SPC Tornado Watch 326 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0326 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 326 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 25 NNE MKL TO 50 WSW BNA TO 20 S BNA TO 20 WNW CSV TO 45 SSW LOZ TO 30 S LOZ. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...MRX...OHX...MEG...HUN... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 326 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS TNC001-003-007-009-011-013-015-023-025-031-035-039-041-049-051- 055-057-061-063-065-067-071-073-077-081-089-093-099-101-103-105- 107-109-115-117-119-121-123-127-129-135-139-143-145-149-151-153- 155-173-175-177-181-185-270740- TN . TENNESSEE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ANDERSON BEDFORD BLEDSOE BLOUNT BRADLEY CAMPBELL CANNON CHESTER CLAIBORNE COFFEE CUMBERLAND DECATUR DE KALB FENTRESS FRANKLIN GILES GRAINGER GRUNDY HAMBLEN HAMILTON HANCOCK HARDIN HAWKINS HENDERSON HICKMAN JEFFERSON KNOX LAWRENCE LEWIS LINCOLN LOUDON MCMINN MCNAIRY MARION MARSHALL MAURY MEIGS MONROE MOORE MORGAN PERRY POLK RHEA ROANE RUTHERFORD SCOTT SEQUATCHIE SEVIER UNION VAN BUREN WARREN Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 326 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0326 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 326 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 25 NNE MKL TO 50 WSW BNA TO 20 S BNA TO 20 WNW CSV TO 45 SSW LOZ TO 30 S LOZ. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...MRX...OHX...MEG...HUN... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 326 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS TNC001-003-007-009-011-013-015-023-025-031-035-039-041-049-051- 055-057-061-063-065-067-071-073-077-081-089-093-099-101-103-105- 107-109-115-117-119-121-123-127-129-135-139-143-145-149-151-153- 155-173-175-177-181-185-270740- TN . TENNESSEE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ANDERSON BEDFORD BLEDSOE BLOUNT BRADLEY CAMPBELL CANNON CHESTER CLAIBORNE COFFEE CUMBERLAND DECATUR DE KALB FENTRESS FRANKLIN GILES GRAINGER GRUNDY HAMBLEN HAMILTON HANCOCK HARDIN HAWKINS HENDERSON HICKMAN JEFFERSON KNOX LAWRENCE LEWIS LINCOLN LOUDON MCMINN MCNAIRY MARION MARSHALL MAURY MEIGS MONROE MOORE MORGAN PERRY POLK RHEA ROANE RUTHERFORD SCOTT SEQUATCHIE SEVIER UNION VAN BUREN WARREN Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 327 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0327 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 S LOZ TO 10 W JKL TO 35 W HTS TO 45 W UNI. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...ILN...LMK...JKL...RLX...MRX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS KYC013-025-043-051-063-071-095-115-119-121-127-131-133-153-159- 175-193-195-270740- KY . KENTUCKY COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BELL BREATHITT CARTER CLAY ELLIOTT FLOYD HARLAN JOHNSON KNOTT KNOX LAWRENCE LESLIE LETCHER MAGOFFIN MARTIN MORGAN PERRY PIKE VAC051-105-169-195-720-270740- VA . VIRGINIA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE DICKENSON LEE SCOTT WISE VIRGINIA INDEPENDENT CITIES INCLUDED ARE Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 327 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0327 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 S LOZ TO 10 W JKL TO 35 W HTS TO 45 W UNI. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...ILN...LMK...JKL...RLX...MRX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS KYC013-025-043-051-063-071-095-115-119-121-127-131-133-153-159- 175-193-195-270740- KY . KENTUCKY COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BELL BREATHITT CARTER CLAY ELLIOTT FLOYD HARLAN JOHNSON KNOTT KNOX LAWRENCE LESLIE LETCHER MAGOFFIN MARTIN MORGAN PERRY PIKE VAC051-105-169-195-720-270740- VA . VIRGINIA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE DICKENSON LEE SCOTT WISE VIRGINIA INDEPENDENT CITIES INCLUDED ARE Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 327 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0327 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 S LOZ TO 10 W JKL TO 35 W HTS TO 45 W UNI. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...ILN...LMK...JKL...RLX...MRX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS KYC013-025-043-051-063-071-095-115-119-121-127-131-133-153-159- 175-193-195-270740- KY . KENTUCKY COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BELL BREATHITT CARTER CLAY ELLIOTT FLOYD HARLAN JOHNSON KNOTT KNOX LAWRENCE LESLIE LETCHER MAGOFFIN MARTIN MORGAN PERRY PIKE VAC051-105-169-195-720-270740- VA . VIRGINIA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE DICKENSON LEE SCOTT WISE VIRGINIA INDEPENDENT CITIES INCLUDED ARE Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 327 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0327 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 S LOZ TO 10 W JKL TO 35 W HTS TO 45 W UNI. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...ILN...LMK...JKL...RLX...MRX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS KYC013-025-043-051-063-071-095-115-119-121-127-131-133-153-159- 175-193-195-270740- KY . KENTUCKY COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BELL BREATHITT CARTER CLAY ELLIOTT FLOYD HARLAN JOHNSON KNOTT KNOX LAWRENCE LESLIE LETCHER MAGOFFIN MARTIN MORGAN PERRY PIKE VAC051-105-169-195-720-270740- VA . VIRGINIA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE DICKENSON LEE SCOTT WISE VIRGINIA INDEPENDENT CITIES INCLUDED ARE Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 327 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0327 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 S LOZ TO 10 W JKL TO 35 W HTS TO 45 W UNI. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...ILN...LMK...JKL...RLX...MRX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS KYC013-025-043-051-063-071-095-115-119-121-127-131-133-153-159- 175-193-195-270740- KY . KENTUCKY COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BELL BREATHITT CARTER CLAY ELLIOTT FLOYD HARLAN JOHNSON KNOTT KNOX LAWRENCE LESLIE LETCHER MAGOFFIN MARTIN MORGAN PERRY PIKE VAC051-105-169-195-720-270740- VA . VIRGINIA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE DICKENSON LEE SCOTT WISE VIRGINIA INDEPENDENT CITIES INCLUDED ARE Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 327 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0327 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 S LOZ TO 10 W JKL TO 35 W HTS TO 45 W UNI. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...ILN...LMK...JKL...RLX...MRX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 327 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS KYC013-025-043-051-063-071-095-115-119-121-127-131-133-153-159- 175-193-195-270740- KY . KENTUCKY COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BELL BREATHITT CARTER CLAY ELLIOTT FLOYD HARLAN JOHNSON KNOTT KNOX LAWRENCE LESLIE LETCHER MAGOFFIN MARTIN MORGAN PERRY PIKE VAC051-105-169-195-720-270740- VA . VIRGINIA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE DICKENSON LEE SCOTT WISE VIRGINIA INDEPENDENT CITIES INCLUDED ARE Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 327

1 year 3 months ago
WW 327 TORNADO IN KY OH VA 270305Z - 271000Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED Tornado Watch Number 327 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1105 PM EDT Sun May 26 2024 The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a * Tornado Watch for portions of Southeast Indiana Northern and Eastern Kentucky Southwest Ohio Far Southwest Virginia * Effective this Sunday night and Monday morning from 1105 PM until 600 AM EDT. * Primary threats include... A couple tornadoes possible Widespread damaging winds likely with isolated significant gusts to 75 mph possible Isolated large hail events to 1 inch in diameter possible SUMMARY...A severe squall line will likely move eastward across the Watch area tonight. Severe damaging gusts and a risk for line-embedded tornadoes will be the primary hazards. The tornado watch area is approximately along and 80 statute miles east and west of a line from 10 miles north of Cincinnati OH to 55 miles southeast of London KY. For a complete depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU7). PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... REMEMBER...A Tornado Watch means conditions are favorable for tornadoes and severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch area. Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for threatening weather conditions and listen for later statements and possible warnings. && OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 320...WW 321...WW 322...WW 323...WW 324...WW 325...WW 326... AVIATION...Tornadoes and a few severe thunderstorms with hail surface and aloft to 1 inch. Extreme turbulence and surface wind gusts to 65 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 450. Mean storm motion vector 30035. ...Smith Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 330 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0330 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 330 THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...BMX...HUN...JAN...FFC...MEG... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 330 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ALC009-033-043-049-057-059-071-075-077-079-083-089-093-095-103- 127-133-270740- AL . ALABAMA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BLOUNT COLBERT CULLMAN DEKALB FAYETTE FRANKLIN JACKSON LAMAR LAUDERDALE LAWRENCE LIMESTONE MADISON MARION MARSHALL MORGAN WALKER WINSTON ARC003-017-270740- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ASHLEY CHICOT GAC047-083-295-270740- GA . GEORGIA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 330 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0330 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 330 THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA. ..GOSS..05/27/24 ATTN...WFO...BMX...HUN...JAN...FFC...MEG... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 330 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ALC009-033-043-049-057-059-071-075-077-079-083-089-093-095-103- 127-133-270740- AL . ALABAMA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BLOUNT COLBERT CULLMAN DEKALB FAYETTE FRANKLIN JACKSON LAMAR LAUDERDALE LAWRENCE LIMESTONE MADISON MARION MARSHALL MORGAN WALKER WINSTON ARC003-017-270740- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ASHLEY CHICOT GAC047-083-295-270740- GA . GEORGIA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE Read more

SPC MD 1007

1 year 3 months ago
MD 1007 CONCERNING TORNADO WATCH 327... FOR CENTRAL/EASTERN KY...FAR SOUTHERN OH
Mesoscale Discussion 1007 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1142 PM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Areas affected...Central/Eastern KY...Far Southern OH Concerning...Tornado Watch 327... Valid 270442Z - 270615Z The severe weather threat for Tornado Watch 327 continues. SUMMARY...Threat for damaging gusts and line-embedded QLCS tornadoes remains possible. DISCUSSION...Organized convective line continues to push eastward across central KY at around 40 kt. At the this speed, the line should move into eastern KY at around 0530Z and to the edge of Tornado Watch 327 around 0730 to 0800Z. Updrafts have largely maintained their intensity over the past hour, which is a testament to the organized character of the line given the reduced buoyancy it has encountered. Vertical shear remains strong and the line is oriented favorably for continued forward propagation. Damaging wind gusts will be the primary threat within this line as it continues eastward. The JKL VAD continues to show strong low-level shear with notable veering with height, suggesting that some line-embedded QLCS tornadoes are still possible, particularly in any surge within the line. One such surge may be possible soon with the strong updraft on the southern end of the line over south-central KY. ..Mosier.. 05/27/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...RLX...JKL...ILN...LMK... LAT...LON 38058509 39148448 39188331 38588272 37178325 36608375 36808578 38058509 Read more

SPC May 27, 2024 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1205 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024 Valid 281200Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN TEXAS INTO SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO.... ...SUMMARY... Strong thunderstorms, perhaps including a few supercells and a couple of organizing clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail, are possible across much of central into western Texas and southeastern New Mexico Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday evening. ...Synopsis... The westerlies are forecast to remain modestly amplified and progressive across the northern mid-latitudes of the Pacific into western North America through this period. Within this regime, models indicate that large-scale mid-level troughing will shift inland of the British Columbia and Pacific Northwest coast through the Canadian and northern U.S. Rockies, while downstream ridging overspreads the eastern Canadian Prairies and northern U.S. Great Plains. Farther east, the progression of larger-scale troughing east of the upper Mississippi Valley may be slower, as one notable embedded short wave digs southeast of the Upper Midwest toward the lower Ohio Valley, but a preceding impulse may accelerate east-northeast of the lower Great Lakes region into the St. Lawrence Valley. This likely will be accompanied by a weakening surface cyclone, and trailing reinforcing surges of cooler/drier air through much of the Northeast, Mid Atlantic and Ohio into middle Mississippi Valleys. An initial surge of cooler and drier air likely will advance across the remainder of the Southeast, into the Florida Peninsula and north central Gulf coast, and later, beneath ridging within weaker westerlies across the southern mid- and subtropical latitudes, through the southern Great Plains. ...Texas and portions of adjacent states... Latest model output, including the NAM in particular, suggests that the southern Great Plains portion of the lead cold front may become reinforced by outflow from convection as it spreads across and south of the Red River Valley early Tuesday. This convection likely will be initially rooted within lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection, aided by forcing for ascent associated with at least one mid/upper perturbation progressing through the larger-scale ridging. Beneath warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air, daytime heating to the south of the front will contribute to strengthening differential heating across the front/outflow, with residual seasonably moist air to the south of this boundary becoming characterized by large mixed-layer CAPE on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg. As the initial convection increasingly acquires inflow of this air, substantive further intensification is probable as it propagates southward toward the upper Texas/Louisiana coastal plain, accompanied by potential damaging wind gusts. Upstream, it appears that a trailing perturbation may support renewed thunderstorm development across parts of the Texas South Plains and Big Country by mid to late afternoon. Although lower/mid-tropospheric wind fields may be modest in strength, turning with height beneath stronger flow aloft may be supportive of supercells initially, accompanied by potential to produce large hail before consolidating and growing upscale. It appears that this activity may tend to track southeastward along outflow trailing the initial convection, accompanied by substantive further intensification. This may include an evolving mesoscale convective vortex, strengthening rear-inflow, and cold pool with potentially sustained strong to severe surface gusts propagating southeastward and southward toward the Texas Hill Country and through the Edwards Plateau into Tuesday evening. It is possible severe wind probabilities may need to be increased a bit further in later outlooks, as model spread decreases and potential convective evolution becomes a bit clearer. Otherwise, isolated supercell storms remain a possibility near the dryline initially across parts of the Permian Basin. ...Northern Intermountain Region/Rockies... Models indicate that weak destabilization ahead of the inland advancing mid-level trough will support increasing thunderstorm development Tuesday afternoon and evening. The NAM, in particular, continues to suggest that activity may consolidate across the mountains of central Idaho into western Montana, where evaporative cooling within a well-mixed sub-cloud boundary layer may contribute to downward mixing of 40-50 kt southwesterly lower/mid-tropospheric flow and a strengthening cold pool. It is possible that strong to severe surface gusts may spread east of the continental divide Tuesday evening, even as more weakly unstable inflow begins to weaken convection. ..Kerr.. 05/27/2024 Read more

SPC May 27, 2024 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1205 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024 Valid 281200Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN TEXAS INTO SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO.... ...SUMMARY... Strong thunderstorms, perhaps including a few supercells and a couple of organizing clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail, are possible across much of central into western Texas and southeastern New Mexico Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday evening. ...Synopsis... The westerlies are forecast to remain modestly amplified and progressive across the northern mid-latitudes of the Pacific into western North America through this period. Within this regime, models indicate that large-scale mid-level troughing will shift inland of the British Columbia and Pacific Northwest coast through the Canadian and northern U.S. Rockies, while downstream ridging overspreads the eastern Canadian Prairies and northern U.S. Great Plains. Farther east, the progression of larger-scale troughing east of the upper Mississippi Valley may be slower, as one notable embedded short wave digs southeast of the Upper Midwest toward the lower Ohio Valley, but a preceding impulse may accelerate east-northeast of the lower Great Lakes region into the St. Lawrence Valley. This likely will be accompanied by a weakening surface cyclone, and trailing reinforcing surges of cooler/drier air through much of the Northeast, Mid Atlantic and Ohio into middle Mississippi Valleys. An initial surge of cooler and drier air likely will advance across the remainder of the Southeast, into the Florida Peninsula and north central Gulf coast, and later, beneath ridging within weaker westerlies across the southern mid- and subtropical latitudes, through the southern Great Plains. ...Texas and portions of adjacent states... Latest model output, including the NAM in particular, suggests that the southern Great Plains portion of the lead cold front may become reinforced by outflow from convection as it spreads across and south of the Red River Valley early Tuesday. This convection likely will be initially rooted within lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection, aided by forcing for ascent associated with at least one mid/upper perturbation progressing through the larger-scale ridging. Beneath warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air, daytime heating to the south of the front will contribute to strengthening differential heating across the front/outflow, with residual seasonably moist air to the south of this boundary becoming characterized by large mixed-layer CAPE on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg. As the initial convection increasingly acquires inflow of this air, substantive further intensification is probable as it propagates southward toward the upper Texas/Louisiana coastal plain, accompanied by potential damaging wind gusts. Upstream, it appears that a trailing perturbation may support renewed thunderstorm development across parts of the Texas South Plains and Big Country by mid to late afternoon. Although lower/mid-tropospheric wind fields may be modest in strength, turning with height beneath stronger flow aloft may be supportive of supercells initially, accompanied by potential to produce large hail before consolidating and growing upscale. It appears that this activity may tend to track southeastward along outflow trailing the initial convection, accompanied by substantive further intensification. This may include an evolving mesoscale convective vortex, strengthening rear-inflow, and cold pool with potentially sustained strong to severe surface gusts propagating southeastward and southward toward the Texas Hill Country and through the Edwards Plateau into Tuesday evening. It is possible severe wind probabilities may need to be increased a bit further in later outlooks, as model spread decreases and potential convective evolution becomes a bit clearer. Otherwise, isolated supercell storms remain a possibility near the dryline initially across parts of the Permian Basin. ...Northern Intermountain Region/Rockies... Models indicate that weak destabilization ahead of the inland advancing mid-level trough will support increasing thunderstorm development Tuesday afternoon and evening. The NAM, in particular, continues to suggest that activity may consolidate across the mountains of central Idaho into western Montana, where evaporative cooling within a well-mixed sub-cloud boundary layer may contribute to downward mixing of 40-50 kt southwesterly lower/mid-tropospheric flow and a strengthening cold pool. It is possible that strong to severe surface gusts may spread east of the continental divide Tuesday evening, even as more weakly unstable inflow begins to weaken convection. ..Kerr.. 05/27/2024 Read more

SPC May 27, 2024 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1205 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024 Valid 281200Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN TEXAS INTO SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO.... ...SUMMARY... Strong thunderstorms, perhaps including a few supercells and a couple of organizing clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail, are possible across much of central into western Texas and southeastern New Mexico Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday evening. ...Synopsis... The westerlies are forecast to remain modestly amplified and progressive across the northern mid-latitudes of the Pacific into western North America through this period. Within this regime, models indicate that large-scale mid-level troughing will shift inland of the British Columbia and Pacific Northwest coast through the Canadian and northern U.S. Rockies, while downstream ridging overspreads the eastern Canadian Prairies and northern U.S. Great Plains. Farther east, the progression of larger-scale troughing east of the upper Mississippi Valley may be slower, as one notable embedded short wave digs southeast of the Upper Midwest toward the lower Ohio Valley, but a preceding impulse may accelerate east-northeast of the lower Great Lakes region into the St. Lawrence Valley. This likely will be accompanied by a weakening surface cyclone, and trailing reinforcing surges of cooler/drier air through much of the Northeast, Mid Atlantic and Ohio into middle Mississippi Valleys. An initial surge of cooler and drier air likely will advance across the remainder of the Southeast, into the Florida Peninsula and north central Gulf coast, and later, beneath ridging within weaker westerlies across the southern mid- and subtropical latitudes, through the southern Great Plains. ...Texas and portions of adjacent states... Latest model output, including the NAM in particular, suggests that the southern Great Plains portion of the lead cold front may become reinforced by outflow from convection as it spreads across and south of the Red River Valley early Tuesday. This convection likely will be initially rooted within lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection, aided by forcing for ascent associated with at least one mid/upper perturbation progressing through the larger-scale ridging. Beneath warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air, daytime heating to the south of the front will contribute to strengthening differential heating across the front/outflow, with residual seasonably moist air to the south of this boundary becoming characterized by large mixed-layer CAPE on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg. As the initial convection increasingly acquires inflow of this air, substantive further intensification is probable as it propagates southward toward the upper Texas/Louisiana coastal plain, accompanied by potential damaging wind gusts. Upstream, it appears that a trailing perturbation may support renewed thunderstorm development across parts of the Texas South Plains and Big Country by mid to late afternoon. Although lower/mid-tropospheric wind fields may be modest in strength, turning with height beneath stronger flow aloft may be supportive of supercells initially, accompanied by potential to produce large hail before consolidating and growing upscale. It appears that this activity may tend to track southeastward along outflow trailing the initial convection, accompanied by substantive further intensification. This may include an evolving mesoscale convective vortex, strengthening rear-inflow, and cold pool with potentially sustained strong to severe surface gusts propagating southeastward and southward toward the Texas Hill Country and through the Edwards Plateau into Tuesday evening. It is possible severe wind probabilities may need to be increased a bit further in later outlooks, as model spread decreases and potential convective evolution becomes a bit clearer. Otherwise, isolated supercell storms remain a possibility near the dryline initially across parts of the Permian Basin. ...Northern Intermountain Region/Rockies... Models indicate that weak destabilization ahead of the inland advancing mid-level trough will support increasing thunderstorm development Tuesday afternoon and evening. The NAM, in particular, continues to suggest that activity may consolidate across the mountains of central Idaho into western Montana, where evaporative cooling within a well-mixed sub-cloud boundary layer may contribute to downward mixing of 40-50 kt southwesterly lower/mid-tropospheric flow and a strengthening cold pool. It is possible that strong to severe surface gusts may spread east of the continental divide Tuesday evening, even as more weakly unstable inflow begins to weaken convection. ..Kerr.. 05/27/2024 Read more

SPC May 27, 2024 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1205 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024 Valid 281200Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN TEXAS INTO SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO.... ...SUMMARY... Strong thunderstorms, perhaps including a few supercells and a couple of organizing clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail, are possible across much of central into western Texas and southeastern New Mexico Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday evening. ...Synopsis... The westerlies are forecast to remain modestly amplified and progressive across the northern mid-latitudes of the Pacific into western North America through this period. Within this regime, models indicate that large-scale mid-level troughing will shift inland of the British Columbia and Pacific Northwest coast through the Canadian and northern U.S. Rockies, while downstream ridging overspreads the eastern Canadian Prairies and northern U.S. Great Plains. Farther east, the progression of larger-scale troughing east of the upper Mississippi Valley may be slower, as one notable embedded short wave digs southeast of the Upper Midwest toward the lower Ohio Valley, but a preceding impulse may accelerate east-northeast of the lower Great Lakes region into the St. Lawrence Valley. This likely will be accompanied by a weakening surface cyclone, and trailing reinforcing surges of cooler/drier air through much of the Northeast, Mid Atlantic and Ohio into middle Mississippi Valleys. An initial surge of cooler and drier air likely will advance across the remainder of the Southeast, into the Florida Peninsula and north central Gulf coast, and later, beneath ridging within weaker westerlies across the southern mid- and subtropical latitudes, through the southern Great Plains. ...Texas and portions of adjacent states... Latest model output, including the NAM in particular, suggests that the southern Great Plains portion of the lead cold front may become reinforced by outflow from convection as it spreads across and south of the Red River Valley early Tuesday. This convection likely will be initially rooted within lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection, aided by forcing for ascent associated with at least one mid/upper perturbation progressing through the larger-scale ridging. Beneath warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air, daytime heating to the south of the front will contribute to strengthening differential heating across the front/outflow, with residual seasonably moist air to the south of this boundary becoming characterized by large mixed-layer CAPE on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg. As the initial convection increasingly acquires inflow of this air, substantive further intensification is probable as it propagates southward toward the upper Texas/Louisiana coastal plain, accompanied by potential damaging wind gusts. Upstream, it appears that a trailing perturbation may support renewed thunderstorm development across parts of the Texas South Plains and Big Country by mid to late afternoon. Although lower/mid-tropospheric wind fields may be modest in strength, turning with height beneath stronger flow aloft may be supportive of supercells initially, accompanied by potential to produce large hail before consolidating and growing upscale. It appears that this activity may tend to track southeastward along outflow trailing the initial convection, accompanied by substantive further intensification. This may include an evolving mesoscale convective vortex, strengthening rear-inflow, and cold pool with potentially sustained strong to severe surface gusts propagating southeastward and southward toward the Texas Hill Country and through the Edwards Plateau into Tuesday evening. It is possible severe wind probabilities may need to be increased a bit further in later outlooks, as model spread decreases and potential convective evolution becomes a bit clearer. Otherwise, isolated supercell storms remain a possibility near the dryline initially across parts of the Permian Basin. ...Northern Intermountain Region/Rockies... Models indicate that weak destabilization ahead of the inland advancing mid-level trough will support increasing thunderstorm development Tuesday afternoon and evening. The NAM, in particular, continues to suggest that activity may consolidate across the mountains of central Idaho into western Montana, where evaporative cooling within a well-mixed sub-cloud boundary layer may contribute to downward mixing of 40-50 kt southwesterly lower/mid-tropospheric flow and a strengthening cold pool. It is possible that strong to severe surface gusts may spread east of the continental divide Tuesday evening, even as more weakly unstable inflow begins to weaken convection. ..Kerr.. 05/27/2024 Read more

SPC May 27, 2024 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1205 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024 Valid 281200Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN TEXAS INTO SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO.... ...SUMMARY... Strong thunderstorms, perhaps including a few supercells and a couple of organizing clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail, are possible across much of central into western Texas and southeastern New Mexico Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday evening. ...Synopsis... The westerlies are forecast to remain modestly amplified and progressive across the northern mid-latitudes of the Pacific into western North America through this period. Within this regime, models indicate that large-scale mid-level troughing will shift inland of the British Columbia and Pacific Northwest coast through the Canadian and northern U.S. Rockies, while downstream ridging overspreads the eastern Canadian Prairies and northern U.S. Great Plains. Farther east, the progression of larger-scale troughing east of the upper Mississippi Valley may be slower, as one notable embedded short wave digs southeast of the Upper Midwest toward the lower Ohio Valley, but a preceding impulse may accelerate east-northeast of the lower Great Lakes region into the St. Lawrence Valley. This likely will be accompanied by a weakening surface cyclone, and trailing reinforcing surges of cooler/drier air through much of the Northeast, Mid Atlantic and Ohio into middle Mississippi Valleys. An initial surge of cooler and drier air likely will advance across the remainder of the Southeast, into the Florida Peninsula and north central Gulf coast, and later, beneath ridging within weaker westerlies across the southern mid- and subtropical latitudes, through the southern Great Plains. ...Texas and portions of adjacent states... Latest model output, including the NAM in particular, suggests that the southern Great Plains portion of the lead cold front may become reinforced by outflow from convection as it spreads across and south of the Red River Valley early Tuesday. This convection likely will be initially rooted within lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection, aided by forcing for ascent associated with at least one mid/upper perturbation progressing through the larger-scale ridging. Beneath warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air, daytime heating to the south of the front will contribute to strengthening differential heating across the front/outflow, with residual seasonably moist air to the south of this boundary becoming characterized by large mixed-layer CAPE on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg. As the initial convection increasingly acquires inflow of this air, substantive further intensification is probable as it propagates southward toward the upper Texas/Louisiana coastal plain, accompanied by potential damaging wind gusts. Upstream, it appears that a trailing perturbation may support renewed thunderstorm development across parts of the Texas South Plains and Big Country by mid to late afternoon. Although lower/mid-tropospheric wind fields may be modest in strength, turning with height beneath stronger flow aloft may be supportive of supercells initially, accompanied by potential to produce large hail before consolidating and growing upscale. It appears that this activity may tend to track southeastward along outflow trailing the initial convection, accompanied by substantive further intensification. This may include an evolving mesoscale convective vortex, strengthening rear-inflow, and cold pool with potentially sustained strong to severe surface gusts propagating southeastward and southward toward the Texas Hill Country and through the Edwards Plateau into Tuesday evening. It is possible severe wind probabilities may need to be increased a bit further in later outlooks, as model spread decreases and potential convective evolution becomes a bit clearer. Otherwise, isolated supercell storms remain a possibility near the dryline initially across parts of the Permian Basin. ...Northern Intermountain Region/Rockies... Models indicate that weak destabilization ahead of the inland advancing mid-level trough will support increasing thunderstorm development Tuesday afternoon and evening. The NAM, in particular, continues to suggest that activity may consolidate across the mountains of central Idaho into western Montana, where evaporative cooling within a well-mixed sub-cloud boundary layer may contribute to downward mixing of 40-50 kt southwesterly lower/mid-tropospheric flow and a strengthening cold pool. It is possible that strong to severe surface gusts may spread east of the continental divide Tuesday evening, even as more weakly unstable inflow begins to weaken convection. ..Kerr.. 05/27/2024 Read more

SPC May 27, 2024 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1205 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024 Valid 281200Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN TEXAS INTO SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO.... ...SUMMARY... Strong thunderstorms, perhaps including a few supercells and a couple of organizing clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail, are possible across much of central into western Texas and southeastern New Mexico Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday evening. ...Synopsis... The westerlies are forecast to remain modestly amplified and progressive across the northern mid-latitudes of the Pacific into western North America through this period. Within this regime, models indicate that large-scale mid-level troughing will shift inland of the British Columbia and Pacific Northwest coast through the Canadian and northern U.S. Rockies, while downstream ridging overspreads the eastern Canadian Prairies and northern U.S. Great Plains. Farther east, the progression of larger-scale troughing east of the upper Mississippi Valley may be slower, as one notable embedded short wave digs southeast of the Upper Midwest toward the lower Ohio Valley, but a preceding impulse may accelerate east-northeast of the lower Great Lakes region into the St. Lawrence Valley. This likely will be accompanied by a weakening surface cyclone, and trailing reinforcing surges of cooler/drier air through much of the Northeast, Mid Atlantic and Ohio into middle Mississippi Valleys. An initial surge of cooler and drier air likely will advance across the remainder of the Southeast, into the Florida Peninsula and north central Gulf coast, and later, beneath ridging within weaker westerlies across the southern mid- and subtropical latitudes, through the southern Great Plains. ...Texas and portions of adjacent states... Latest model output, including the NAM in particular, suggests that the southern Great Plains portion of the lead cold front may become reinforced by outflow from convection as it spreads across and south of the Red River Valley early Tuesday. This convection likely will be initially rooted within lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection, aided by forcing for ascent associated with at least one mid/upper perturbation progressing through the larger-scale ridging. Beneath warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air, daytime heating to the south of the front will contribute to strengthening differential heating across the front/outflow, with residual seasonably moist air to the south of this boundary becoming characterized by large mixed-layer CAPE on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg. As the initial convection increasingly acquires inflow of this air, substantive further intensification is probable as it propagates southward toward the upper Texas/Louisiana coastal plain, accompanied by potential damaging wind gusts. Upstream, it appears that a trailing perturbation may support renewed thunderstorm development across parts of the Texas South Plains and Big Country by mid to late afternoon. Although lower/mid-tropospheric wind fields may be modest in strength, turning with height beneath stronger flow aloft may be supportive of supercells initially, accompanied by potential to produce large hail before consolidating and growing upscale. It appears that this activity may tend to track southeastward along outflow trailing the initial convection, accompanied by substantive further intensification. This may include an evolving mesoscale convective vortex, strengthening rear-inflow, and cold pool with potentially sustained strong to severe surface gusts propagating southeastward and southward toward the Texas Hill Country and through the Edwards Plateau into Tuesday evening. It is possible severe wind probabilities may need to be increased a bit further in later outlooks, as model spread decreases and potential convective evolution becomes a bit clearer. Otherwise, isolated supercell storms remain a possibility near the dryline initially across parts of the Permian Basin. ...Northern Intermountain Region/Rockies... Models indicate that weak destabilization ahead of the inland advancing mid-level trough will support increasing thunderstorm development Tuesday afternoon and evening. The NAM, in particular, continues to suggest that activity may consolidate across the mountains of central Idaho into western Montana, where evaporative cooling within a well-mixed sub-cloud boundary layer may contribute to downward mixing of 40-50 kt southwesterly lower/mid-tropospheric flow and a strengthening cold pool. It is possible that strong to severe surface gusts may spread east of the continental divide Tuesday evening, even as more weakly unstable inflow begins to weaken convection. ..Kerr.. 05/27/2024 Read more

SPC May 27, 2024 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1205 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024 Valid 281200Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN TEXAS INTO SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO.... ...SUMMARY... Strong thunderstorms, perhaps including a few supercells and a couple of organizing clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail, are possible across much of central into western Texas and southeastern New Mexico Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday evening. ...Synopsis... The westerlies are forecast to remain modestly amplified and progressive across the northern mid-latitudes of the Pacific into western North America through this period. Within this regime, models indicate that large-scale mid-level troughing will shift inland of the British Columbia and Pacific Northwest coast through the Canadian and northern U.S. Rockies, while downstream ridging overspreads the eastern Canadian Prairies and northern U.S. Great Plains. Farther east, the progression of larger-scale troughing east of the upper Mississippi Valley may be slower, as one notable embedded short wave digs southeast of the Upper Midwest toward the lower Ohio Valley, but a preceding impulse may accelerate east-northeast of the lower Great Lakes region into the St. Lawrence Valley. This likely will be accompanied by a weakening surface cyclone, and trailing reinforcing surges of cooler/drier air through much of the Northeast, Mid Atlantic and Ohio into middle Mississippi Valleys. An initial surge of cooler and drier air likely will advance across the remainder of the Southeast, into the Florida Peninsula and north central Gulf coast, and later, beneath ridging within weaker westerlies across the southern mid- and subtropical latitudes, through the southern Great Plains. ...Texas and portions of adjacent states... Latest model output, including the NAM in particular, suggests that the southern Great Plains portion of the lead cold front may become reinforced by outflow from convection as it spreads across and south of the Red River Valley early Tuesday. This convection likely will be initially rooted within lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection, aided by forcing for ascent associated with at least one mid/upper perturbation progressing through the larger-scale ridging. Beneath warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air, daytime heating to the south of the front will contribute to strengthening differential heating across the front/outflow, with residual seasonably moist air to the south of this boundary becoming characterized by large mixed-layer CAPE on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg. As the initial convection increasingly acquires inflow of this air, substantive further intensification is probable as it propagates southward toward the upper Texas/Louisiana coastal plain, accompanied by potential damaging wind gusts. Upstream, it appears that a trailing perturbation may support renewed thunderstorm development across parts of the Texas South Plains and Big Country by mid to late afternoon. Although lower/mid-tropospheric wind fields may be modest in strength, turning with height beneath stronger flow aloft may be supportive of supercells initially, accompanied by potential to produce large hail before consolidating and growing upscale. It appears that this activity may tend to track southeastward along outflow trailing the initial convection, accompanied by substantive further intensification. This may include an evolving mesoscale convective vortex, strengthening rear-inflow, and cold pool with potentially sustained strong to severe surface gusts propagating southeastward and southward toward the Texas Hill Country and through the Edwards Plateau into Tuesday evening. It is possible severe wind probabilities may need to be increased a bit further in later outlooks, as model spread decreases and potential convective evolution becomes a bit clearer. Otherwise, isolated supercell storms remain a possibility near the dryline initially across parts of the Permian Basin. ...Northern Intermountain Region/Rockies... Models indicate that weak destabilization ahead of the inland advancing mid-level trough will support increasing thunderstorm development Tuesday afternoon and evening. The NAM, in particular, continues to suggest that activity may consolidate across the mountains of central Idaho into western Montana, where evaporative cooling within a well-mixed sub-cloud boundary layer may contribute to downward mixing of 40-50 kt southwesterly lower/mid-tropospheric flow and a strengthening cold pool. It is possible that strong to severe surface gusts may spread east of the continental divide Tuesday evening, even as more weakly unstable inflow begins to weaken convection. ..Kerr.. 05/27/2024 Read more

SPC May 27, 2024 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1205 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024 Valid 281200Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND WESTERN TEXAS INTO SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO.... ...SUMMARY... Strong thunderstorms, perhaps including a few supercells and a couple of organizing clusters posing a risk for severe wind and hail, are possible across much of central into western Texas and southeastern New Mexico Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday evening. ...Synopsis... The westerlies are forecast to remain modestly amplified and progressive across the northern mid-latitudes of the Pacific into western North America through this period. Within this regime, models indicate that large-scale mid-level troughing will shift inland of the British Columbia and Pacific Northwest coast through the Canadian and northern U.S. Rockies, while downstream ridging overspreads the eastern Canadian Prairies and northern U.S. Great Plains. Farther east, the progression of larger-scale troughing east of the upper Mississippi Valley may be slower, as one notable embedded short wave digs southeast of the Upper Midwest toward the lower Ohio Valley, but a preceding impulse may accelerate east-northeast of the lower Great Lakes region into the St. Lawrence Valley. This likely will be accompanied by a weakening surface cyclone, and trailing reinforcing surges of cooler/drier air through much of the Northeast, Mid Atlantic and Ohio into middle Mississippi Valleys. An initial surge of cooler and drier air likely will advance across the remainder of the Southeast, into the Florida Peninsula and north central Gulf coast, and later, beneath ridging within weaker westerlies across the southern mid- and subtropical latitudes, through the southern Great Plains. ...Texas and portions of adjacent states... Latest model output, including the NAM in particular, suggests that the southern Great Plains portion of the lead cold front may become reinforced by outflow from convection as it spreads across and south of the Red River Valley early Tuesday. This convection likely will be initially rooted within lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection, aided by forcing for ascent associated with at least one mid/upper perturbation progressing through the larger-scale ridging. Beneath warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air, daytime heating to the south of the front will contribute to strengthening differential heating across the front/outflow, with residual seasonably moist air to the south of this boundary becoming characterized by large mixed-layer CAPE on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg. As the initial convection increasingly acquires inflow of this air, substantive further intensification is probable as it propagates southward toward the upper Texas/Louisiana coastal plain, accompanied by potential damaging wind gusts. Upstream, it appears that a trailing perturbation may support renewed thunderstorm development across parts of the Texas South Plains and Big Country by mid to late afternoon. Although lower/mid-tropospheric wind fields may be modest in strength, turning with height beneath stronger flow aloft may be supportive of supercells initially, accompanied by potential to produce large hail before consolidating and growing upscale. It appears that this activity may tend to track southeastward along outflow trailing the initial convection, accompanied by substantive further intensification. This may include an evolving mesoscale convective vortex, strengthening rear-inflow, and cold pool with potentially sustained strong to severe surface gusts propagating southeastward and southward toward the Texas Hill Country and through the Edwards Plateau into Tuesday evening. It is possible severe wind probabilities may need to be increased a bit further in later outlooks, as model spread decreases and potential convective evolution becomes a bit clearer. Otherwise, isolated supercell storms remain a possibility near the dryline initially across parts of the Permian Basin. ...Northern Intermountain Region/Rockies... Models indicate that weak destabilization ahead of the inland advancing mid-level trough will support increasing thunderstorm development Tuesday afternoon and evening. The NAM, in particular, continues to suggest that activity may consolidate across the mountains of central Idaho into western Montana, where evaporative cooling within a well-mixed sub-cloud boundary layer may contribute to downward mixing of 40-50 kt southwesterly lower/mid-tropospheric flow and a strengthening cold pool. It is possible that strong to severe surface gusts may spread east of the continental divide Tuesday evening, even as more weakly unstable inflow begins to weaken convection. ..Kerr.. 05/27/2024 Read more
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5 years 11 months ago
Severe Storms
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