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1 year 5 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0143 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...Synopsis...
Elevated fire weather conditions are anticipated across a large
swath of the central Plains this afternoon.
...northern Oklahoma to southern South Dakota...
06 UTC surface observations show strengthening northwesterly winds
behind a cold front across the northern Plains. This cold advection
regime will persist into the afternoon, and despite an influx of
cooler temperatures, diurnal heating of a dry air mass will support
RH reductions into the 20-30% range. Sustained winds between 15-25
mph (gusting to 30-40 mph) should support widespread, sustained
elevated conditions with localized areas of critical fire weather
conditions - especially across eastern NE/KS where winds in the
850-700 mb layer are forecast to be strongest. Recent fuel reports
and precipitation analyses continue to suggest that fine fuels are
sufficiently dry to support the fire weather concern.
...Eastern New Mexico to Southwest Texas...
Localized elevated conditions are possible this afternoon on the lee
side of more prominent terrain features across eastern NM into
Southwest TX. A modest westerly flow regime will promote areas of
downslope warming/drying with pockets of afternoon RH minimums in
the 15-20% range and 15-20 mph winds. These conditions are expected
to remain sufficiently localized to preclude highlights.
..Moore.. 04/11/2024
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0143 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...Synopsis...
Elevated fire weather conditions are anticipated across a large
swath of the central Plains this afternoon.
...northern Oklahoma to southern South Dakota...
06 UTC surface observations show strengthening northwesterly winds
behind a cold front across the northern Plains. This cold advection
regime will persist into the afternoon, and despite an influx of
cooler temperatures, diurnal heating of a dry air mass will support
RH reductions into the 20-30% range. Sustained winds between 15-25
mph (gusting to 30-40 mph) should support widespread, sustained
elevated conditions with localized areas of critical fire weather
conditions - especially across eastern NE/KS where winds in the
850-700 mb layer are forecast to be strongest. Recent fuel reports
and precipitation analyses continue to suggest that fine fuels are
sufficiently dry to support the fire weather concern.
...Eastern New Mexico to Southwest Texas...
Localized elevated conditions are possible this afternoon on the lee
side of more prominent terrain features across eastern NM into
Southwest TX. A modest westerly flow regime will promote areas of
downslope warming/drying with pockets of afternoon RH minimums in
the 15-20% range and 15-20 mph winds. These conditions are expected
to remain sufficiently localized to preclude highlights.
..Moore.. 04/11/2024
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0143 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...Synopsis...
Elevated fire weather conditions are anticipated across a large
swath of the central Plains this afternoon.
...northern Oklahoma to southern South Dakota...
06 UTC surface observations show strengthening northwesterly winds
behind a cold front across the northern Plains. This cold advection
regime will persist into the afternoon, and despite an influx of
cooler temperatures, diurnal heating of a dry air mass will support
RH reductions into the 20-30% range. Sustained winds between 15-25
mph (gusting to 30-40 mph) should support widespread, sustained
elevated conditions with localized areas of critical fire weather
conditions - especially across eastern NE/KS where winds in the
850-700 mb layer are forecast to be strongest. Recent fuel reports
and precipitation analyses continue to suggest that fine fuels are
sufficiently dry to support the fire weather concern.
...Eastern New Mexico to Southwest Texas...
Localized elevated conditions are possible this afternoon on the lee
side of more prominent terrain features across eastern NM into
Southwest TX. A modest westerly flow regime will promote areas of
downslope warming/drying with pockets of afternoon RH minimums in
the 15-20% range and 15-20 mph winds. These conditions are expected
to remain sufficiently localized to preclude highlights.
..Moore.. 04/11/2024
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1249 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN EAST
OR...SOUTHWEST ID...AND FAR NORTH NV...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated marginally severe wind gusts and hail are possible across
parts of the northwest Great Basin vicinity during the late
afternoon to early evening Friday.
...Northwest Great Basin...
An amplified shortwave trough will approach but remain west of the
central CA coast through 12Z Saturday. While the bulk of PW increase
will remain over parts of CA and the OR Pacific Coast, modest
moistening should occur within the 700-mb baroclinic zone farther
east across northwest NV and east OR into southwest ID. Isolated to
scattered high-based thunderstorms should develop just after peak
heating. Moderate southwesterly flow should exist within the meager
buoyancy layer between the offshore trough and the mid-level ridge
that will become centered over the High Plains. Strong to localized
severe wind gusts will be the main threat. Marginally severe hail
may occur in a portion of east OR/southwest ID where brief supercell
structures are possible, before convection wanes after dusk.
...East...
Deep surface cyclone near the Georgian Bay of Lake Huron at 12Z
Friday should occlude and slowly weaken as it continues
northeastward into western Quebec. The arcing occluded front across
parts of the Northeast may be a focus for low-topped convection
during the late morning to early afternoon. Low-level hodograph
curvature should be largest at the beginning of the period, and
weaken through the day. Surface-based destabilization appears to be
very limited, and the severe threat in the east NY vicinity appears
too low to warrant an areal delineation.
As the northern-stream shortwave impulse translates through the
basal portion of the amplified upper trough over the East, cold
mid-level temperatures will support isolated to scattered low-topped
convection spreading from west to east across parts of the central
OH Valley/Cumberland Plateau into VA/NC. Surface-based buoyancy
should be scant at most amid decidedly westerly wind profiles.
Still, moderate to strong low-level flow may be mixed to the surface
and yield locally gusty winds during the afternoon.
..Grams.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1249 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN EAST
OR...SOUTHWEST ID...AND FAR NORTH NV...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated marginally severe wind gusts and hail are possible across
parts of the northwest Great Basin vicinity during the late
afternoon to early evening Friday.
...Northwest Great Basin...
An amplified shortwave trough will approach but remain west of the
central CA coast through 12Z Saturday. While the bulk of PW increase
will remain over parts of CA and the OR Pacific Coast, modest
moistening should occur within the 700-mb baroclinic zone farther
east across northwest NV and east OR into southwest ID. Isolated to
scattered high-based thunderstorms should develop just after peak
heating. Moderate southwesterly flow should exist within the meager
buoyancy layer between the offshore trough and the mid-level ridge
that will become centered over the High Plains. Strong to localized
severe wind gusts will be the main threat. Marginally severe hail
may occur in a portion of east OR/southwest ID where brief supercell
structures are possible, before convection wanes after dusk.
...East...
Deep surface cyclone near the Georgian Bay of Lake Huron at 12Z
Friday should occlude and slowly weaken as it continues
northeastward into western Quebec. The arcing occluded front across
parts of the Northeast may be a focus for low-topped convection
during the late morning to early afternoon. Low-level hodograph
curvature should be largest at the beginning of the period, and
weaken through the day. Surface-based destabilization appears to be
very limited, and the severe threat in the east NY vicinity appears
too low to warrant an areal delineation.
As the northern-stream shortwave impulse translates through the
basal portion of the amplified upper trough over the East, cold
mid-level temperatures will support isolated to scattered low-topped
convection spreading from west to east across parts of the central
OH Valley/Cumberland Plateau into VA/NC. Surface-based buoyancy
should be scant at most amid decidedly westerly wind profiles.
Still, moderate to strong low-level flow may be mixed to the surface
and yield locally gusty winds during the afternoon.
..Grams.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1249 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN EAST
OR...SOUTHWEST ID...AND FAR NORTH NV...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated marginally severe wind gusts and hail are possible across
parts of the northwest Great Basin vicinity during the late
afternoon to early evening Friday.
...Northwest Great Basin...
An amplified shortwave trough will approach but remain west of the
central CA coast through 12Z Saturday. While the bulk of PW increase
will remain over parts of CA and the OR Pacific Coast, modest
moistening should occur within the 700-mb baroclinic zone farther
east across northwest NV and east OR into southwest ID. Isolated to
scattered high-based thunderstorms should develop just after peak
heating. Moderate southwesterly flow should exist within the meager
buoyancy layer between the offshore trough and the mid-level ridge
that will become centered over the High Plains. Strong to localized
severe wind gusts will be the main threat. Marginally severe hail
may occur in a portion of east OR/southwest ID where brief supercell
structures are possible, before convection wanes after dusk.
...East...
Deep surface cyclone near the Georgian Bay of Lake Huron at 12Z
Friday should occlude and slowly weaken as it continues
northeastward into western Quebec. The arcing occluded front across
parts of the Northeast may be a focus for low-topped convection
during the late morning to early afternoon. Low-level hodograph
curvature should be largest at the beginning of the period, and
weaken through the day. Surface-based destabilization appears to be
very limited, and the severe threat in the east NY vicinity appears
too low to warrant an areal delineation.
As the northern-stream shortwave impulse translates through the
basal portion of the amplified upper trough over the East, cold
mid-level temperatures will support isolated to scattered low-topped
convection spreading from west to east across parts of the central
OH Valley/Cumberland Plateau into VA/NC. Surface-based buoyancy
should be scant at most amid decidedly westerly wind profiles.
Still, moderate to strong low-level flow may be mixed to the surface
and yield locally gusty winds during the afternoon.
..Grams.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1249 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN EAST
OR...SOUTHWEST ID...AND FAR NORTH NV...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated marginally severe wind gusts and hail are possible across
parts of the northwest Great Basin vicinity during the late
afternoon to early evening Friday.
...Northwest Great Basin...
An amplified shortwave trough will approach but remain west of the
central CA coast through 12Z Saturday. While the bulk of PW increase
will remain over parts of CA and the OR Pacific Coast, modest
moistening should occur within the 700-mb baroclinic zone farther
east across northwest NV and east OR into southwest ID. Isolated to
scattered high-based thunderstorms should develop just after peak
heating. Moderate southwesterly flow should exist within the meager
buoyancy layer between the offshore trough and the mid-level ridge
that will become centered over the High Plains. Strong to localized
severe wind gusts will be the main threat. Marginally severe hail
may occur in a portion of east OR/southwest ID where brief supercell
structures are possible, before convection wanes after dusk.
...East...
Deep surface cyclone near the Georgian Bay of Lake Huron at 12Z
Friday should occlude and slowly weaken as it continues
northeastward into western Quebec. The arcing occluded front across
parts of the Northeast may be a focus for low-topped convection
during the late morning to early afternoon. Low-level hodograph
curvature should be largest at the beginning of the period, and
weaken through the day. Surface-based destabilization appears to be
very limited, and the severe threat in the east NY vicinity appears
too low to warrant an areal delineation.
As the northern-stream shortwave impulse translates through the
basal portion of the amplified upper trough over the East, cold
mid-level temperatures will support isolated to scattered low-topped
convection spreading from west to east across parts of the central
OH Valley/Cumberland Plateau into VA/NC. Surface-based buoyancy
should be scant at most amid decidedly westerly wind profiles.
Still, moderate to strong low-level flow may be mixed to the surface
and yield locally gusty winds during the afternoon.
..Grams.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1249 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN EAST
OR...SOUTHWEST ID...AND FAR NORTH NV...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated marginally severe wind gusts and hail are possible across
parts of the northwest Great Basin vicinity during the late
afternoon to early evening Friday.
...Northwest Great Basin...
An amplified shortwave trough will approach but remain west of the
central CA coast through 12Z Saturday. While the bulk of PW increase
will remain over parts of CA and the OR Pacific Coast, modest
moistening should occur within the 700-mb baroclinic zone farther
east across northwest NV and east OR into southwest ID. Isolated to
scattered high-based thunderstorms should develop just after peak
heating. Moderate southwesterly flow should exist within the meager
buoyancy layer between the offshore trough and the mid-level ridge
that will become centered over the High Plains. Strong to localized
severe wind gusts will be the main threat. Marginally severe hail
may occur in a portion of east OR/southwest ID where brief supercell
structures are possible, before convection wanes after dusk.
...East...
Deep surface cyclone near the Georgian Bay of Lake Huron at 12Z
Friday should occlude and slowly weaken as it continues
northeastward into western Quebec. The arcing occluded front across
parts of the Northeast may be a focus for low-topped convection
during the late morning to early afternoon. Low-level hodograph
curvature should be largest at the beginning of the period, and
weaken through the day. Surface-based destabilization appears to be
very limited, and the severe threat in the east NY vicinity appears
too low to warrant an areal delineation.
As the northern-stream shortwave impulse translates through the
basal portion of the amplified upper trough over the East, cold
mid-level temperatures will support isolated to scattered low-topped
convection spreading from west to east across parts of the central
OH Valley/Cumberland Plateau into VA/NC. Surface-based buoyancy
should be scant at most amid decidedly westerly wind profiles.
Still, moderate to strong low-level flow may be mixed to the surface
and yield locally gusty winds during the afternoon.
..Grams.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0600Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1249 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN EAST
OR...SOUTHWEST ID...AND FAR NORTH NV...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated marginally severe wind gusts and hail are possible across
parts of the northwest Great Basin vicinity during the late
afternoon to early evening Friday.
...Northwest Great Basin...
An amplified shortwave trough will approach but remain west of the
central CA coast through 12Z Saturday. While the bulk of PW increase
will remain over parts of CA and the OR Pacific Coast, modest
moistening should occur within the 700-mb baroclinic zone farther
east across northwest NV and east OR into southwest ID. Isolated to
scattered high-based thunderstorms should develop just after peak
heating. Moderate southwesterly flow should exist within the meager
buoyancy layer between the offshore trough and the mid-level ridge
that will become centered over the High Plains. Strong to localized
severe wind gusts will be the main threat. Marginally severe hail
may occur in a portion of east OR/southwest ID where brief supercell
structures are possible, before convection wanes after dusk.
...East...
Deep surface cyclone near the Georgian Bay of Lake Huron at 12Z
Friday should occlude and slowly weaken as it continues
northeastward into western Quebec. The arcing occluded front across
parts of the Northeast may be a focus for low-topped convection
during the late morning to early afternoon. Low-level hodograph
curvature should be largest at the beginning of the period, and
weaken through the day. Surface-based destabilization appears to be
very limited, and the severe threat in the east NY vicinity appears
too low to warrant an areal delineation.
As the northern-stream shortwave impulse translates through the
basal portion of the amplified upper trough over the East, cold
mid-level temperatures will support isolated to scattered low-topped
convection spreading from west to east across parts of the central
OH Valley/Cumberland Plateau into VA/NC. Surface-based buoyancy
should be scant at most amid decidedly westerly wind profiles.
Still, moderate to strong low-level flow may be mixed to the surface
and yield locally gusty winds during the afternoon.
..Grams.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1247 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
THE UPPER OHIO RIVER VALLEY...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE OHIO RIVER VALLEY AND NORTHERN FLORIDA TO SOUTHERN GEORGIA...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms with a few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds,
and isolated large hail are possible across the upper Ohio River
Valley and parts of the Appalachians this afternoon. Scattered
damaging winds and a couple tornadoes will also be possible across
southeast Georgia into northern Florida, mainly this morning through
early afternoon.
...Synopsis...
04 UTC surface observations depict a diffuse surface low over the
lower MS River Valley. This low is forecast to deepen over the next
24 hours as it lifts northward into the OH Valley/Great Lakes region
in tandem with the phasing of an amplified upper-level trough over
the MS Valley with an approaching upstream perturbation. A surface
cold front currently draped across southeast LA will surge to the
east/northeast as the low deepens, and should act to focus
thunderstorm development through the late morning and afternoon
hours across both the upper OH Valley and Southeast.
...Upper OH River Valley...
Recent 925/850 mb analyses and surface observations show a
consolidating warm frontal zone draped from the surface low over the
lower MS Valley into the upper OH River Valley. The surface low will
deepen along this corridor amid a combination of strong height falls
and ascent within the left-exit region of a mid-level jet. A plume
of low to mid-60s dewpoints will advect northward with the deepening
low, establishing a focused warm sector ahead of the approaching
cold front by early afternoon across parts of KY, OH, and WV. The
current expectation is for sufficient destabilization within the
warm sector to support surface-based convection by the 18-21 UTC
time frame. A combination of strong synoptic-scale ascent and 40-50
knot deep-layer shear vectors off the cold front should promote a
mix of discrete cells and semi-discrete clusters - including the
potential for a few supercells. Increasing southeasterly winds
through the lowest 1-2 km should yield effective SRH values between
150-300 m2/s2, which will support a tornado threat with the more
robust/organized cells as well as a wind threat with more organized
clusters. This threat appears greatest across southeast OH into
western WV where latest guidance continues to show a focused
convective signal. Further to the east into parts of northwest VA, a
somewhat weaker convective signal is noted in most CAM guidance, but
50-knot flow in the lowest 2 km will likely pose a substantial wind
threat with any storms that can mature. Risk probabilities have been
expanded into this region to account for this potential.
That said, this scenario appears to be conditional on achieving
sufficient low-level warming within the warm sector. While an
extensive dry slot is noted in water-vapor imagery across the
Mid-South into central IN, the low/mid-level warm advection regime
is maintaining mid-level stratus across the region with most ASOS
stations reporting overcast skies and ceilings near 6 kft. It is
unclear how much clearing will occur through early afternoon given
persistent ascent, and a 10 F spread in afternoon high temperatures
is noted across OH/WV in recent ensemble guidance. Based on forecast
soundings, surface temperatures in the upper 60s may be required to
realize 500+ J/kg SBCAPE with minimal inhibition. The median of the
temperature distribution appears to reside in the upper 60s, but
SBCAPE may still only reach 500-1000 J/kg per ensemble
distributions.
...Florida/Georgia...
Lingering thunderstorms associated with overnight convection will
likely be ongoing across the FL Panhandle at 12 UTC. This activity
should become consolidated into a more organized line as the cold
front pushes east through the morning across southern GA and
northern FL. Poor lapse rates sampled by 00 UTC soundings across
central/northern FL will limit buoyancy despite mid/upper 60s
dewpoints. However, strong kinematic fields should be in place as a
mid-level jet max passes overhead. Forecast hodographs suggest
effective bulk shear values around 50-55 knots will be common, and
low-level SRH may approach 150 m2/s2 along/ahead of the line. The
severe risk will likely be modulated by the degree of diurnal
destabilization that can occur ahead of the line, but stronger
cells/segments may pose a severe wind/tornado risk given the
favorable wind profiles. This risk may peak by late morning before
the line begins to move offshore and forcing for ascent gradually
abates by late afternoon as the synoptic low lifts well to the
north.
..Moore/Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1247 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
THE UPPER OHIO RIVER VALLEY...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE OHIO RIVER VALLEY AND NORTHERN FLORIDA TO SOUTHERN GEORGIA...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms with a few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds,
and isolated large hail are possible across the upper Ohio River
Valley and parts of the Appalachians this afternoon. Scattered
damaging winds and a couple tornadoes will also be possible across
southeast Georgia into northern Florida, mainly this morning through
early afternoon.
...Synopsis...
04 UTC surface observations depict a diffuse surface low over the
lower MS River Valley. This low is forecast to deepen over the next
24 hours as it lifts northward into the OH Valley/Great Lakes region
in tandem with the phasing of an amplified upper-level trough over
the MS Valley with an approaching upstream perturbation. A surface
cold front currently draped across southeast LA will surge to the
east/northeast as the low deepens, and should act to focus
thunderstorm development through the late morning and afternoon
hours across both the upper OH Valley and Southeast.
...Upper OH River Valley...
Recent 925/850 mb analyses and surface observations show a
consolidating warm frontal zone draped from the surface low over the
lower MS Valley into the upper OH River Valley. The surface low will
deepen along this corridor amid a combination of strong height falls
and ascent within the left-exit region of a mid-level jet. A plume
of low to mid-60s dewpoints will advect northward with the deepening
low, establishing a focused warm sector ahead of the approaching
cold front by early afternoon across parts of KY, OH, and WV. The
current expectation is for sufficient destabilization within the
warm sector to support surface-based convection by the 18-21 UTC
time frame. A combination of strong synoptic-scale ascent and 40-50
knot deep-layer shear vectors off the cold front should promote a
mix of discrete cells and semi-discrete clusters - including the
potential for a few supercells. Increasing southeasterly winds
through the lowest 1-2 km should yield effective SRH values between
150-300 m2/s2, which will support a tornado threat with the more
robust/organized cells as well as a wind threat with more organized
clusters. This threat appears greatest across southeast OH into
western WV where latest guidance continues to show a focused
convective signal. Further to the east into parts of northwest VA, a
somewhat weaker convective signal is noted in most CAM guidance, but
50-knot flow in the lowest 2 km will likely pose a substantial wind
threat with any storms that can mature. Risk probabilities have been
expanded into this region to account for this potential.
That said, this scenario appears to be conditional on achieving
sufficient low-level warming within the warm sector. While an
extensive dry slot is noted in water-vapor imagery across the
Mid-South into central IN, the low/mid-level warm advection regime
is maintaining mid-level stratus across the region with most ASOS
stations reporting overcast skies and ceilings near 6 kft. It is
unclear how much clearing will occur through early afternoon given
persistent ascent, and a 10 F spread in afternoon high temperatures
is noted across OH/WV in recent ensemble guidance. Based on forecast
soundings, surface temperatures in the upper 60s may be required to
realize 500+ J/kg SBCAPE with minimal inhibition. The median of the
temperature distribution appears to reside in the upper 60s, but
SBCAPE may still only reach 500-1000 J/kg per ensemble
distributions.
...Florida/Georgia...
Lingering thunderstorms associated with overnight convection will
likely be ongoing across the FL Panhandle at 12 UTC. This activity
should become consolidated into a more organized line as the cold
front pushes east through the morning across southern GA and
northern FL. Poor lapse rates sampled by 00 UTC soundings across
central/northern FL will limit buoyancy despite mid/upper 60s
dewpoints. However, strong kinematic fields should be in place as a
mid-level jet max passes overhead. Forecast hodographs suggest
effective bulk shear values around 50-55 knots will be common, and
low-level SRH may approach 150 m2/s2 along/ahead of the line. The
severe risk will likely be modulated by the degree of diurnal
destabilization that can occur ahead of the line, but stronger
cells/segments may pose a severe wind/tornado risk given the
favorable wind profiles. This risk may peak by late morning before
the line begins to move offshore and forcing for ascent gradually
abates by late afternoon as the synoptic low lifts well to the
north.
..Moore/Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1247 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
THE UPPER OHIO RIVER VALLEY...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE OHIO RIVER VALLEY AND NORTHERN FLORIDA TO SOUTHERN GEORGIA...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms with a few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds,
and isolated large hail are possible across the upper Ohio River
Valley and parts of the Appalachians this afternoon. Scattered
damaging winds and a couple tornadoes will also be possible across
southeast Georgia into northern Florida, mainly this morning through
early afternoon.
...Synopsis...
04 UTC surface observations depict a diffuse surface low over the
lower MS River Valley. This low is forecast to deepen over the next
24 hours as it lifts northward into the OH Valley/Great Lakes region
in tandem with the phasing of an amplified upper-level trough over
the MS Valley with an approaching upstream perturbation. A surface
cold front currently draped across southeast LA will surge to the
east/northeast as the low deepens, and should act to focus
thunderstorm development through the late morning and afternoon
hours across both the upper OH Valley and Southeast.
...Upper OH River Valley...
Recent 925/850 mb analyses and surface observations show a
consolidating warm frontal zone draped from the surface low over the
lower MS Valley into the upper OH River Valley. The surface low will
deepen along this corridor amid a combination of strong height falls
and ascent within the left-exit region of a mid-level jet. A plume
of low to mid-60s dewpoints will advect northward with the deepening
low, establishing a focused warm sector ahead of the approaching
cold front by early afternoon across parts of KY, OH, and WV. The
current expectation is for sufficient destabilization within the
warm sector to support surface-based convection by the 18-21 UTC
time frame. A combination of strong synoptic-scale ascent and 40-50
knot deep-layer shear vectors off the cold front should promote a
mix of discrete cells and semi-discrete clusters - including the
potential for a few supercells. Increasing southeasterly winds
through the lowest 1-2 km should yield effective SRH values between
150-300 m2/s2, which will support a tornado threat with the more
robust/organized cells as well as a wind threat with more organized
clusters. This threat appears greatest across southeast OH into
western WV where latest guidance continues to show a focused
convective signal. Further to the east into parts of northwest VA, a
somewhat weaker convective signal is noted in most CAM guidance, but
50-knot flow in the lowest 2 km will likely pose a substantial wind
threat with any storms that can mature. Risk probabilities have been
expanded into this region to account for this potential.
That said, this scenario appears to be conditional on achieving
sufficient low-level warming within the warm sector. While an
extensive dry slot is noted in water-vapor imagery across the
Mid-South into central IN, the low/mid-level warm advection regime
is maintaining mid-level stratus across the region with most ASOS
stations reporting overcast skies and ceilings near 6 kft. It is
unclear how much clearing will occur through early afternoon given
persistent ascent, and a 10 F spread in afternoon high temperatures
is noted across OH/WV in recent ensemble guidance. Based on forecast
soundings, surface temperatures in the upper 60s may be required to
realize 500+ J/kg SBCAPE with minimal inhibition. The median of the
temperature distribution appears to reside in the upper 60s, but
SBCAPE may still only reach 500-1000 J/kg per ensemble
distributions.
...Florida/Georgia...
Lingering thunderstorms associated with overnight convection will
likely be ongoing across the FL Panhandle at 12 UTC. This activity
should become consolidated into a more organized line as the cold
front pushes east through the morning across southern GA and
northern FL. Poor lapse rates sampled by 00 UTC soundings across
central/northern FL will limit buoyancy despite mid/upper 60s
dewpoints. However, strong kinematic fields should be in place as a
mid-level jet max passes overhead. Forecast hodographs suggest
effective bulk shear values around 50-55 knots will be common, and
low-level SRH may approach 150 m2/s2 along/ahead of the line. The
severe risk will likely be modulated by the degree of diurnal
destabilization that can occur ahead of the line, but stronger
cells/segments may pose a severe wind/tornado risk given the
favorable wind profiles. This risk may peak by late morning before
the line begins to move offshore and forcing for ascent gradually
abates by late afternoon as the synoptic low lifts well to the
north.
..Moore/Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1247 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
THE UPPER OHIO RIVER VALLEY...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE OHIO RIVER VALLEY AND NORTHERN FLORIDA TO SOUTHERN GEORGIA...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms with a few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds,
and isolated large hail are possible across the upper Ohio River
Valley and parts of the Appalachians this afternoon. Scattered
damaging winds and a couple tornadoes will also be possible across
southeast Georgia into northern Florida, mainly this morning through
early afternoon.
...Synopsis...
04 UTC surface observations depict a diffuse surface low over the
lower MS River Valley. This low is forecast to deepen over the next
24 hours as it lifts northward into the OH Valley/Great Lakes region
in tandem with the phasing of an amplified upper-level trough over
the MS Valley with an approaching upstream perturbation. A surface
cold front currently draped across southeast LA will surge to the
east/northeast as the low deepens, and should act to focus
thunderstorm development through the late morning and afternoon
hours across both the upper OH Valley and Southeast.
...Upper OH River Valley...
Recent 925/850 mb analyses and surface observations show a
consolidating warm frontal zone draped from the surface low over the
lower MS Valley into the upper OH River Valley. The surface low will
deepen along this corridor amid a combination of strong height falls
and ascent within the left-exit region of a mid-level jet. A plume
of low to mid-60s dewpoints will advect northward with the deepening
low, establishing a focused warm sector ahead of the approaching
cold front by early afternoon across parts of KY, OH, and WV. The
current expectation is for sufficient destabilization within the
warm sector to support surface-based convection by the 18-21 UTC
time frame. A combination of strong synoptic-scale ascent and 40-50
knot deep-layer shear vectors off the cold front should promote a
mix of discrete cells and semi-discrete clusters - including the
potential for a few supercells. Increasing southeasterly winds
through the lowest 1-2 km should yield effective SRH values between
150-300 m2/s2, which will support a tornado threat with the more
robust/organized cells as well as a wind threat with more organized
clusters. This threat appears greatest across southeast OH into
western WV where latest guidance continues to show a focused
convective signal. Further to the east into parts of northwest VA, a
somewhat weaker convective signal is noted in most CAM guidance, but
50-knot flow in the lowest 2 km will likely pose a substantial wind
threat with any storms that can mature. Risk probabilities have been
expanded into this region to account for this potential.
That said, this scenario appears to be conditional on achieving
sufficient low-level warming within the warm sector. While an
extensive dry slot is noted in water-vapor imagery across the
Mid-South into central IN, the low/mid-level warm advection regime
is maintaining mid-level stratus across the region with most ASOS
stations reporting overcast skies and ceilings near 6 kft. It is
unclear how much clearing will occur through early afternoon given
persistent ascent, and a 10 F spread in afternoon high temperatures
is noted across OH/WV in recent ensemble guidance. Based on forecast
soundings, surface temperatures in the upper 60s may be required to
realize 500+ J/kg SBCAPE with minimal inhibition. The median of the
temperature distribution appears to reside in the upper 60s, but
SBCAPE may still only reach 500-1000 J/kg per ensemble
distributions.
...Florida/Georgia...
Lingering thunderstorms associated with overnight convection will
likely be ongoing across the FL Panhandle at 12 UTC. This activity
should become consolidated into a more organized line as the cold
front pushes east through the morning across southern GA and
northern FL. Poor lapse rates sampled by 00 UTC soundings across
central/northern FL will limit buoyancy despite mid/upper 60s
dewpoints. However, strong kinematic fields should be in place as a
mid-level jet max passes overhead. Forecast hodographs suggest
effective bulk shear values around 50-55 knots will be common, and
low-level SRH may approach 150 m2/s2 along/ahead of the line. The
severe risk will likely be modulated by the degree of diurnal
destabilization that can occur ahead of the line, but stronger
cells/segments may pose a severe wind/tornado risk given the
favorable wind profiles. This risk may peak by late morning before
the line begins to move offshore and forcing for ascent gradually
abates by late afternoon as the synoptic low lifts well to the
north.
..Moore/Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1247 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
THE UPPER OHIO RIVER VALLEY...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE OHIO RIVER VALLEY AND NORTHERN FLORIDA TO SOUTHERN GEORGIA...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms with a few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds,
and isolated large hail are possible across the upper Ohio River
Valley and parts of the Appalachians this afternoon. Scattered
damaging winds and a couple tornadoes will also be possible across
southeast Georgia into northern Florida, mainly this morning through
early afternoon.
...Synopsis...
04 UTC surface observations depict a diffuse surface low over the
lower MS River Valley. This low is forecast to deepen over the next
24 hours as it lifts northward into the OH Valley/Great Lakes region
in tandem with the phasing of an amplified upper-level trough over
the MS Valley with an approaching upstream perturbation. A surface
cold front currently draped across southeast LA will surge to the
east/northeast as the low deepens, and should act to focus
thunderstorm development through the late morning and afternoon
hours across both the upper OH Valley and Southeast.
...Upper OH River Valley...
Recent 925/850 mb analyses and surface observations show a
consolidating warm frontal zone draped from the surface low over the
lower MS Valley into the upper OH River Valley. The surface low will
deepen along this corridor amid a combination of strong height falls
and ascent within the left-exit region of a mid-level jet. A plume
of low to mid-60s dewpoints will advect northward with the deepening
low, establishing a focused warm sector ahead of the approaching
cold front by early afternoon across parts of KY, OH, and WV. The
current expectation is for sufficient destabilization within the
warm sector to support surface-based convection by the 18-21 UTC
time frame. A combination of strong synoptic-scale ascent and 40-50
knot deep-layer shear vectors off the cold front should promote a
mix of discrete cells and semi-discrete clusters - including the
potential for a few supercells. Increasing southeasterly winds
through the lowest 1-2 km should yield effective SRH values between
150-300 m2/s2, which will support a tornado threat with the more
robust/organized cells as well as a wind threat with more organized
clusters. This threat appears greatest across southeast OH into
western WV where latest guidance continues to show a focused
convective signal. Further to the east into parts of northwest VA, a
somewhat weaker convective signal is noted in most CAM guidance, but
50-knot flow in the lowest 2 km will likely pose a substantial wind
threat with any storms that can mature. Risk probabilities have been
expanded into this region to account for this potential.
That said, this scenario appears to be conditional on achieving
sufficient low-level warming within the warm sector. While an
extensive dry slot is noted in water-vapor imagery across the
Mid-South into central IN, the low/mid-level warm advection regime
is maintaining mid-level stratus across the region with most ASOS
stations reporting overcast skies and ceilings near 6 kft. It is
unclear how much clearing will occur through early afternoon given
persistent ascent, and a 10 F spread in afternoon high temperatures
is noted across OH/WV in recent ensemble guidance. Based on forecast
soundings, surface temperatures in the upper 60s may be required to
realize 500+ J/kg SBCAPE with minimal inhibition. The median of the
temperature distribution appears to reside in the upper 60s, but
SBCAPE may still only reach 500-1000 J/kg per ensemble
distributions.
...Florida/Georgia...
Lingering thunderstorms associated with overnight convection will
likely be ongoing across the FL Panhandle at 12 UTC. This activity
should become consolidated into a more organized line as the cold
front pushes east through the morning across southern GA and
northern FL. Poor lapse rates sampled by 00 UTC soundings across
central/northern FL will limit buoyancy despite mid/upper 60s
dewpoints. However, strong kinematic fields should be in place as a
mid-level jet max passes overhead. Forecast hodographs suggest
effective bulk shear values around 50-55 knots will be common, and
low-level SRH may approach 150 m2/s2 along/ahead of the line. The
severe risk will likely be modulated by the degree of diurnal
destabilization that can occur ahead of the line, but stronger
cells/segments may pose a severe wind/tornado risk given the
favorable wind profiles. This risk may peak by late morning before
the line begins to move offshore and forcing for ascent gradually
abates by late afternoon as the synoptic low lifts well to the
north.
..Moore/Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1247 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
THE UPPER OHIO RIVER VALLEY...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE OHIO RIVER VALLEY AND NORTHERN FLORIDA TO SOUTHERN GEORGIA...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms with a few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds,
and isolated large hail are possible across the upper Ohio River
Valley and parts of the Appalachians this afternoon. Scattered
damaging winds and a couple tornadoes will also be possible across
southeast Georgia into northern Florida, mainly this morning through
early afternoon.
...Synopsis...
04 UTC surface observations depict a diffuse surface low over the
lower MS River Valley. This low is forecast to deepen over the next
24 hours as it lifts northward into the OH Valley/Great Lakes region
in tandem with the phasing of an amplified upper-level trough over
the MS Valley with an approaching upstream perturbation. A surface
cold front currently draped across southeast LA will surge to the
east/northeast as the low deepens, and should act to focus
thunderstorm development through the late morning and afternoon
hours across both the upper OH Valley and Southeast.
...Upper OH River Valley...
Recent 925/850 mb analyses and surface observations show a
consolidating warm frontal zone draped from the surface low over the
lower MS Valley into the upper OH River Valley. The surface low will
deepen along this corridor amid a combination of strong height falls
and ascent within the left-exit region of a mid-level jet. A plume
of low to mid-60s dewpoints will advect northward with the deepening
low, establishing a focused warm sector ahead of the approaching
cold front by early afternoon across parts of KY, OH, and WV. The
current expectation is for sufficient destabilization within the
warm sector to support surface-based convection by the 18-21 UTC
time frame. A combination of strong synoptic-scale ascent and 40-50
knot deep-layer shear vectors off the cold front should promote a
mix of discrete cells and semi-discrete clusters - including the
potential for a few supercells. Increasing southeasterly winds
through the lowest 1-2 km should yield effective SRH values between
150-300 m2/s2, which will support a tornado threat with the more
robust/organized cells as well as a wind threat with more organized
clusters. This threat appears greatest across southeast OH into
western WV where latest guidance continues to show a focused
convective signal. Further to the east into parts of northwest VA, a
somewhat weaker convective signal is noted in most CAM guidance, but
50-knot flow in the lowest 2 km will likely pose a substantial wind
threat with any storms that can mature. Risk probabilities have been
expanded into this region to account for this potential.
That said, this scenario appears to be conditional on achieving
sufficient low-level warming within the warm sector. While an
extensive dry slot is noted in water-vapor imagery across the
Mid-South into central IN, the low/mid-level warm advection regime
is maintaining mid-level stratus across the region with most ASOS
stations reporting overcast skies and ceilings near 6 kft. It is
unclear how much clearing will occur through early afternoon given
persistent ascent, and a 10 F spread in afternoon high temperatures
is noted across OH/WV in recent ensemble guidance. Based on forecast
soundings, surface temperatures in the upper 60s may be required to
realize 500+ J/kg SBCAPE with minimal inhibition. The median of the
temperature distribution appears to reside in the upper 60s, but
SBCAPE may still only reach 500-1000 J/kg per ensemble
distributions.
...Florida/Georgia...
Lingering thunderstorms associated with overnight convection will
likely be ongoing across the FL Panhandle at 12 UTC. This activity
should become consolidated into a more organized line as the cold
front pushes east through the morning across southern GA and
northern FL. Poor lapse rates sampled by 00 UTC soundings across
central/northern FL will limit buoyancy despite mid/upper 60s
dewpoints. However, strong kinematic fields should be in place as a
mid-level jet max passes overhead. Forecast hodographs suggest
effective bulk shear values around 50-55 knots will be common, and
low-level SRH may approach 150 m2/s2 along/ahead of the line. The
severe risk will likely be modulated by the degree of diurnal
destabilization that can occur ahead of the line, but stronger
cells/segments may pose a severe wind/tornado risk given the
favorable wind profiles. This risk may peak by late morning before
the line begins to move offshore and forcing for ascent gradually
abates by late afternoon as the synoptic low lifts well to the
north.
..Moore/Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1247 AM CDT Thu Apr 11 2024
Valid 111200Z - 121200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
THE UPPER OHIO RIVER VALLEY...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
THE OHIO RIVER VALLEY AND NORTHERN FLORIDA TO SOUTHERN GEORGIA...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms with a few tornadoes, scattered damaging winds,
and isolated large hail are possible across the upper Ohio River
Valley and parts of the Appalachians this afternoon. Scattered
damaging winds and a couple tornadoes will also be possible across
southeast Georgia into northern Florida, mainly this morning through
early afternoon.
...Synopsis...
04 UTC surface observations depict a diffuse surface low over the
lower MS River Valley. This low is forecast to deepen over the next
24 hours as it lifts northward into the OH Valley/Great Lakes region
in tandem with the phasing of an amplified upper-level trough over
the MS Valley with an approaching upstream perturbation. A surface
cold front currently draped across southeast LA will surge to the
east/northeast as the low deepens, and should act to focus
thunderstorm development through the late morning and afternoon
hours across both the upper OH Valley and Southeast.
...Upper OH River Valley...
Recent 925/850 mb analyses and surface observations show a
consolidating warm frontal zone draped from the surface low over the
lower MS Valley into the upper OH River Valley. The surface low will
deepen along this corridor amid a combination of strong height falls
and ascent within the left-exit region of a mid-level jet. A plume
of low to mid-60s dewpoints will advect northward with the deepening
low, establishing a focused warm sector ahead of the approaching
cold front by early afternoon across parts of KY, OH, and WV. The
current expectation is for sufficient destabilization within the
warm sector to support surface-based convection by the 18-21 UTC
time frame. A combination of strong synoptic-scale ascent and 40-50
knot deep-layer shear vectors off the cold front should promote a
mix of discrete cells and semi-discrete clusters - including the
potential for a few supercells. Increasing southeasterly winds
through the lowest 1-2 km should yield effective SRH values between
150-300 m2/s2, which will support a tornado threat with the more
robust/organized cells as well as a wind threat with more organized
clusters. This threat appears greatest across southeast OH into
western WV where latest guidance continues to show a focused
convective signal. Further to the east into parts of northwest VA, a
somewhat weaker convective signal is noted in most CAM guidance, but
50-knot flow in the lowest 2 km will likely pose a substantial wind
threat with any storms that can mature. Risk probabilities have been
expanded into this region to account for this potential.
That said, this scenario appears to be conditional on achieving
sufficient low-level warming within the warm sector. While an
extensive dry slot is noted in water-vapor imagery across the
Mid-South into central IN, the low/mid-level warm advection regime
is maintaining mid-level stratus across the region with most ASOS
stations reporting overcast skies and ceilings near 6 kft. It is
unclear how much clearing will occur through early afternoon given
persistent ascent, and a 10 F spread in afternoon high temperatures
is noted across OH/WV in recent ensemble guidance. Based on forecast
soundings, surface temperatures in the upper 60s may be required to
realize 500+ J/kg SBCAPE with minimal inhibition. The median of the
temperature distribution appears to reside in the upper 60s, but
SBCAPE may still only reach 500-1000 J/kg per ensemble
distributions.
...Florida/Georgia...
Lingering thunderstorms associated with overnight convection will
likely be ongoing across the FL Panhandle at 12 UTC. This activity
should become consolidated into a more organized line as the cold
front pushes east through the morning across southern GA and
northern FL. Poor lapse rates sampled by 00 UTC soundings across
central/northern FL will limit buoyancy despite mid/upper 60s
dewpoints. However, strong kinematic fields should be in place as a
mid-level jet max passes overhead. Forecast hodographs suggest
effective bulk shear values around 50-55 knots will be common, and
low-level SRH may approach 150 m2/s2 along/ahead of the line. The
severe risk will likely be modulated by the degree of diurnal
destabilization that can occur ahead of the line, but stronger
cells/segments may pose a severe wind/tornado risk given the
favorable wind profiles. This risk may peak by late morning before
the line begins to move offshore and forcing for ascent gradually
abates by late afternoon as the synoptic low lifts well to the
north.
..Moore/Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
MD 0417 CONCERNING TORNADO WATCH 103... FOR PARTS OF THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE
Mesoscale Discussion 0417
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0635 PM CDT Wed Apr 10 2024
Areas affected...parts of the Florida Panhandle
Concerning...Tornado Watch 103...
Valid 102335Z - 110130Z
The severe weather threat for Tornado Watch 103 continues.
SUMMARY...The risk for severe weather has become increasingly
negligible, at least in the near term, but could increase once again
later this evening across at least coastal portions of the Florida
Panhandle around Apalachicola. While the remainder of Tornado Watch
103 may be allowed to expire at 9 PM EDT, trends will need to
continue to be monitored for the possibility of a new severe weather
watch later this evening.
DISCUSSION...The initially strong and better organized cluster of
storms has undergone considerable further weakening as it continues
to progress through an environment characterized by stable
near-surface lapse rates and less unstable low-level inflow across
and inland of northeastern Gulf coastal areas. Outflow, trailing
the forward propagating portion of the remnant convective system now
progressing into the Apalachicola vicinity, has advanced 60-70 miles
offshore of the western Florida Panhandle, but appears to have
stalled in advance of a significant mid-level short wave still west
of the lower Mississippi Valley.
Renewed thunderstorm development is ongoing along and southwest of
the stalling portion of the outflow, aided by forcing associated
with strengthening low-level warm advection beneath increasingly
difluent upper flow. It appears that this may increasingly acquire
low-level inflow of moderately unstable air over the next few hours,
with potential for further upscale growth and the evolution of
another organizing convective convective cluster along the outflow
boundary through mid/late evening. While the bulk of the strongest
storms may remain offshore, it is possible that the risk for severe
storms could increase again across coastal areas around Apalachicola
later this evening.
..Kerr.. 04/10/2024
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...TAE...MOB...
LAT...LON 30448747 30648657 30558558 29918513 29558590 29648715
29908786 30448747
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0100Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0748 PM CDT Wed Apr 10 2024
Valid 110100Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ALONG PORTIONS OF
THE NORTHEAST GULF COAST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe risk continues this evening along the northeast Gulf
Coast. Locally damaging winds are the primary threat, though a
tornado can not be ruled out.
...01z Update...
Long-lived MCS that developed over the TX Coastal Plain early this
morning has progressed along the Gulf Coast with the leading edge of
this complex now over the eastern FL Panhandle. An embedded MCV is
noted along the northern portion of this complex along the AL/GA
border south of CSG. While the primary upper trough is approaching
the lower MS Valley, and warm advection will remain strong across
the southeastern US overnight, the ongoing MCS has overturned
buoyancy inland. The strongest deep convection has now shifted
offshore and will likely struggle to redevelop inland, to any
appreciable intensity, overnight. For these reasons, only a small
portion of the northeast Gulf Coast will remain in severe
probabilities this evening.
..Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0100Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0748 PM CDT Wed Apr 10 2024
Valid 110100Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ALONG PORTIONS OF
THE NORTHEAST GULF COAST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe risk continues this evening along the northeast Gulf
Coast. Locally damaging winds are the primary threat, though a
tornado can not be ruled out.
...01z Update...
Long-lived MCS that developed over the TX Coastal Plain early this
morning has progressed along the Gulf Coast with the leading edge of
this complex now over the eastern FL Panhandle. An embedded MCV is
noted along the northern portion of this complex along the AL/GA
border south of CSG. While the primary upper trough is approaching
the lower MS Valley, and warm advection will remain strong across
the southeastern US overnight, the ongoing MCS has overturned
buoyancy inland. The strongest deep convection has now shifted
offshore and will likely struggle to redevelop inland, to any
appreciable intensity, overnight. For these reasons, only a small
portion of the northeast Gulf Coast will remain in severe
probabilities this evening.
..Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0100Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0748 PM CDT Wed Apr 10 2024
Valid 110100Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ALONG PORTIONS OF
THE NORTHEAST GULF COAST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe risk continues this evening along the northeast Gulf
Coast. Locally damaging winds are the primary threat, though a
tornado can not be ruled out.
...01z Update...
Long-lived MCS that developed over the TX Coastal Plain early this
morning has progressed along the Gulf Coast with the leading edge of
this complex now over the eastern FL Panhandle. An embedded MCV is
noted along the northern portion of this complex along the AL/GA
border south of CSG. While the primary upper trough is approaching
the lower MS Valley, and warm advection will remain strong across
the southeastern US overnight, the ongoing MCS has overturned
buoyancy inland. The strongest deep convection has now shifted
offshore and will likely struggle to redevelop inland, to any
appreciable intensity, overnight. For these reasons, only a small
portion of the northeast Gulf Coast will remain in severe
probabilities this evening.
..Darrow.. 04/11/2024
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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