SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 1127 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe wind gusts and some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... The lead portion of an upper trough centered along the coastal Pacific Northwest will shift north-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region in tandem with the exit region of a strengthening mid/upper-level jet. Scattered thunderstorms are expected in this regime preceding the Pacific Coast trough, with initial development over the higher terrain ahead of the surface cold front. Isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible, with the potential for a more focused corridor of stronger wind gusts across northwest/north-central Montana late this afternoon through early evening. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon across east/northeast Oregon, northern/eastern Idaho, to western Wyoming, and southeastward into Utah/western Colorado, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep-layer shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells and small bowing/outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, with some hail and severe-caliber wind gusts possible. ...High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern Montana this afternoon, with another favored corridor across the central High Plains including northeast Colorado/western Nebraska. Activity should move east-northeastward across the adjoining High Plains. This convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe wind gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Pacific Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward across the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the Montana lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. ...Southeast Arizona/far southwest New Mexico... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon with a relatively moist air mass and ample insolation. Increasing mid-level southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. An instance or two of marginally severe hail could also occur. ..Guyer/Wendt.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 0752 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MONTANA...THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST AND CENTRAL ROCKIES...SOUTHEAST ARIZONA TO EXTREME SOUTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO...AND THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe gusts and possibly some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and the central and northern High Plains. ...Synopsis... A highly amplified but somewhat progressive mid/upper-level pattern is in place over the CONUS, led by a cyclone departing New England for the Canadian Maritimes. Weak mean troughing will persist in its wake over the Atlantic Coast States. A persistent anticyclone -- initially centered over southwestern OK -- should expand somewhat across the southern/central Plains while its 500-mb high drifts northeastward over OK through the period. West Coast troughing is anchored by a strong cyclone -- initially centered just off the OR Coast. This feature should shift eastward/inland through tonight, while breaking up into a couple strong shortwave troughs as internal vorticity maxima pivot over the Northwest and northern CA. A broad fetch of downstream southwest flow will extend across the Great Basin, Intermountain West, and northern/central Rockies. Moisture-channel imagery indicates embedded shortwave troughs over southeastern ID -- forecast to move northeastward over the northern Rockies today -- and over the Four Corners region. The latter perturbation should cross much of western/northern CO and southern WY today, reaching to WY/NE border vicinity by 00Z, then northeastward to eastern SD by 12Z. 11Z surface analysis showed a longstanding, quasistationary to warm frontal zone, from northern FL across the northeastern Gulf shelf waters to southern LA, north-central TX, southwestern OK, to a low over the northern TX Panhandle. This boundary still defines the northern rim of the richest Gulf moisture/theta-e, and should drift northward over the southern Plains through the period while moving little elsewhere. A low was drawn over eastern WA, with cold front across northeastern OR, central NV to south-central CA. This low should occlude and move northward into southern BC today, while the cold front moves slowly eastward across ID and northern NV, and loses definition farther south. A secondary low should form by 00Z over northwestern MT and move northeastward to the southern AB/SK border region by 12Z. Meanwhile, a lee trough will strengthen and extend from the secondary low southeastward over central/eastern MT, then over eastern arts of WY/CO. The trough should move northeastward over more of eastern MT, and into the western Dakotas, overnight. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... Scattered thunderstorms are expected in the field of southwesterly mid/upper flow, preceding the Pacific Coast trough, and mostly ahead of the surface cold front. Within that plume, isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible. Severe potential may begin as early as midday to early afternoon -- and continue through the afternoon -- across parts of the eastern Great Basin/western Colorado Plateau region. This will occur as clearing behind the shortwave trough permits sustained heating of higher terrain from the Wasatch Range southward and southeastward. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon from western WY and eastern ID across western MT, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. A monsoonal plume and associated parallel moisture-transport vectors will ensure sufficient boundary-layer moisture supply, even through the diurnal heating/mixing process, with somewhat less moisture and deeper inverted-v thermodynamic profiles northward. MLCAPE should range from around 1000-2000 J/kg in southern UT, in richest moisture, to around 200-800 J/kg over the northern Rockies, in stronger flow aloft. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells, small bowing/ outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells. Despite the weak moisture, enough is apparent to suggest isolated severe-gust potential into parts of eastern WA and northeastern OR, including areas of dry-thunder potential in the fire-weather outlook. ...Northern/central High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern MT this afternoon. Activity should move northeastward to eastward across the adjoining High Plains. Along the way, this convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward down the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the MT lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. Interestingly, most progs show a relative minimum in convective coverage in the area of greatest midlevel DCVA/ascent head of the ejecting shortwave trough, compared to farther north and south. For now, a long 5%/Marginal outlook will be maintained, with the understanding that conditional/localized concentrations of severe-gust potential in particular may exist where upscale aggregation can occur. Potential for activity to persist later into the evening is most apparent over the southern part of the outlook area, which has been expanded somewhat eastward accordingly. ...Southeastern AZ, extreme southwestern NM... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon in a plume of monsoonal moisture and favorable surface heating today from western Chihuahua across southeastern AZ and southwestern NM, north-northeastward over eastern AZ and western NM. Increasing midlevel southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. Isolated, marginally severe hail also may occur in some cores. Forecast soundings reasonably suggest that lower-elevation dewpoints, remaining in the 50s to near 60 F through most of the heating/mixing cycle, contribute to MLCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 0752 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MONTANA...THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST AND CENTRAL ROCKIES...SOUTHEAST ARIZONA TO EXTREME SOUTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO...AND THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe gusts and possibly some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and the central and northern High Plains. ...Synopsis... A highly amplified but somewhat progressive mid/upper-level pattern is in place over the CONUS, led by a cyclone departing New England for the Canadian Maritimes. Weak mean troughing will persist in its wake over the Atlantic Coast States. A persistent anticyclone -- initially centered over southwestern OK -- should expand somewhat across the southern/central Plains while its 500-mb high drifts northeastward over OK through the period. West Coast troughing is anchored by a strong cyclone -- initially centered just off the OR Coast. This feature should shift eastward/inland through tonight, while breaking up into a couple strong shortwave troughs as internal vorticity maxima pivot over the Northwest and northern CA. A broad fetch of downstream southwest flow will extend across the Great Basin, Intermountain West, and northern/central Rockies. Moisture-channel imagery indicates embedded shortwave troughs over southeastern ID -- forecast to move northeastward over the northern Rockies today -- and over the Four Corners region. The latter perturbation should cross much of western/northern CO and southern WY today, reaching to WY/NE border vicinity by 00Z, then northeastward to eastern SD by 12Z. 11Z surface analysis showed a longstanding, quasistationary to warm frontal zone, from northern FL across the northeastern Gulf shelf waters to southern LA, north-central TX, southwestern OK, to a low over the northern TX Panhandle. This boundary still defines the northern rim of the richest Gulf moisture/theta-e, and should drift northward over the southern Plains through the period while moving little elsewhere. A low was drawn over eastern WA, with cold front across northeastern OR, central NV to south-central CA. This low should occlude and move northward into southern BC today, while the cold front moves slowly eastward across ID and northern NV, and loses definition farther south. A secondary low should form by 00Z over northwestern MT and move northeastward to the southern AB/SK border region by 12Z. Meanwhile, a lee trough will strengthen and extend from the secondary low southeastward over central/eastern MT, then over eastern arts of WY/CO. The trough should move northeastward over more of eastern MT, and into the western Dakotas, overnight. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... Scattered thunderstorms are expected in the field of southwesterly mid/upper flow, preceding the Pacific Coast trough, and mostly ahead of the surface cold front. Within that plume, isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible. Severe potential may begin as early as midday to early afternoon -- and continue through the afternoon -- across parts of the eastern Great Basin/western Colorado Plateau region. This will occur as clearing behind the shortwave trough permits sustained heating of higher terrain from the Wasatch Range southward and southeastward. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon from western WY and eastern ID across western MT, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. A monsoonal plume and associated parallel moisture-transport vectors will ensure sufficient boundary-layer moisture supply, even through the diurnal heating/mixing process, with somewhat less moisture and deeper inverted-v thermodynamic profiles northward. MLCAPE should range from around 1000-2000 J/kg in southern UT, in richest moisture, to around 200-800 J/kg over the northern Rockies, in stronger flow aloft. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells, small bowing/ outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells. Despite the weak moisture, enough is apparent to suggest isolated severe-gust potential into parts of eastern WA and northeastern OR, including areas of dry-thunder potential in the fire-weather outlook. ...Northern/central High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern MT this afternoon. Activity should move northeastward to eastward across the adjoining High Plains. Along the way, this convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward down the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the MT lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. Interestingly, most progs show a relative minimum in convective coverage in the area of greatest midlevel DCVA/ascent head of the ejecting shortwave trough, compared to farther north and south. For now, a long 5%/Marginal outlook will be maintained, with the understanding that conditional/localized concentrations of severe-gust potential in particular may exist where upscale aggregation can occur. Potential for activity to persist later into the evening is most apparent over the southern part of the outlook area, which has been expanded somewhat eastward accordingly. ...Southeastern AZ, extreme southwestern NM... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon in a plume of monsoonal moisture and favorable surface heating today from western Chihuahua across southeastern AZ and southwestern NM, north-northeastward over eastern AZ and western NM. Increasing midlevel southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. Isolated, marginally severe hail also may occur in some cores. Forecast soundings reasonably suggest that lower-elevation dewpoints, remaining in the 50s to near 60 F through most of the heating/mixing cycle, contribute to MLCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 0752 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MONTANA...THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST AND CENTRAL ROCKIES...SOUTHEAST ARIZONA TO EXTREME SOUTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO...AND THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe gusts and possibly some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and the central and northern High Plains. ...Synopsis... A highly amplified but somewhat progressive mid/upper-level pattern is in place over the CONUS, led by a cyclone departing New England for the Canadian Maritimes. Weak mean troughing will persist in its wake over the Atlantic Coast States. A persistent anticyclone -- initially centered over southwestern OK -- should expand somewhat across the southern/central Plains while its 500-mb high drifts northeastward over OK through the period. West Coast troughing is anchored by a strong cyclone -- initially centered just off the OR Coast. This feature should shift eastward/inland through tonight, while breaking up into a couple strong shortwave troughs as internal vorticity maxima pivot over the Northwest and northern CA. A broad fetch of downstream southwest flow will extend across the Great Basin, Intermountain West, and northern/central Rockies. Moisture-channel imagery indicates embedded shortwave troughs over southeastern ID -- forecast to move northeastward over the northern Rockies today -- and over the Four Corners region. The latter perturbation should cross much of western/northern CO and southern WY today, reaching to WY/NE border vicinity by 00Z, then northeastward to eastern SD by 12Z. 11Z surface analysis showed a longstanding, quasistationary to warm frontal zone, from northern FL across the northeastern Gulf shelf waters to southern LA, north-central TX, southwestern OK, to a low over the northern TX Panhandle. This boundary still defines the northern rim of the richest Gulf moisture/theta-e, and should drift northward over the southern Plains through the period while moving little elsewhere. A low was drawn over eastern WA, with cold front across northeastern OR, central NV to south-central CA. This low should occlude and move northward into southern BC today, while the cold front moves slowly eastward across ID and northern NV, and loses definition farther south. A secondary low should form by 00Z over northwestern MT and move northeastward to the southern AB/SK border region by 12Z. Meanwhile, a lee trough will strengthen and extend from the secondary low southeastward over central/eastern MT, then over eastern arts of WY/CO. The trough should move northeastward over more of eastern MT, and into the western Dakotas, overnight. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... Scattered thunderstorms are expected in the field of southwesterly mid/upper flow, preceding the Pacific Coast trough, and mostly ahead of the surface cold front. Within that plume, isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible. Severe potential may begin as early as midday to early afternoon -- and continue through the afternoon -- across parts of the eastern Great Basin/western Colorado Plateau region. This will occur as clearing behind the shortwave trough permits sustained heating of higher terrain from the Wasatch Range southward and southeastward. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon from western WY and eastern ID across western MT, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. A monsoonal plume and associated parallel moisture-transport vectors will ensure sufficient boundary-layer moisture supply, even through the diurnal heating/mixing process, with somewhat less moisture and deeper inverted-v thermodynamic profiles northward. MLCAPE should range from around 1000-2000 J/kg in southern UT, in richest moisture, to around 200-800 J/kg over the northern Rockies, in stronger flow aloft. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells, small bowing/ outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells. Despite the weak moisture, enough is apparent to suggest isolated severe-gust potential into parts of eastern WA and northeastern OR, including areas of dry-thunder potential in the fire-weather outlook. ...Northern/central High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern MT this afternoon. Activity should move northeastward to eastward across the adjoining High Plains. Along the way, this convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward down the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the MT lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. Interestingly, most progs show a relative minimum in convective coverage in the area of greatest midlevel DCVA/ascent head of the ejecting shortwave trough, compared to farther north and south. For now, a long 5%/Marginal outlook will be maintained, with the understanding that conditional/localized concentrations of severe-gust potential in particular may exist where upscale aggregation can occur. Potential for activity to persist later into the evening is most apparent over the southern part of the outlook area, which has been expanded somewhat eastward accordingly. ...Southeastern AZ, extreme southwestern NM... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon in a plume of monsoonal moisture and favorable surface heating today from western Chihuahua across southeastern AZ and southwestern NM, north-northeastward over eastern AZ and western NM. Increasing midlevel southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. Isolated, marginally severe hail also may occur in some cores. Forecast soundings reasonably suggest that lower-elevation dewpoints, remaining in the 50s to near 60 F through most of the heating/mixing cycle, contribute to MLCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 0752 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MONTANA...THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST AND CENTRAL ROCKIES...SOUTHEAST ARIZONA TO EXTREME SOUTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO...AND THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe gusts and possibly some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and the central and northern High Plains. ...Synopsis... A highly amplified but somewhat progressive mid/upper-level pattern is in place over the CONUS, led by a cyclone departing New England for the Canadian Maritimes. Weak mean troughing will persist in its wake over the Atlantic Coast States. A persistent anticyclone -- initially centered over southwestern OK -- should expand somewhat across the southern/central Plains while its 500-mb high drifts northeastward over OK through the period. West Coast troughing is anchored by a strong cyclone -- initially centered just off the OR Coast. This feature should shift eastward/inland through tonight, while breaking up into a couple strong shortwave troughs as internal vorticity maxima pivot over the Northwest and northern CA. A broad fetch of downstream southwest flow will extend across the Great Basin, Intermountain West, and northern/central Rockies. Moisture-channel imagery indicates embedded shortwave troughs over southeastern ID -- forecast to move northeastward over the northern Rockies today -- and over the Four Corners region. The latter perturbation should cross much of western/northern CO and southern WY today, reaching to WY/NE border vicinity by 00Z, then northeastward to eastern SD by 12Z. 11Z surface analysis showed a longstanding, quasistationary to warm frontal zone, from northern FL across the northeastern Gulf shelf waters to southern LA, north-central TX, southwestern OK, to a low over the northern TX Panhandle. This boundary still defines the northern rim of the richest Gulf moisture/theta-e, and should drift northward over the southern Plains through the period while moving little elsewhere. A low was drawn over eastern WA, with cold front across northeastern OR, central NV to south-central CA. This low should occlude and move northward into southern BC today, while the cold front moves slowly eastward across ID and northern NV, and loses definition farther south. A secondary low should form by 00Z over northwestern MT and move northeastward to the southern AB/SK border region by 12Z. Meanwhile, a lee trough will strengthen and extend from the secondary low southeastward over central/eastern MT, then over eastern arts of WY/CO. The trough should move northeastward over more of eastern MT, and into the western Dakotas, overnight. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... Scattered thunderstorms are expected in the field of southwesterly mid/upper flow, preceding the Pacific Coast trough, and mostly ahead of the surface cold front. Within that plume, isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible. Severe potential may begin as early as midday to early afternoon -- and continue through the afternoon -- across parts of the eastern Great Basin/western Colorado Plateau region. This will occur as clearing behind the shortwave trough permits sustained heating of higher terrain from the Wasatch Range southward and southeastward. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon from western WY and eastern ID across western MT, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. A monsoonal plume and associated parallel moisture-transport vectors will ensure sufficient boundary-layer moisture supply, even through the diurnal heating/mixing process, with somewhat less moisture and deeper inverted-v thermodynamic profiles northward. MLCAPE should range from around 1000-2000 J/kg in southern UT, in richest moisture, to around 200-800 J/kg over the northern Rockies, in stronger flow aloft. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells, small bowing/ outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells. Despite the weak moisture, enough is apparent to suggest isolated severe-gust potential into parts of eastern WA and northeastern OR, including areas of dry-thunder potential in the fire-weather outlook. ...Northern/central High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern MT this afternoon. Activity should move northeastward to eastward across the adjoining High Plains. Along the way, this convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward down the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the MT lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. Interestingly, most progs show a relative minimum in convective coverage in the area of greatest midlevel DCVA/ascent head of the ejecting shortwave trough, compared to farther north and south. For now, a long 5%/Marginal outlook will be maintained, with the understanding that conditional/localized concentrations of severe-gust potential in particular may exist where upscale aggregation can occur. Potential for activity to persist later into the evening is most apparent over the southern part of the outlook area, which has been expanded somewhat eastward accordingly. ...Southeastern AZ, extreme southwestern NM... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon in a plume of monsoonal moisture and favorable surface heating today from western Chihuahua across southeastern AZ and southwestern NM, north-northeastward over eastern AZ and western NM. Increasing midlevel southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. Isolated, marginally severe hail also may occur in some cores. Forecast soundings reasonably suggest that lower-elevation dewpoints, remaining in the 50s to near 60 F through most of the heating/mixing cycle, contribute to MLCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 0752 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MONTANA...THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST AND CENTRAL ROCKIES...SOUTHEAST ARIZONA TO EXTREME SOUTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO...AND THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Strong to severe storms with severe gusts and possibly some hail are possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies, southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and the central and northern High Plains. ...Synopsis... A highly amplified but somewhat progressive mid/upper-level pattern is in place over the CONUS, led by a cyclone departing New England for the Canadian Maritimes. Weak mean troughing will persist in its wake over the Atlantic Coast States. A persistent anticyclone -- initially centered over southwestern OK -- should expand somewhat across the southern/central Plains while its 500-mb high drifts northeastward over OK through the period. West Coast troughing is anchored by a strong cyclone -- initially centered just off the OR Coast. This feature should shift eastward/inland through tonight, while breaking up into a couple strong shortwave troughs as internal vorticity maxima pivot over the Northwest and northern CA. A broad fetch of downstream southwest flow will extend across the Great Basin, Intermountain West, and northern/central Rockies. Moisture-channel imagery indicates embedded shortwave troughs over southeastern ID -- forecast to move northeastward over the northern Rockies today -- and over the Four Corners region. The latter perturbation should cross much of western/northern CO and southern WY today, reaching to WY/NE border vicinity by 00Z, then northeastward to eastern SD by 12Z. 11Z surface analysis showed a longstanding, quasistationary to warm frontal zone, from northern FL across the northeastern Gulf shelf waters to southern LA, north-central TX, southwestern OK, to a low over the northern TX Panhandle. This boundary still defines the northern rim of the richest Gulf moisture/theta-e, and should drift northward over the southern Plains through the period while moving little elsewhere. A low was drawn over eastern WA, with cold front across northeastern OR, central NV to south-central CA. This low should occlude and move northward into southern BC today, while the cold front moves slowly eastward across ID and northern NV, and loses definition farther south. A secondary low should form by 00Z over northwestern MT and move northeastward to the southern AB/SK border region by 12Z. Meanwhile, a lee trough will strengthen and extend from the secondary low southeastward over central/eastern MT, then over eastern arts of WY/CO. The trough should move northeastward over more of eastern MT, and into the western Dakotas, overnight. ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies... Scattered thunderstorms are expected in the field of southwesterly mid/upper flow, preceding the Pacific Coast trough, and mostly ahead of the surface cold front. Within that plume, isolated severe gusts and marginally severe hail will be possible. Severe potential may begin as early as midday to early afternoon -- and continue through the afternoon -- across parts of the eastern Great Basin/western Colorado Plateau region. This will occur as clearing behind the shortwave trough permits sustained heating of higher terrain from the Wasatch Range southward and southeastward. Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon from western WY and eastern ID across western MT, as eastern fringes of large-scale ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain. A monsoonal plume and associated parallel moisture-transport vectors will ensure sufficient boundary-layer moisture supply, even through the diurnal heating/mixing process, with somewhat less moisture and deeper inverted-v thermodynamic profiles northward. MLCAPE should range from around 1000-2000 J/kg in southern UT, in richest moisture, to around 200-800 J/kg over the northern Rockies, in stronger flow aloft. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep shear (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells, small bowing/ outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells. Despite the weak moisture, enough is apparent to suggest isolated severe-gust potential into parts of eastern WA and northeastern OR, including areas of dry-thunder potential in the fire-weather outlook. ...Northern/central High Plains... Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over eastern MT this afternoon. Activity should move northeastward to eastward across the adjoining High Plains. Along the way, this convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated severe gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible. Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this corridor, between the Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and low-level moisture greater southward down the central High Plains. Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the MT lee trough, along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized convection. Interestingly, most progs show a relative minimum in convective coverage in the area of greatest midlevel DCVA/ascent head of the ejecting shortwave trough, compared to farther north and south. For now, a long 5%/Marginal outlook will be maintained, with the understanding that conditional/localized concentrations of severe-gust potential in particular may exist where upscale aggregation can occur. Potential for activity to persist later into the evening is most apparent over the southern part of the outlook area, which has been expanded somewhat eastward accordingly. ...Southeastern AZ, extreme southwestern NM... Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon in a plume of monsoonal moisture and favorable surface heating today from western Chihuahua across southeastern AZ and southwestern NM, north-northeastward over eastern AZ and western NM. Increasing midlevel southerlies around the western rim of the anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts from the most intense cells locally. Isolated, marginally severe hail also may occur in some cores. Forecast soundings reasonably suggest that lower-elevation dewpoints, remaining in the 50s to near 60 F through most of the heating/mixing cycle, contribute to MLCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range. ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/23/2024 Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 0401 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 261200Z - 311200Z ...DISCUSSION... Models continue to suggest potential for severe weather across parts of the Upper Mississippi Valley area Day4/Monday, as a mid-level short-wave trough is shunted northeastward across this region by the persistent central U.S. ridge. Timing of the advance of this feature differs between the GFS and ECMWF, casting some uncertainty, but enough agreement exists to maintain a 15% probability area across this region. One other area of interest Day 4/Monday is across portions of the southern New England/Mid-Atlantic vicinity within a northwesterly flow regime on the southwestern side of New England/Canadian Maritimes upper low. Enhanced northwesterlies aloft would be sufficient to produce rather fast-moving bands of storms, but degree of instability remains a substantial question at this time. With intensity of the convection thus still uncertain, will refrain at this time from introducing a risk area. As the north-central U.S. mid-level feature moves into/across Ontario Day 5, a decrease in severe risk is expected despite a weak frontal advance southeastward across the Great Lakes into the Ohio Valley. Beyond Day 5, models begin to deviate substantially, particularly with respect to their handling of the next trough expected to progress eastward across the Canadian Prairie and northwestern/north-central CONUS. While some severe potential could accompany this feature, particularly if an evolution that resembles the stronger ECMWF solution plays out, uncertainty precludes any reasonable assessment of severe potential. Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 0401 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 261200Z - 311200Z ...DISCUSSION... Models continue to suggest potential for severe weather across parts of the Upper Mississippi Valley area Day4/Monday, as a mid-level short-wave trough is shunted northeastward across this region by the persistent central U.S. ridge. Timing of the advance of this feature differs between the GFS and ECMWF, casting some uncertainty, but enough agreement exists to maintain a 15% probability area across this region. One other area of interest Day 4/Monday is across portions of the southern New England/Mid-Atlantic vicinity within a northwesterly flow regime on the southwestern side of New England/Canadian Maritimes upper low. Enhanced northwesterlies aloft would be sufficient to produce rather fast-moving bands of storms, but degree of instability remains a substantial question at this time. With intensity of the convection thus still uncertain, will refrain at this time from introducing a risk area. As the north-central U.S. mid-level feature moves into/across Ontario Day 5, a decrease in severe risk is expected despite a weak frontal advance southeastward across the Great Lakes into the Ohio Valley. Beyond Day 5, models begin to deviate substantially, particularly with respect to their handling of the next trough expected to progress eastward across the Canadian Prairie and northwestern/north-central CONUS. While some severe potential could accompany this feature, particularly if an evolution that resembles the stronger ECMWF solution plays out, uncertainty precludes any reasonable assessment of severe potential. Read more

SPC Aug 23, 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 0401 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024 Valid 261200Z - 311200Z ...DISCUSSION... Models continue to suggest potential for severe weather across parts of the Upper Mississippi Valley area Day4/Monday, as a mid-level short-wave trough is shunted northeastward across this region by the persistent central U.S. ridge. Timing of the advance of this feature differs between the GFS and ECMWF, casting some uncertainty, but enough agreement exists to maintain a 15% probability area across this region. One other area of interest Day 4/Monday is across portions of the southern New England/Mid-Atlantic vicinity within a northwesterly flow regime on the southwestern side of New England/Canadian Maritimes upper low. Enhanced northwesterlies aloft would be sufficient to produce rather fast-moving bands of storms, but degree of instability remains a substantial question at this time. With intensity of the convection thus still uncertain, will refrain at this time from introducing a risk area. As the north-central U.S. mid-level feature moves into/across Ontario Day 5, a decrease in severe risk is expected despite a weak frontal advance southeastward across the Great Lakes into the Ohio Valley. Beyond Day 5, models begin to deviate substantially, particularly with respect to their handling of the next trough expected to progress eastward across the Canadian Prairie and northwestern/north-central CONUS. While some severe potential could accompany this feature, particularly if an evolution that resembles the stronger ECMWF solution plays out, uncertainty precludes any reasonable assessment of severe potential. Read more
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