SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1151 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241700Z - 251200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN/CENTRAL WYOMING... ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF WESTERN UTAH INTO SOUTHEAST NEVADA... The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, and only minor adjustments were made based on the latest observations and high-resolution guidance. ..Weinman.. 08/24/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0129 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024/ ...Synopsis... A highly amplified mid-level trough will progress through portions of the interior West throughout the day. A mid-level jet streak will accompany this trough along its southern/eastern periphery. Daytime heating/mixing will allow these winds to mix toward the surface. This process will result in southwesterly sustained surface winds of 25-35 mph and RH values into the teens/single digits F across portions of western Utah into southeast Nevada, amid marginally receptive fuels, supporting Critical fire-weather conditions. Similar wind/RH conditions supporting Critical fire-weather conditions will occur across portions of northern/central Wyoming, albeit with sustained winds of 20-25 mph and RH values into the teens and low 20s F, amid receptive fuels. Farther west, upper forcing for ascent associated with the mid-level trough will foster isolated dry thunderstorms over portions of northern Nevada and vicinity. Fuels in this region remain receptive to large-fire spread with PWAT values ranging from 0.5-0.75 inches. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1151 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241700Z - 251200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN/CENTRAL WYOMING... ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF WESTERN UTAH INTO SOUTHEAST NEVADA... The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, and only minor adjustments were made based on the latest observations and high-resolution guidance. ..Weinman.. 08/24/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0129 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024/ ...Synopsis... A highly amplified mid-level trough will progress through portions of the interior West throughout the day. A mid-level jet streak will accompany this trough along its southern/eastern periphery. Daytime heating/mixing will allow these winds to mix toward the surface. This process will result in southwesterly sustained surface winds of 25-35 mph and RH values into the teens/single digits F across portions of western Utah into southeast Nevada, amid marginally receptive fuels, supporting Critical fire-weather conditions. Similar wind/RH conditions supporting Critical fire-weather conditions will occur across portions of northern/central Wyoming, albeit with sustained winds of 20-25 mph and RH values into the teens and low 20s F, amid receptive fuels. Farther west, upper forcing for ascent associated with the mid-level trough will foster isolated dry thunderstorms over portions of northern Nevada and vicinity. Fuels in this region remain receptive to large-fire spread with PWAT values ranging from 0.5-0.75 inches. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1151 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241700Z - 251200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN/CENTRAL WYOMING... ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF WESTERN UTAH INTO SOUTHEAST NEVADA... The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, and only minor adjustments were made based on the latest observations and high-resolution guidance. ..Weinman.. 08/24/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0129 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024/ ...Synopsis... A highly amplified mid-level trough will progress through portions of the interior West throughout the day. A mid-level jet streak will accompany this trough along its southern/eastern periphery. Daytime heating/mixing will allow these winds to mix toward the surface. This process will result in southwesterly sustained surface winds of 25-35 mph and RH values into the teens/single digits F across portions of western Utah into southeast Nevada, amid marginally receptive fuels, supporting Critical fire-weather conditions. Similar wind/RH conditions supporting Critical fire-weather conditions will occur across portions of northern/central Wyoming, albeit with sustained winds of 20-25 mph and RH values into the teens and low 20s F, amid receptive fuels. Farther west, upper forcing for ascent associated with the mid-level trough will foster isolated dry thunderstorms over portions of northern Nevada and vicinity. Fuels in this region remain receptive to large-fire spread with PWAT values ranging from 0.5-0.75 inches. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1151 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241700Z - 251200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN/CENTRAL WYOMING... ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF WESTERN UTAH INTO SOUTHEAST NEVADA... The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, and only minor adjustments were made based on the latest observations and high-resolution guidance. ..Weinman.. 08/24/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0129 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024/ ...Synopsis... A highly amplified mid-level trough will progress through portions of the interior West throughout the day. A mid-level jet streak will accompany this trough along its southern/eastern periphery. Daytime heating/mixing will allow these winds to mix toward the surface. This process will result in southwesterly sustained surface winds of 25-35 mph and RH values into the teens/single digits F across portions of western Utah into southeast Nevada, amid marginally receptive fuels, supporting Critical fire-weather conditions. Similar wind/RH conditions supporting Critical fire-weather conditions will occur across portions of northern/central Wyoming, albeit with sustained winds of 20-25 mph and RH values into the teens and low 20s F, amid receptive fuels. Farther west, upper forcing for ascent associated with the mid-level trough will foster isolated dry thunderstorms over portions of northern Nevada and vicinity. Fuels in this region remain receptive to large-fire spread with PWAT values ranging from 0.5-0.75 inches. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1151 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241700Z - 251200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHERN/CENTRAL WYOMING... ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF WESTERN UTAH INTO SOUTHEAST NEVADA... The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, and only minor adjustments were made based on the latest observations and high-resolution guidance. ..Weinman.. 08/24/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0129 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024/ ...Synopsis... A highly amplified mid-level trough will progress through portions of the interior West throughout the day. A mid-level jet streak will accompany this trough along its southern/eastern periphery. Daytime heating/mixing will allow these winds to mix toward the surface. This process will result in southwesterly sustained surface winds of 25-35 mph and RH values into the teens/single digits F across portions of western Utah into southeast Nevada, amid marginally receptive fuels, supporting Critical fire-weather conditions. Similar wind/RH conditions supporting Critical fire-weather conditions will occur across portions of northern/central Wyoming, albeit with sustained winds of 20-25 mph and RH values into the teens and low 20s F, amid receptive fuels. Farther west, upper forcing for ascent associated with the mid-level trough will foster isolated dry thunderstorms over portions of northern Nevada and vicinity. Fuels in this region remain receptive to large-fire spread with PWAT values ranging from 0.5-0.75 inches. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTHERN PLAINS...OZARKS...AND FOUR CORNERS TO CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota, parts of the Ozarks, and also across western Oklahoma. ...Northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota... Have introduced severe hail/wind probabilities for the potential of isolated severe thunderstorm development beginning potentially as early as late afternoon across northeast Montana, but more likely this evening across the region. This development is possible along/behind a surface wave and eastward-moving front, where moderate buoyancy will coincide with strong shear through the cloud-bearing layer. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits also possible over the High Plains. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less), but enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with a well-mixed sub-cloud layer supportive of strong/locally severe wind gusts. ...Southern Missouri/northern Arkansas... A linear convective cluster will continue to progress southward today. Deep-layer/low-level shear will remain weak, with the cluster tending to remain elevated to the east of the main reservoir of surface-based buoyancy and mid-level lapse rates. While some strong gusts and/or sub-severe hail could occur, the overall severe potential should remain isolated and relatively marginal in nature. ...Western/northern Oklahoma.... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible by late afternoon through around sunset, with locally strong-severe microbursts possible. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, with an effective dryline to its west across northwest Texas to northwest Oklahoma. Enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTHERN PLAINS...OZARKS...AND FOUR CORNERS TO CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota, parts of the Ozarks, and also across western Oklahoma. ...Northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota... Have introduced severe hail/wind probabilities for the potential of isolated severe thunderstorm development beginning potentially as early as late afternoon across northeast Montana, but more likely this evening across the region. This development is possible along/behind a surface wave and eastward-moving front, where moderate buoyancy will coincide with strong shear through the cloud-bearing layer. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits also possible over the High Plains. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less), but enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with a well-mixed sub-cloud layer supportive of strong/locally severe wind gusts. ...Southern Missouri/northern Arkansas... A linear convective cluster will continue to progress southward today. Deep-layer/low-level shear will remain weak, with the cluster tending to remain elevated to the east of the main reservoir of surface-based buoyancy and mid-level lapse rates. While some strong gusts and/or sub-severe hail could occur, the overall severe potential should remain isolated and relatively marginal in nature. ...Western/northern Oklahoma.... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible by late afternoon through around sunset, with locally strong-severe microbursts possible. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, with an effective dryline to its west across northwest Texas to northwest Oklahoma. Enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTHERN PLAINS...OZARKS...AND FOUR CORNERS TO CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota, parts of the Ozarks, and also across western Oklahoma. ...Northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota... Have introduced severe hail/wind probabilities for the potential of isolated severe thunderstorm development beginning potentially as early as late afternoon across northeast Montana, but more likely this evening across the region. This development is possible along/behind a surface wave and eastward-moving front, where moderate buoyancy will coincide with strong shear through the cloud-bearing layer. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits also possible over the High Plains. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less), but enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with a well-mixed sub-cloud layer supportive of strong/locally severe wind gusts. ...Southern Missouri/northern Arkansas... A linear convective cluster will continue to progress southward today. Deep-layer/low-level shear will remain weak, with the cluster tending to remain elevated to the east of the main reservoir of surface-based buoyancy and mid-level lapse rates. While some strong gusts and/or sub-severe hail could occur, the overall severe potential should remain isolated and relatively marginal in nature. ...Western/northern Oklahoma.... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible by late afternoon through around sunset, with locally strong-severe microbursts possible. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, with an effective dryline to its west across northwest Texas to northwest Oklahoma. Enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTHERN PLAINS...OZARKS...AND FOUR CORNERS TO CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota, parts of the Ozarks, and also across western Oklahoma. ...Northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota... Have introduced severe hail/wind probabilities for the potential of isolated severe thunderstorm development beginning potentially as early as late afternoon across northeast Montana, but more likely this evening across the region. This development is possible along/behind a surface wave and eastward-moving front, where moderate buoyancy will coincide with strong shear through the cloud-bearing layer. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits also possible over the High Plains. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less), but enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with a well-mixed sub-cloud layer supportive of strong/locally severe wind gusts. ...Southern Missouri/northern Arkansas... A linear convective cluster will continue to progress southward today. Deep-layer/low-level shear will remain weak, with the cluster tending to remain elevated to the east of the main reservoir of surface-based buoyancy and mid-level lapse rates. While some strong gusts and/or sub-severe hail could occur, the overall severe potential should remain isolated and relatively marginal in nature. ...Western/northern Oklahoma.... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible by late afternoon through around sunset, with locally strong-severe microbursts possible. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, with an effective dryline to its west across northwest Texas to northwest Oklahoma. Enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTHERN PLAINS...OZARKS...AND FOUR CORNERS TO CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota, parts of the Ozarks, and also across western Oklahoma. ...Northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota... Have introduced severe hail/wind probabilities for the potential of isolated severe thunderstorm development beginning potentially as early as late afternoon across northeast Montana, but more likely this evening across the region. This development is possible along/behind a surface wave and eastward-moving front, where moderate buoyancy will coincide with strong shear through the cloud-bearing layer. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits also possible over the High Plains. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less), but enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with a well-mixed sub-cloud layer supportive of strong/locally severe wind gusts. ...Southern Missouri/northern Arkansas... A linear convective cluster will continue to progress southward today. Deep-layer/low-level shear will remain weak, with the cluster tending to remain elevated to the east of the main reservoir of surface-based buoyancy and mid-level lapse rates. While some strong gusts and/or sub-severe hail could occur, the overall severe potential should remain isolated and relatively marginal in nature. ...Western/northern Oklahoma.... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible by late afternoon through around sunset, with locally strong-severe microbursts possible. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, with an effective dryline to its west across northwest Texas to northwest Oklahoma. Enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTHERN PLAINS...OZARKS...AND FOUR CORNERS TO CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota, parts of the Ozarks, and also across western Oklahoma. ...Northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota... Have introduced severe hail/wind probabilities for the potential of isolated severe thunderstorm development beginning potentially as early as late afternoon across northeast Montana, but more likely this evening across the region. This development is possible along/behind a surface wave and eastward-moving front, where moderate buoyancy will coincide with strong shear through the cloud-bearing layer. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits also possible over the High Plains. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less), but enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with a well-mixed sub-cloud layer supportive of strong/locally severe wind gusts. ...Southern Missouri/northern Arkansas... A linear convective cluster will continue to progress southward today. Deep-layer/low-level shear will remain weak, with the cluster tending to remain elevated to the east of the main reservoir of surface-based buoyancy and mid-level lapse rates. While some strong gusts and/or sub-severe hail could occur, the overall severe potential should remain isolated and relatively marginal in nature. ...Western/northern Oklahoma.... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible by late afternoon through around sunset, with locally strong-severe microbursts possible. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, with an effective dryline to its west across northwest Texas to northwest Oklahoma. Enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTHERN PLAINS...OZARKS...AND FOUR CORNERS TO CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota, parts of the Ozarks, and also across western Oklahoma. ...Northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota... Have introduced severe hail/wind probabilities for the potential of isolated severe thunderstorm development beginning potentially as early as late afternoon across northeast Montana, but more likely this evening across the region. This development is possible along/behind a surface wave and eastward-moving front, where moderate buoyancy will coincide with strong shear through the cloud-bearing layer. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits also possible over the High Plains. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less), but enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with a well-mixed sub-cloud layer supportive of strong/locally severe wind gusts. ...Southern Missouri/northern Arkansas... A linear convective cluster will continue to progress southward today. Deep-layer/low-level shear will remain weak, with the cluster tending to remain elevated to the east of the main reservoir of surface-based buoyancy and mid-level lapse rates. While some strong gusts and/or sub-severe hail could occur, the overall severe potential should remain isolated and relatively marginal in nature. ...Western/northern Oklahoma.... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible by late afternoon through around sunset, with locally strong-severe microbursts possible. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, with an effective dryline to its west across northwest Texas to northwest Oklahoma. Enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTHERN PLAINS...OZARKS...AND FOUR CORNERS TO CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota, parts of the Ozarks, and also across western Oklahoma. ...Northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota... Have introduced severe hail/wind probabilities for the potential of isolated severe thunderstorm development beginning potentially as early as late afternoon across northeast Montana, but more likely this evening across the region. This development is possible along/behind a surface wave and eastward-moving front, where moderate buoyancy will coincide with strong shear through the cloud-bearing layer. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits also possible over the High Plains. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less), but enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with a well-mixed sub-cloud layer supportive of strong/locally severe wind gusts. ...Southern Missouri/northern Arkansas... A linear convective cluster will continue to progress southward today. Deep-layer/low-level shear will remain weak, with the cluster tending to remain elevated to the east of the main reservoir of surface-based buoyancy and mid-level lapse rates. While some strong gusts and/or sub-severe hail could occur, the overall severe potential should remain isolated and relatively marginal in nature. ...Western/northern Oklahoma.... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible by late afternoon through around sunset, with locally strong-severe microbursts possible. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, with an effective dryline to its west across northwest Texas to northwest Oklahoma. Enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTHERN PLAINS...OZARKS...AND FOUR CORNERS TO CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota, parts of the Ozarks, and also across western Oklahoma. ...Northeast Montana/northwest North Dakota... Have introduced severe hail/wind probabilities for the potential of isolated severe thunderstorm development beginning potentially as early as late afternoon across northeast Montana, but more likely this evening across the region. This development is possible along/behind a surface wave and eastward-moving front, where moderate buoyancy will coincide with strong shear through the cloud-bearing layer. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits also possible over the High Plains. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less), but enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with a well-mixed sub-cloud layer supportive of strong/locally severe wind gusts. ...Southern Missouri/northern Arkansas... A linear convective cluster will continue to progress southward today. Deep-layer/low-level shear will remain weak, with the cluster tending to remain elevated to the east of the main reservoir of surface-based buoyancy and mid-level lapse rates. While some strong gusts and/or sub-severe hail could occur, the overall severe potential should remain isolated and relatively marginal in nature. ...Western/northern Oklahoma.... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible by late afternoon through around sunset, with locally strong-severe microbursts possible. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, with an effective dryline to its west across northwest Texas to northwest Oklahoma. Enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0749 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241300Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE FOUR CORNERS REGION NORTHEASTWARD INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...OVER PARTS OF MISSOURI TO NORTHERN ARKANSAS...AND ALSO OVER AND NEAR WESTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over parts of Missouri to northern Arkansas, and also over and near western Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... Positively tilted mid/upper-level troughing should shift slowly eastward through the period, from the West Coast States to the northern Rockies, Great Basin and southern CA. Several shortwaves will pivot through the associated tightly cyclonic regime astride the trough, then eject into the downstream southwest flow. Additional perturbations will move northeastward in continuing southwest flow over the southern Rockies and central Plains, closer to a pronounced anticyclone whose 500-mb high should move slowly northeastward over OK. Ridging accompanying that high should build northeastward to southern Hudson Bay by the end of the period. A broad fetch of deep-layer moisture was apparent in moisture-channel imagery and surface analysis from northwestern MX across the Four Corners to the central Rockies and adjacent High Plains. Otherwise, the 11Z surface chart showed a long-lived, quasistationary frontal zone from Atlantic waters off the Carolinas, southwestward over northern FL, to coastal LA, then northwestward as a warm front across southern/western OK to a low near DDC. Rich moisture has spread through the front over central eastern OK and into southern/central KS, with upper 60s and greater surface dewpoints. The low is expected to move/redevelop into the north-central KS/south-central NE vicinity by 00Z, with warm frontogenesis to its east across the southern IA/northern NE area. A separate cold front -- analyzed from eastern MT southwestward over northwestern UT and southern NV -- should move slowly eastward through the period, reaching the western Dakotas, central WY and southwestern UT by 12Z tomorrow. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Again today, the persistent monsoonal moisture plume (somewhat eastward-displaced from previous days) should host widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits possible over the High Plains portion of the outlook area. Diurnal heating of higher terrain from just south of I-40 across the Four Corners, San Juans, and assorted ranges from there to the Laramies and Front Range, should remove MLCINH quickly into early afternoon, fostering deep convective growth. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less) due to a lack of both 1. Stronger/backed near-surface flow and 2. Greater CAPE density and buoyant depth (related to modest lapse rates aloft in the monsoonal plume). Still, the southeastern fringe of the mass response in upper levels to the Western CONUS troughing should yield enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with translational vector augmentation of outflow winds possibly contributing to marginal severe potential. The main supporting factor for downdraft intensity will be a well-mixed subcloud layer beneath around 200-800 J/kg ambient MLCAPE. ...MO/AR... An MCV was apparent in composited radar imagery over southeastern NE between LNK-FNB, and should pivot slowly southeastward through the day. Associated regionally enhanced low-level moist/warm advection, and isentropic lift to LFC, have been supporting swath of elevated convection now over portions of northwestern MO. Lightning coverage and cooling IR cloud tops have been noted the past hour in a roughly north/south-oriented band of embedded thunderstorms, though radar-reflectivity structures remain messy and disorganized. Further organization/intensification with a southward translational thrust is possible through the day, as a combination of surface heating and boundary-later warm/moist advection combine to destabilize the foregoing airmass. This will lead to at least isolated potential for damaging gusts and marginally severe hail. Guidance still varies considerably on the potential for this activity to merge upscale enough for a single, well-developed cold pool, which would create a greater conditional wind threat over parts of west-central/southwestern MO and perhaps into northern AR before encountering decreasing instability. Southern parts of the outlook area have been extended somewhat, and the area widened somewhat, to account for these mesobeta- to convective-scale uncertainties. ...Western OK and vicinity... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible from mid- late afternoon, with a few perhaps straying into early evening, offering locally strong-severe microbursts. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, across southern to northeastern OK and into eastern KS. West of the associated moisture plume, an effective dryline will set up by midafternoon from northwest TX to northwestern OK, representing a differential between more intense heating/mixing to the west and the more strongly capped, moist boundary-layer environment under and nearer the high aloft. That boundary also should conform closely to a wind-shift line and confluence/ convergence axis, west of which winds at the surface will have a substantial westerly component. With further westward extent into the Panhandles, the boundary layer will be too dry to support substantial convection. Within the transition zone, represented by the outlook area, just enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values commonly 1000-2000 J/kg. the dryline should retreat northwestward through the area this evening, but under unfavorably strong (and intensifying) MLCINH, and without appreciable large-scale support, later development is not expected. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0749 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241300Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE FOUR CORNERS REGION NORTHEASTWARD INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...OVER PARTS OF MISSOURI TO NORTHERN ARKANSAS...AND ALSO OVER AND NEAR WESTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over parts of Missouri to northern Arkansas, and also over and near western Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... Positively tilted mid/upper-level troughing should shift slowly eastward through the period, from the West Coast States to the northern Rockies, Great Basin and southern CA. Several shortwaves will pivot through the associated tightly cyclonic regime astride the trough, then eject into the downstream southwest flow. Additional perturbations will move northeastward in continuing southwest flow over the southern Rockies and central Plains, closer to a pronounced anticyclone whose 500-mb high should move slowly northeastward over OK. Ridging accompanying that high should build northeastward to southern Hudson Bay by the end of the period. A broad fetch of deep-layer moisture was apparent in moisture-channel imagery and surface analysis from northwestern MX across the Four Corners to the central Rockies and adjacent High Plains. Otherwise, the 11Z surface chart showed a long-lived, quasistationary frontal zone from Atlantic waters off the Carolinas, southwestward over northern FL, to coastal LA, then northwestward as a warm front across southern/western OK to a low near DDC. Rich moisture has spread through the front over central eastern OK and into southern/central KS, with upper 60s and greater surface dewpoints. The low is expected to move/redevelop into the north-central KS/south-central NE vicinity by 00Z, with warm frontogenesis to its east across the southern IA/northern NE area. A separate cold front -- analyzed from eastern MT southwestward over northwestern UT and southern NV -- should move slowly eastward through the period, reaching the western Dakotas, central WY and southwestern UT by 12Z tomorrow. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Again today, the persistent monsoonal moisture plume (somewhat eastward-displaced from previous days) should host widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits possible over the High Plains portion of the outlook area. Diurnal heating of higher terrain from just south of I-40 across the Four Corners, San Juans, and assorted ranges from there to the Laramies and Front Range, should remove MLCINH quickly into early afternoon, fostering deep convective growth. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less) due to a lack of both 1. Stronger/backed near-surface flow and 2. Greater CAPE density and buoyant depth (related to modest lapse rates aloft in the monsoonal plume). Still, the southeastern fringe of the mass response in upper levels to the Western CONUS troughing should yield enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with translational vector augmentation of outflow winds possibly contributing to marginal severe potential. The main supporting factor for downdraft intensity will be a well-mixed subcloud layer beneath around 200-800 J/kg ambient MLCAPE. ...MO/AR... An MCV was apparent in composited radar imagery over southeastern NE between LNK-FNB, and should pivot slowly southeastward through the day. Associated regionally enhanced low-level moist/warm advection, and isentropic lift to LFC, have been supporting swath of elevated convection now over portions of northwestern MO. Lightning coverage and cooling IR cloud tops have been noted the past hour in a roughly north/south-oriented band of embedded thunderstorms, though radar-reflectivity structures remain messy and disorganized. Further organization/intensification with a southward translational thrust is possible through the day, as a combination of surface heating and boundary-later warm/moist advection combine to destabilize the foregoing airmass. This will lead to at least isolated potential for damaging gusts and marginally severe hail. Guidance still varies considerably on the potential for this activity to merge upscale enough for a single, well-developed cold pool, which would create a greater conditional wind threat over parts of west-central/southwestern MO and perhaps into northern AR before encountering decreasing instability. Southern parts of the outlook area have been extended somewhat, and the area widened somewhat, to account for these mesobeta- to convective-scale uncertainties. ...Western OK and vicinity... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible from mid- late afternoon, with a few perhaps straying into early evening, offering locally strong-severe microbursts. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, across southern to northeastern OK and into eastern KS. West of the associated moisture plume, an effective dryline will set up by midafternoon from northwest TX to northwestern OK, representing a differential between more intense heating/mixing to the west and the more strongly capped, moist boundary-layer environment under and nearer the high aloft. That boundary also should conform closely to a wind-shift line and confluence/ convergence axis, west of which winds at the surface will have a substantial westerly component. With further westward extent into the Panhandles, the boundary layer will be too dry to support substantial convection. Within the transition zone, represented by the outlook area, just enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values commonly 1000-2000 J/kg. the dryline should retreat northwestward through the area this evening, but under unfavorably strong (and intensifying) MLCINH, and without appreciable large-scale support, later development is not expected. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0749 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241300Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE FOUR CORNERS REGION NORTHEASTWARD INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...OVER PARTS OF MISSOURI TO NORTHERN ARKANSAS...AND ALSO OVER AND NEAR WESTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over parts of Missouri to northern Arkansas, and also over and near western Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... Positively tilted mid/upper-level troughing should shift slowly eastward through the period, from the West Coast States to the northern Rockies, Great Basin and southern CA. Several shortwaves will pivot through the associated tightly cyclonic regime astride the trough, then eject into the downstream southwest flow. Additional perturbations will move northeastward in continuing southwest flow over the southern Rockies and central Plains, closer to a pronounced anticyclone whose 500-mb high should move slowly northeastward over OK. Ridging accompanying that high should build northeastward to southern Hudson Bay by the end of the period. A broad fetch of deep-layer moisture was apparent in moisture-channel imagery and surface analysis from northwestern MX across the Four Corners to the central Rockies and adjacent High Plains. Otherwise, the 11Z surface chart showed a long-lived, quasistationary frontal zone from Atlantic waters off the Carolinas, southwestward over northern FL, to coastal LA, then northwestward as a warm front across southern/western OK to a low near DDC. Rich moisture has spread through the front over central eastern OK and into southern/central KS, with upper 60s and greater surface dewpoints. The low is expected to move/redevelop into the north-central KS/south-central NE vicinity by 00Z, with warm frontogenesis to its east across the southern IA/northern NE area. A separate cold front -- analyzed from eastern MT southwestward over northwestern UT and southern NV -- should move slowly eastward through the period, reaching the western Dakotas, central WY and southwestern UT by 12Z tomorrow. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Again today, the persistent monsoonal moisture plume (somewhat eastward-displaced from previous days) should host widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits possible over the High Plains portion of the outlook area. Diurnal heating of higher terrain from just south of I-40 across the Four Corners, San Juans, and assorted ranges from there to the Laramies and Front Range, should remove MLCINH quickly into early afternoon, fostering deep convective growth. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less) due to a lack of both 1. Stronger/backed near-surface flow and 2. Greater CAPE density and buoyant depth (related to modest lapse rates aloft in the monsoonal plume). Still, the southeastern fringe of the mass response in upper levels to the Western CONUS troughing should yield enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with translational vector augmentation of outflow winds possibly contributing to marginal severe potential. The main supporting factor for downdraft intensity will be a well-mixed subcloud layer beneath around 200-800 J/kg ambient MLCAPE. ...MO/AR... An MCV was apparent in composited radar imagery over southeastern NE between LNK-FNB, and should pivot slowly southeastward through the day. Associated regionally enhanced low-level moist/warm advection, and isentropic lift to LFC, have been supporting swath of elevated convection now over portions of northwestern MO. Lightning coverage and cooling IR cloud tops have been noted the past hour in a roughly north/south-oriented band of embedded thunderstorms, though radar-reflectivity structures remain messy and disorganized. Further organization/intensification with a southward translational thrust is possible through the day, as a combination of surface heating and boundary-later warm/moist advection combine to destabilize the foregoing airmass. This will lead to at least isolated potential for damaging gusts and marginally severe hail. Guidance still varies considerably on the potential for this activity to merge upscale enough for a single, well-developed cold pool, which would create a greater conditional wind threat over parts of west-central/southwestern MO and perhaps into northern AR before encountering decreasing instability. Southern parts of the outlook area have been extended somewhat, and the area widened somewhat, to account for these mesobeta- to convective-scale uncertainties. ...Western OK and vicinity... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible from mid- late afternoon, with a few perhaps straying into early evening, offering locally strong-severe microbursts. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, across southern to northeastern OK and into eastern KS. West of the associated moisture plume, an effective dryline will set up by midafternoon from northwest TX to northwestern OK, representing a differential between more intense heating/mixing to the west and the more strongly capped, moist boundary-layer environment under and nearer the high aloft. That boundary also should conform closely to a wind-shift line and confluence/ convergence axis, west of which winds at the surface will have a substantial westerly component. With further westward extent into the Panhandles, the boundary layer will be too dry to support substantial convection. Within the transition zone, represented by the outlook area, just enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values commonly 1000-2000 J/kg. the dryline should retreat northwestward through the area this evening, but under unfavorably strong (and intensifying) MLCINH, and without appreciable large-scale support, later development is not expected. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0749 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241300Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE FOUR CORNERS REGION NORTHEASTWARD INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...OVER PARTS OF MISSOURI TO NORTHERN ARKANSAS...AND ALSO OVER AND NEAR WESTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over parts of Missouri to northern Arkansas, and also over and near western Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... Positively tilted mid/upper-level troughing should shift slowly eastward through the period, from the West Coast States to the northern Rockies, Great Basin and southern CA. Several shortwaves will pivot through the associated tightly cyclonic regime astride the trough, then eject into the downstream southwest flow. Additional perturbations will move northeastward in continuing southwest flow over the southern Rockies and central Plains, closer to a pronounced anticyclone whose 500-mb high should move slowly northeastward over OK. Ridging accompanying that high should build northeastward to southern Hudson Bay by the end of the period. A broad fetch of deep-layer moisture was apparent in moisture-channel imagery and surface analysis from northwestern MX across the Four Corners to the central Rockies and adjacent High Plains. Otherwise, the 11Z surface chart showed a long-lived, quasistationary frontal zone from Atlantic waters off the Carolinas, southwestward over northern FL, to coastal LA, then northwestward as a warm front across southern/western OK to a low near DDC. Rich moisture has spread through the front over central eastern OK and into southern/central KS, with upper 60s and greater surface dewpoints. The low is expected to move/redevelop into the north-central KS/south-central NE vicinity by 00Z, with warm frontogenesis to its east across the southern IA/northern NE area. A separate cold front -- analyzed from eastern MT southwestward over northwestern UT and southern NV -- should move slowly eastward through the period, reaching the western Dakotas, central WY and southwestern UT by 12Z tomorrow. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Again today, the persistent monsoonal moisture plume (somewhat eastward-displaced from previous days) should host widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits possible over the High Plains portion of the outlook area. Diurnal heating of higher terrain from just south of I-40 across the Four Corners, San Juans, and assorted ranges from there to the Laramies and Front Range, should remove MLCINH quickly into early afternoon, fostering deep convective growth. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less) due to a lack of both 1. Stronger/backed near-surface flow and 2. Greater CAPE density and buoyant depth (related to modest lapse rates aloft in the monsoonal plume). Still, the southeastern fringe of the mass response in upper levels to the Western CONUS troughing should yield enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with translational vector augmentation of outflow winds possibly contributing to marginal severe potential. The main supporting factor for downdraft intensity will be a well-mixed subcloud layer beneath around 200-800 J/kg ambient MLCAPE. ...MO/AR... An MCV was apparent in composited radar imagery over southeastern NE between LNK-FNB, and should pivot slowly southeastward through the day. Associated regionally enhanced low-level moist/warm advection, and isentropic lift to LFC, have been supporting swath of elevated convection now over portions of northwestern MO. Lightning coverage and cooling IR cloud tops have been noted the past hour in a roughly north/south-oriented band of embedded thunderstorms, though radar-reflectivity structures remain messy and disorganized. Further organization/intensification with a southward translational thrust is possible through the day, as a combination of surface heating and boundary-later warm/moist advection combine to destabilize the foregoing airmass. This will lead to at least isolated potential for damaging gusts and marginally severe hail. Guidance still varies considerably on the potential for this activity to merge upscale enough for a single, well-developed cold pool, which would create a greater conditional wind threat over parts of west-central/southwestern MO and perhaps into northern AR before encountering decreasing instability. Southern parts of the outlook area have been extended somewhat, and the area widened somewhat, to account for these mesobeta- to convective-scale uncertainties. ...Western OK and vicinity... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible from mid- late afternoon, with a few perhaps straying into early evening, offering locally strong-severe microbursts. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, across southern to northeastern OK and into eastern KS. West of the associated moisture plume, an effective dryline will set up by midafternoon from northwest TX to northwestern OK, representing a differential between more intense heating/mixing to the west and the more strongly capped, moist boundary-layer environment under and nearer the high aloft. That boundary also should conform closely to a wind-shift line and confluence/ convergence axis, west of which winds at the surface will have a substantial westerly component. With further westward extent into the Panhandles, the boundary layer will be too dry to support substantial convection. Within the transition zone, represented by the outlook area, just enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values commonly 1000-2000 J/kg. the dryline should retreat northwestward through the area this evening, but under unfavorably strong (and intensifying) MLCINH, and without appreciable large-scale support, later development is not expected. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0749 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 241300Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE FOUR CORNERS REGION NORTHEASTWARD INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...OVER PARTS OF MISSOURI TO NORTHERN ARKANSAS...AND ALSO OVER AND NEAR WESTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over parts of Missouri to northern Arkansas, and also over and near western Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... Positively tilted mid/upper-level troughing should shift slowly eastward through the period, from the West Coast States to the northern Rockies, Great Basin and southern CA. Several shortwaves will pivot through the associated tightly cyclonic regime astride the trough, then eject into the downstream southwest flow. Additional perturbations will move northeastward in continuing southwest flow over the southern Rockies and central Plains, closer to a pronounced anticyclone whose 500-mb high should move slowly northeastward over OK. Ridging accompanying that high should build northeastward to southern Hudson Bay by the end of the period. A broad fetch of deep-layer moisture was apparent in moisture-channel imagery and surface analysis from northwestern MX across the Four Corners to the central Rockies and adjacent High Plains. Otherwise, the 11Z surface chart showed a long-lived, quasistationary frontal zone from Atlantic waters off the Carolinas, southwestward over northern FL, to coastal LA, then northwestward as a warm front across southern/western OK to a low near DDC. Rich moisture has spread through the front over central eastern OK and into southern/central KS, with upper 60s and greater surface dewpoints. The low is expected to move/redevelop into the north-central KS/south-central NE vicinity by 00Z, with warm frontogenesis to its east across the southern IA/northern NE area. A separate cold front -- analyzed from eastern MT southwestward over northwestern UT and southern NV -- should move slowly eastward through the period, reaching the western Dakotas, central WY and southwestern UT by 12Z tomorrow. ...Four Corners to Central High Plains... Again today, the persistent monsoonal moisture plume (somewhat eastward-displaced from previous days) should host widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms by mid/late afternoon. Activity should move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits possible over the High Plains portion of the outlook area. Diurnal heating of higher terrain from just south of I-40 across the Four Corners, San Juans, and assorted ranges from there to the Laramies and Front Range, should remove MLCINH quickly into early afternoon, fostering deep convective growth. Effective shear will be modest (generally 30 kt or less) due to a lack of both 1. Stronger/backed near-surface flow and 2. Greater CAPE density and buoyant depth (related to modest lapse rates aloft in the monsoonal plume). Still, the southeastern fringe of the mass response in upper levels to the Western CONUS troughing should yield enough cloud-layer shear for a few organized multicell storms, with translational vector augmentation of outflow winds possibly contributing to marginal severe potential. The main supporting factor for downdraft intensity will be a well-mixed subcloud layer beneath around 200-800 J/kg ambient MLCAPE. ...MO/AR... An MCV was apparent in composited radar imagery over southeastern NE between LNK-FNB, and should pivot slowly southeastward through the day. Associated regionally enhanced low-level moist/warm advection, and isentropic lift to LFC, have been supporting swath of elevated convection now over portions of northwestern MO. Lightning coverage and cooling IR cloud tops have been noted the past hour in a roughly north/south-oriented band of embedded thunderstorms, though radar-reflectivity structures remain messy and disorganized. Further organization/intensification with a southward translational thrust is possible through the day, as a combination of surface heating and boundary-later warm/moist advection combine to destabilize the foregoing airmass. This will lead to at least isolated potential for damaging gusts and marginally severe hail. Guidance still varies considerably on the potential for this activity to merge upscale enough for a single, well-developed cold pool, which would create a greater conditional wind threat over parts of west-central/southwestern MO and perhaps into northern AR before encountering decreasing instability. Southern parts of the outlook area have been extended somewhat, and the area widened somewhat, to account for these mesobeta- to convective-scale uncertainties. ...Western OK and vicinity... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible from mid- late afternoon, with a few perhaps straying into early evening, offering locally strong-severe microbursts. A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the mid/upper high, across southern to northeastern OK and into eastern KS. West of the associated moisture plume, an effective dryline will set up by midafternoon from northwest TX to northwestern OK, representing a differential between more intense heating/mixing to the west and the more strongly capped, moist boundary-layer environment under and nearer the high aloft. That boundary also should conform closely to a wind-shift line and confluence/ convergence axis, west of which winds at the surface will have a substantial westerly component. With further westward extent into the Panhandles, the boundary layer will be too dry to support substantial convection. Within the transition zone, represented by the outlook area, just enough moisture should be present to support a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values commonly 1000-2000 J/kg. the dryline should retreat northwestward through the area this evening, but under unfavorably strong (and intensifying) MLCINH, and without appreciable large-scale support, later development is not expected. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/24/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 24, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0354 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024 Valid 271200Z - 011200Z ...DISCUSSION... Within the faster belt of upper flow across the northern U.S., substantial differences in timing of the disturbances in the flow are manifest from the very start of the medium-range period. On Tuesday/Day 4, an energetic short-wave trough should be crossing the north-central U.S., headed toward the Upper Mississippi Valley/southern Ontario, while an upstream trough crosses western Canada and the Pacific Northwest, and a downstream one crosses northern Quebec. However, noted differences in both timing and orientation of these features is immediately apparent. The north-central U.S. feature -- the one associated with Day-4 severe risk over the Great Lakes region -- is roughly 12 hours slower, and evolves to a more negatively tilted configuration in the ECMWF, as compared to the GFS. This results in fairly substantial differences in the surface pattern as well, prohibiting any forecast of the specifics regarding the severe-weather potential on Tuesday. Still, severe-weather risk is apparent despite east-west geographical uncertainties. Thus, will introduce an elongated 15% area across the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes region, given likelihood for existence of a favorably unstable/amply sheared environment in the vicinity of a surface front likely to stretch east-northeastward to west-southwestward across this region. Damaging winds and hail would likely be the primary risks. By Day 5, differences continue to amplify. Risk for severe weather may evolve across portions of the Northeast (favored by the GFS), and/or parts of the Midwest/Ohio Valley (favored by the ECMWF). However, the differences are substantial enough amongst the models to preclude an areal highlight at this time. Meanwhile farther west, an upper low/trough is forecast to be moving across the northwestern U.S. and Canadian Prairie early in the day, but location/timing, and intensity differences with this feature are pronounced. While some severe risk may evolve across parts of the north-central U.S. ahead of this feature and an associated cold front, the differences preclude any areal outlines at this time. Predictability issues persist through the remainder of the period, with model solutions diverging steadily through the upcoming Labor Day weekend. Read more
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