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0306 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 212000Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.
...20Z Update...
Severe probabilities have been trimmed behind convection in parts of
western Pennsylvania as it appears potential for severe storms will
be diminished through the remainder of the afternoon. In
north-central/northeast Iowa, temperatures have risen into the low
90s ahead of the cold front and near an outflow boundary in the
southeast Minnesota/west-central Wisconsin. This area could see a
locally higher potential for large hail/damaging winds. Still,
linear forcing along the front and very modest mid-level ascent
reduces confidence in a discrete storm mode and sufficient storm
coverage, precluding any increase in severe probabilities.
..Wendt.. 09/21/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024/
...Southern High Plains...
A potent upper low and associated 65-75 kt mid-level jet max
centered over AZ are expected to quickly move eastward,
overspreading the southern Rockies/High Plains this afternoon and
evening. At the surface, sustained southerly flow ahead of a
deepening surface low and trailing cold front over western NM will
support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) with
afternoon heating and continued low-level upslope. As the mid-level
system approaches, mid-level height falls and flow aloft will
intensify, elongating low and mid-level hodographs, allowing for
convective development/organization in the form of supercells.
One source of continued uncertainty is the ongoing elevated
convection and cloud debris centered north of a diffuse surface
boundary stretching from central NM to the western TX Panhandle. So
far, this boundary has been slowly lifting north with pronounced
low-level theta-e advection taking place to the south. As deep-layer
ascent intensifies through the late morning, continued convective
development to the north may support reinforcement and stalling of
the boundary. The northward extent of destabilization remains
unclear, though this boundary could serve as a focus for renewed
development of more robust convection expected later this afternoon.
Most CAM guidance shows scattered thunderstorms initiating off the
higher terrain of eastern NM, or ahead of the cold front farther
west by early this afternoon. These storms should quickly mature
with supportive thermodynamics and kinematics, eventually spreading
eastward into the TX Panhandle. The risk for large to very large
hail/severe gusts will likely accompany the stronger supercells, and
a threat for a couple tornadoes may be realized later this
afternoon/early evening from eastern NM into parts of adjacent west
TX, especially near the boundary where low-level shear may be
locally enhanced.
...Upper Midwest and MO Valley...
A second upper low near the international border is forecast to
quickly move eastward reaching the western Great Lakes by early this
evening. Weak ascent is expected ahead of a surging cold front and
diffuse wave cyclone across the northern MO valley and southern MN.
Surface moistening with a warm front lifting north near the IA/MN
border may act as a focus for more robust convective development
along the cold front late this afternoon. Increasingly orthogonal
deep-layer flow and steeping low/mid-level lapse rates could support
a mix of supercells and multi-cell clusters. A few of the stronger
storms may pose some hail/wind threat, which should peak in
intensity during the early evening. However, somewhat limited
heating and the lack of broader forcing for ascent suggests storm
coverage should remain isolated.
...Western PA into the Mid Atlantic...
Short-wave troughing across the upper OH Valley within mid-level
northwesterly flow is expected to support isolated to widely
scattered thunderstorms across western PA/VA later this afternoon.
Model forecast soundings with moderate buoyancy and modest
deep-layer shear would imply some of the stronger storms being
capable of an isolated risk for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps
some hail. This activity will likely diminish by early evening
coincident with nocturnal cooling.
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0222 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 231200Z - 241200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE OZARKS
TO THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID-SOUTH...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from the Ozarks
to the Ohio Valley and Mid-South region on Monday.
...Synopsis...
The mid-level trough over the Southwest on Saturday will start to be
absorbed within the more broad westerlies on Monday as it moves into
the Missouri region. As this occurs, a belt of mid-level flow will
overspread the Ozarks to Ohio Valley region where a moist airmass is
in place ahead of a synoptic cold front. This cold front will move
slowly east through the period Monday.
...Ozarks to Ohio Valley Region...
Extensive cloud-cover from overnight convection will likely limit
warm-sector heating from northern Arkansas and southern Missouri to
western Kentucky and southern Indiana on Monday. However, at least
some breaks in the clouds should result in pockets of greater
destabilization, particularly later in the day. Inhibition will be
limited across the warm sector, so any areas with greater surface
heating will likely convect given the moist airmass and weak height
falls during the day. The lack of strong heating or any capping
inversion should keep instability somewhat weak through the day and
result in a mostly marginal severe threat despite moderate
deep-layer shear.
A few stronger storms are possible within this zone of weak
instability and moderate shear which may pose a threat for large
hail or damaging wind gusts.
..Bentley.. 09/21/2024
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0222 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 231200Z - 241200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE OZARKS
TO THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID-SOUTH...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from the Ozarks
to the Ohio Valley and Mid-South region on Monday.
...Synopsis...
The mid-level trough over the Southwest on Saturday will start to be
absorbed within the more broad westerlies on Monday as it moves into
the Missouri region. As this occurs, a belt of mid-level flow will
overspread the Ozarks to Ohio Valley region where a moist airmass is
in place ahead of a synoptic cold front. This cold front will move
slowly east through the period Monday.
...Ozarks to Ohio Valley Region...
Extensive cloud-cover from overnight convection will likely limit
warm-sector heating from northern Arkansas and southern Missouri to
western Kentucky and southern Indiana on Monday. However, at least
some breaks in the clouds should result in pockets of greater
destabilization, particularly later in the day. Inhibition will be
limited across the warm sector, so any areas with greater surface
heating will likely convect given the moist airmass and weak height
falls during the day. The lack of strong heating or any capping
inversion should keep instability somewhat weak through the day and
result in a mostly marginal severe threat despite moderate
deep-layer shear.
A few stronger storms are possible within this zone of weak
instability and moderate shear which may pose a threat for large
hail or damaging wind gusts.
..Bentley.. 09/21/2024
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0222 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 231200Z - 241200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE OZARKS
TO THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID-SOUTH...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from the Ozarks
to the Ohio Valley and Mid-South region on Monday.
...Synopsis...
The mid-level trough over the Southwest on Saturday will start to be
absorbed within the more broad westerlies on Monday as it moves into
the Missouri region. As this occurs, a belt of mid-level flow will
overspread the Ozarks to Ohio Valley region where a moist airmass is
in place ahead of a synoptic cold front. This cold front will move
slowly east through the period Monday.
...Ozarks to Ohio Valley Region...
Extensive cloud-cover from overnight convection will likely limit
warm-sector heating from northern Arkansas and southern Missouri to
western Kentucky and southern Indiana on Monday. However, at least
some breaks in the clouds should result in pockets of greater
destabilization, particularly later in the day. Inhibition will be
limited across the warm sector, so any areas with greater surface
heating will likely convect given the moist airmass and weak height
falls during the day. The lack of strong heating or any capping
inversion should keep instability somewhat weak through the day and
result in a mostly marginal severe threat despite moderate
deep-layer shear.
A few stronger storms are possible within this zone of weak
instability and moderate shear which may pose a threat for large
hail or damaging wind gusts.
..Bentley.. 09/21/2024
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0222 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 231200Z - 241200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE OZARKS
TO THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID-SOUTH...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from the Ozarks
to the Ohio Valley and Mid-South region on Monday.
...Synopsis...
The mid-level trough over the Southwest on Saturday will start to be
absorbed within the more broad westerlies on Monday as it moves into
the Missouri region. As this occurs, a belt of mid-level flow will
overspread the Ozarks to Ohio Valley region where a moist airmass is
in place ahead of a synoptic cold front. This cold front will move
slowly east through the period Monday.
...Ozarks to Ohio Valley Region...
Extensive cloud-cover from overnight convection will likely limit
warm-sector heating from northern Arkansas and southern Missouri to
western Kentucky and southern Indiana on Monday. However, at least
some breaks in the clouds should result in pockets of greater
destabilization, particularly later in the day. Inhibition will be
limited across the warm sector, so any areas with greater surface
heating will likely convect given the moist airmass and weak height
falls during the day. The lack of strong heating or any capping
inversion should keep instability somewhat weak through the day and
result in a mostly marginal severe threat despite moderate
deep-layer shear.
A few stronger storms are possible within this zone of weak
instability and moderate shear which may pose a threat for large
hail or damaging wind gusts.
..Bentley.. 09/21/2024
Read more
11 months 2 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0222 PM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024
Valid 231200Z - 241200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE OZARKS
TO THE OHIO VALLEY AND MID-SOUTH...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from the Ozarks
to the Ohio Valley and Mid-South region on Monday.
...Synopsis...
The mid-level trough over the Southwest on Saturday will start to be
absorbed within the more broad westerlies on Monday as it moves into
the Missouri region. As this occurs, a belt of mid-level flow will
overspread the Ozarks to Ohio Valley region where a moist airmass is
in place ahead of a synoptic cold front. This cold front will move
slowly east through the period Monday.
...Ozarks to Ohio Valley Region...
Extensive cloud-cover from overnight convection will likely limit
warm-sector heating from northern Arkansas and southern Missouri to
western Kentucky and southern Indiana on Monday. However, at least
some breaks in the clouds should result in pockets of greater
destabilization, particularly later in the day. Inhibition will be
limited across the warm sector, so any areas with greater surface
heating will likely convect given the moist airmass and weak height
falls during the day. The lack of strong heating or any capping
inversion should keep instability somewhat weak through the day and
result in a mostly marginal severe threat despite moderate
deep-layer shear.
A few stronger storms are possible within this zone of weak
instability and moderate shear which may pose a threat for large
hail or damaging wind gusts.
..Bentley.. 09/21/2024
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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