SPC Mar 6, 2024 0600 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 1200Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1200 AM CST Wed Mar 06 2024 Valid 061200Z - 071200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF NORTH TX...FL...SC... ...SUMMARY... Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the Florida Peninsula and southern Great Plains. Hail and gusty winds should be the main threats with this activity. ...Synopsis... An upper-level trough will move northeastward from the Southeast toward the Mid Atlantic coast through the day. A related surface low is forecast to move from Georgia toward southeast VA. Farther west, a deep upper-level trough will move eastward across the southwestern CONUS. A surface low is forecast to gradually consolidate in the lee of the southern Rockies, with some modest increase in low-level moisture expected across the southern Plains. The greatest storm coverage is expected across parts of the Southeast/Florida, and also across the southern Plains. Low-topped convection with some lightning potential will also be possible across southern CA, with some small hail and weak rotation possible. ...Florida Peninsula... In the wake of overnight convection, moderate destabilization will be possible by late morning into the afternoon across parts of the central and southern FL Peninsula. As the upper trough and weak cold front approach the region, scattered thunderstorm development will be possible. Effective shear of 30-40 kt will support modestly organized convection, including the potential for a supercell or two. Isolated hail and strong/damaging gusts will be possible with the strongest storms. ...South Carolina and vicinity... After rather extensive morning precipitation, some modest air mass recovery will be possible across parts of GA and the Carolinas. MLCAPE may approach 1000 J/kg by late afternoon as a midlevel vorticity maximum approaches the region, resulting in the potential for scattered thunderstorm redevelopment. Deep-layer shear will be marginally favorable for organized convection, and isolated hail and or strong gusts will be possible with the strongest storms. At this time, the greatest storm coverage is expected across parts of central/eastern SC. ...North Texas... While large-scale ascent will remain rather subtle across the southern Plains, most guidance depicts isolated to widely scattered thunderstorm development during the afternoon/evening from northwest into north-central TX, possibly related to an approaching upper-level jet maximum. Steep midlevel lapse rates and sufficient deep-layer shear could support a strong storm or two capable of hail and/or strong wind gusts, though poor upper-level lapse rates and subtle forcing will tend to limit storm intensity and coverage. ..Dean/Weinman.. 03/06/2024 Read more

SPC MD 193

1 year 5 months ago
MD 0193 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR PORTIONS OF THE WESTERN FLORIDA PENINSULA
Mesoscale Discussion 0193 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0747 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Areas affected...Portions of the western Florida Peninsula Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely Valid 060147Z - 060345Z Probability of Watch Issuance...20 percent SUMMARY...Isolated damaging gusts and possibly a brief/weak tornado could accompany an approaching mesoscale convective system from the west in the next hour or so. A watch is not currently expected. DISCUSSION...A loosely organized quasi-linear convective system is tracking eastward at around 30-35 kt across the eastern Gulf of Mexico, and is approximately 35-40 miles west of Tampa Bay FL. While the latest IR satellite trends suggest a gradual weakening of this system as it encounters cooler sea-surface temperatures and weaker buoyancy offshore of the western FL Peninsula, around 40 kt of midlevel westerly flow perpendicular to the established cold pool should support some maintenance as it approaches the coast. Regardless, antecedent heating/destabilization of a relatively moist airmass (upper 60s to lower 70s dewpoints) over the peninsula could support locally damaging gusts as it moves ashore in the next hour or so, though the onset of nocturnal cooling could offset this to an extent. In addition, small clockwise-curved hodographs could support a brief/weak tornado along the immediate coastal areas, though the stronger low-level flow/shear is largely displaced to the north, where earlier convection/cloud coverage limited destabilization. Current thinking is that the overall severe-threat will remain too localized/marginal for a watch consideration. ..Weinman/Guyer.. 03/06/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...MFL...MLB...TBW...JAX... LAT...LON 25938194 26848250 27678287 28198289 28898276 29008255 29008227 28968203 28778190 28088181 27228164 26448135 25988126 25798153 25938194 Read more

SPC Mar 6, 2024 0100 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0100Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0704 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 060100Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE FLORIDA PENINSULA AND A SMALL PART OF NORTH TX... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms remain possible across parts of the Florida Peninsula this evening through late tonight. ...Florida Peninsula... An MCS is moving across the eastern Gulf of Mexico this evening, with increasing storm coverage noted farther east along the Gulf Coast sea breeze across the west-central FL Peninsula. The 00Z TBW sounding (adjusted for current surface observations) and objective mesoanalysis indicate MLCAPE of 1000-1500 J/kg across parts of the peninsula, with sufficient deep-layer shear for some storm organization. A marginal supercell or two will remain possible across mainly the central peninsula this evening, with some threat for locally damaging gusts and perhaps some hail. Low-level flow/shear is generally rather weak, but a brief tornado cannot be ruled out given the supercell potential within a moist environment. Longevity of the MCS over the Gulf remains uncertain, due to relatively weaker instability offshore of the FL Gulf Coast. However, if organized convection can persist into parts of the peninsula later tonight, then some threat for locally damaging gusts and perhaps a brief tornado may accompany the remnant of the MCS as it moves eastward. ...North-central TX... A couple stronger storms are ongoing east of the Metroplex this evening, but storm coverage and intensity are expected to wane with time, as nocturnal cooling/stabilization commences within a weakly forced environment. An isolated hail threat may accompany any remaining stronger storms until they diminish. ..Dean.. 03/06/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 6, 2024 0100 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0100Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0704 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 060100Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE FLORIDA PENINSULA AND A SMALL PART OF NORTH TX... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms remain possible across parts of the Florida Peninsula this evening through late tonight. ...Florida Peninsula... An MCS is moving across the eastern Gulf of Mexico this evening, with increasing storm coverage noted farther east along the Gulf Coast sea breeze across the west-central FL Peninsula. The 00Z TBW sounding (adjusted for current surface observations) and objective mesoanalysis indicate MLCAPE of 1000-1500 J/kg across parts of the peninsula, with sufficient deep-layer shear for some storm organization. A marginal supercell or two will remain possible across mainly the central peninsula this evening, with some threat for locally damaging gusts and perhaps some hail. Low-level flow/shear is generally rather weak, but a brief tornado cannot be ruled out given the supercell potential within a moist environment. Longevity of the MCS over the Gulf remains uncertain, due to relatively weaker instability offshore of the FL Gulf Coast. However, if organized convection can persist into parts of the peninsula later tonight, then some threat for locally damaging gusts and perhaps a brief tornado may accompany the remnant of the MCS as it moves eastward. ...North-central TX... A couple stronger storms are ongoing east of the Metroplex this evening, but storm coverage and intensity are expected to wane with time, as nocturnal cooling/stabilization commences within a weakly forced environment. An isolated hail threat may accompany any remaining stronger storms until they diminish. ..Dean.. 03/06/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 6, 2024 0100 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0100Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0704 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 060100Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE FLORIDA PENINSULA AND A SMALL PART OF NORTH TX... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms remain possible across parts of the Florida Peninsula this evening through late tonight. ...Florida Peninsula... An MCS is moving across the eastern Gulf of Mexico this evening, with increasing storm coverage noted farther east along the Gulf Coast sea breeze across the west-central FL Peninsula. The 00Z TBW sounding (adjusted for current surface observations) and objective mesoanalysis indicate MLCAPE of 1000-1500 J/kg across parts of the peninsula, with sufficient deep-layer shear for some storm organization. A marginal supercell or two will remain possible across mainly the central peninsula this evening, with some threat for locally damaging gusts and perhaps some hail. Low-level flow/shear is generally rather weak, but a brief tornado cannot be ruled out given the supercell potential within a moist environment. Longevity of the MCS over the Gulf remains uncertain, due to relatively weaker instability offshore of the FL Gulf Coast. However, if organized convection can persist into parts of the peninsula later tonight, then some threat for locally damaging gusts and perhaps a brief tornado may accompany the remnant of the MCS as it moves eastward. ...North-central TX... A couple stronger storms are ongoing east of the Metroplex this evening, but storm coverage and intensity are expected to wane with time, as nocturnal cooling/stabilization commences within a weakly forced environment. An isolated hail threat may accompany any remaining stronger storms until they diminish. ..Dean.. 03/06/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 6, 2024 0100 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 0100Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0704 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 060100Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE FLORIDA PENINSULA AND A SMALL PART OF NORTH TX... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms remain possible across parts of the Florida Peninsula this evening through late tonight. ...Florida Peninsula... An MCS is moving across the eastern Gulf of Mexico this evening, with increasing storm coverage noted farther east along the Gulf Coast sea breeze across the west-central FL Peninsula. The 00Z TBW sounding (adjusted for current surface observations) and objective mesoanalysis indicate MLCAPE of 1000-1500 J/kg across parts of the peninsula, with sufficient deep-layer shear for some storm organization. A marginal supercell or two will remain possible across mainly the central peninsula this evening, with some threat for locally damaging gusts and perhaps some hail. Low-level flow/shear is generally rather weak, but a brief tornado cannot be ruled out given the supercell potential within a moist environment. Longevity of the MCS over the Gulf remains uncertain, due to relatively weaker instability offshore of the FL Gulf Coast. However, if organized convection can persist into parts of the peninsula later tonight, then some threat for locally damaging gusts and perhaps a brief tornado may accompany the remnant of the MCS as it moves eastward. ...North-central TX... A couple stronger storms are ongoing east of the Metroplex this evening, but storm coverage and intensity are expected to wane with time, as nocturnal cooling/stabilization commences within a weakly forced environment. An isolated hail threat may accompany any remaining stronger storms until they diminish. ..Dean.. 03/06/2024 Read more

SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0349 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 071200Z - 131200Z A mid-level trough will impinge on the Plains states for the later part of this week, supporting downslope flow and associated dry and windy conditions along the Texas/New Mexico border on Day 3/Thursday. A cold front will then surge southward across the southern Plains toward the Rio Grande on Day 4/Friday, promoting dry and breezy conditions along parts of the international border. Thereafter, multiple mid-level impulses are poised to eject into the southern Plains by Days 7-8/Monday-Tuesday. The latest medium-range guidance suggests that dry and windy conditions across the southern High Plains could approach Critical thresholds. Critical probabilities may be introduced in future outlooks if agreement in critically dry and windy conditions persists in future guidance. ..Squitieri.. 03/05/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0349 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 071200Z - 131200Z A mid-level trough will impinge on the Plains states for the later part of this week, supporting downslope flow and associated dry and windy conditions along the Texas/New Mexico border on Day 3/Thursday. A cold front will then surge southward across the southern Plains toward the Rio Grande on Day 4/Friday, promoting dry and breezy conditions along parts of the international border. Thereafter, multiple mid-level impulses are poised to eject into the southern Plains by Days 7-8/Monday-Tuesday. The latest medium-range guidance suggests that dry and windy conditions across the southern High Plains could approach Critical thresholds. Critical probabilities may be introduced in future outlooks if agreement in critically dry and windy conditions persists in future guidance. ..Squitieri.. 03/05/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0349 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 071200Z - 131200Z A mid-level trough will impinge on the Plains states for the later part of this week, supporting downslope flow and associated dry and windy conditions along the Texas/New Mexico border on Day 3/Thursday. A cold front will then surge southward across the southern Plains toward the Rio Grande on Day 4/Friday, promoting dry and breezy conditions along parts of the international border. Thereafter, multiple mid-level impulses are poised to eject into the southern Plains by Days 7-8/Monday-Tuesday. The latest medium-range guidance suggests that dry and windy conditions across the southern High Plains could approach Critical thresholds. Critical probabilities may be introduced in future outlooks if agreement in critically dry and windy conditions persists in future guidance. ..Squitieri.. 03/05/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0349 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 071200Z - 131200Z A mid-level trough will impinge on the Plains states for the later part of this week, supporting downslope flow and associated dry and windy conditions along the Texas/New Mexico border on Day 3/Thursday. A cold front will then surge southward across the southern Plains toward the Rio Grande on Day 4/Friday, promoting dry and breezy conditions along parts of the international border. Thereafter, multiple mid-level impulses are poised to eject into the southern Plains by Days 7-8/Monday-Tuesday. The latest medium-range guidance suggests that dry and windy conditions across the southern High Plains could approach Critical thresholds. Critical probabilities may be introduced in future outlooks if agreement in critically dry and windy conditions persists in future guidance. ..Squitieri.. 03/05/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0349 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 071200Z - 131200Z A mid-level trough will impinge on the Plains states for the later part of this week, supporting downslope flow and associated dry and windy conditions along the Texas/New Mexico border on Day 3/Thursday. A cold front will then surge southward across the southern Plains toward the Rio Grande on Day 4/Friday, promoting dry and breezy conditions along parts of the international border. Thereafter, multiple mid-level impulses are poised to eject into the southern Plains by Days 7-8/Monday-Tuesday. The latest medium-range guidance suggests that dry and windy conditions across the southern High Plains could approach Critical thresholds. Critical probabilities may be introduced in future outlooks if agreement in critically dry and windy conditions persists in future guidance. ..Squitieri.. 03/05/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0349 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 071200Z - 131200Z A mid-level trough will impinge on the Plains states for the later part of this week, supporting downslope flow and associated dry and windy conditions along the Texas/New Mexico border on Day 3/Thursday. A cold front will then surge southward across the southern Plains toward the Rio Grande on Day 4/Friday, promoting dry and breezy conditions along parts of the international border. Thereafter, multiple mid-level impulses are poised to eject into the southern Plains by Days 7-8/Monday-Tuesday. The latest medium-range guidance suggests that dry and windy conditions across the southern High Plains could approach Critical thresholds. Critical probabilities may be introduced in future outlooks if agreement in critically dry and windy conditions persists in future guidance. ..Squitieri.. 03/05/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC MD 192

1 year 5 months ago
MD 0192 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL/SOUTHERN FLORIDA PENINSULA
Mesoscale Discussion 0192 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0312 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Areas affected...portions of the central/southern Florida Peninsula Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely Valid 052112Z - 052245Z Probability of Watch Issuance...5 percent SUMMARY...Isolated thunderstorms are expected over the next 1-2 hours. The strongest storms may produce locally gusty winds and small hail. DISCUSSION...Modest destabilization has occurred across the central/southern FL Peninsula this afternoon amid strong heating and mid/upper 60s F surface dewpoints. Effective shear magnitudes around 30-40 kt will support some storm organization. However, modest midlevel lapse rates, along with generally weak instability and light winds through 3 km, will likely limit longevity of any stronger updrafts. Forecast soundings do indicated elongated hodographs above 3 km, so any updraft that can be sustained could potential produce small hail given cooler temperatures aloft. Otherwise, locally gusty winds may accompany these storms as well. Given the overall marginal nature of the environment and expected isolated storm coverage, a watch is not expected. ..Leitman.. 03/05/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...MFL...MLB...TBW... LAT...LON 27358277 27808255 27978187 27828131 27438082 26698044 25898035 25348043 25238063 25328105 25778149 26268201 26868252 27358277 Read more

SPC Mar 5, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0159 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 052000Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE SOUTH-CENTRAL STATES AND THE FL PENINSULA... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms remain possible across a portion of the South-Central States into this evening, and across central to south Florida this evening through late tonight. ...20Z Update... Primary change has been to reorient the cat 1-MRGL risk area over the South-Central States in the wake of extensive convection that has largely weakened across LA and MS. Redevelopment should focus on the remnant outflow boundary that arcs northwestward across east TX and intersects a slow-moving front. Relatively greatest potential for sustained development should be across northeast TX to southeast OK, where a few storms may produce isolated large hail. In the wake of extensive overturning, a dearth of downstream instability suggest the severe threat should remain relatively short-lived and wane after dusk. Elevated convection within a weaker sheared environment may persist longer across the Mid-South with small hail being the most likely hazard. No adjustments have been made to the FL risk area, with some convective potential this evening and more probable thunderstorm occurrence overnight. ..Grams.. 03/05/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL/ ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a low-amplitude, zonal to gently cyclonic flow pattern is present over most of the CONUS, ahead of a synoptic trough over the northeastern Pacific between 130W-140W. That trough will approach coastal northern/central CA near the end of the period with an embedded 500-mb low west of MRY, then move inland on day 2. Downstream, a southern-stream shortwave trough -- with several associated/small-scale vorticity maxima -- was apparent in moisture-channel imagery over eastern parts of OK/TX to the mid/upper TX Coast. This feature is expected to shift eastward across the Gulf Coast States and northern Gulf through the period, reaching parts of MS/AL and the FL Panhandle by 00Z, then moving across GA/FL in piecemeal fashion around the end of the period and early day 2. A weaker perturbation -- initially evident over parts of the Mid-Atlantic region and adjoining ocean waters -- should deamplify as it moves northeastward across New England through tonight. At the surface, a cold front was analyzed at 16Z from western QC across Lake Huron to southern MO, southeastern OK, north-central TX, and the TX South Plains region. A weak, attached low initially east of DAL should drift southward with the boundary and weaken further today, while another frontal-wave low forms ahead of the front over northern AL overnight. The front itself should move slowly southward across central/east TX, AR, and the lower Ohio Valley through the period. ...Arklatex to lower Mississippi Valley/Delta regions... The threat for marginally severe hail is ongoing with widely scattered elevated thunderstorms ongoing over portions of AR into the Arklatex region and nearby LA/east TX. Though predominantly multicellular in character, due to lack of more intense vertical shear, MUCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range, supported by patches of favorable low-level moisture away from convectively modified air masses, should continue to support episodic development generally shifting eastward to east-southeastward across the outlook area into this afternoon. Sporadic large hail on a pulse basis will remain a threat, though isolated damaging to severe gusts cannot be ruled out as well. Several clusters or small complexes of thunderstorms may develop as the morning activity moves toward the lower Mississippi Valley, with the messier mode lessening hail potential locally but maintaining some pulse-wind threat. Strongest mid/upper winds also will be displaced over the Great Lakes and northern Gulf in distinct northern and subtropical streams -- north and south of the greatest concentrations of convection. This should maintain modest deep shear and a mostly multicell mode for inland activity. Though the prefrontal boundary layer should destabilize diurnally, especially over western parts of the outlook area ahead of the cold front -- mid/upper forcing for ascent will be displaced farther east into the Delta region with time -- and ultimately over parts of the Southeast containing less-suitable low-level moisture and instability. Though isolated strong-severe afternoon thunderstorms may form closer to the front in east TX, AR and LA, large-scale subsidence behind the trough will foster stable layers that may inhibit sustained convection over the greatest low-level instability today. With associated coverage uncertainties, overall unconditional severe probabilities are kept at marginal levels for the time being. ...FL... As the large-scale ascent/destabilization passes over the north- central/northeastern Gulf waters -- including the Loop Current -- low/middle-level lapse rates should steepen with weakening MLCINH. This may support upscale organization of convection now near and off the northern coastline into a quasi-linear MCS that would move east-southeastward across the Gulf, reaching the West Coast of FL late this evening or overnight, before shifting eastward over at least parts of the peninsula. Additional convection may form late during the diurnal heating cycle this afternoon, and/or in a zone of increasing warm advection and low-level convergence/lift ahead of the MCS this evening. While both synoptic and convection-allowing guidance is inconsistent on mesoscale timing of the complex, or greatest coverage areas of pre-MCS activity, the general notion of increasing convective potential from late afternoon onward over FL is supported by the pattern and by ongoing offshore convective trends. As such, while the severe threat still looks conditional (especially given some nocturnal stabilization likely to occur inland over FL), at least a marginal unconditional risk now is apparent, given increasing deep shear progged across most of the area, and at least marginal low-level instability with around 500-1500 J/kg MLCAPE away from convective outflows. Progged hodographs generally are not particularly large, though storm-scale and boundary interactions can modify them locally to become more favorable, amidst 35-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes. Read more

SPC Mar 5, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0159 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 052000Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE SOUTH-CENTRAL STATES AND THE FL PENINSULA... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms remain possible across a portion of the South-Central States into this evening, and across central to south Florida this evening through late tonight. ...20Z Update... Primary change has been to reorient the cat 1-MRGL risk area over the South-Central States in the wake of extensive convection that has largely weakened across LA and MS. Redevelopment should focus on the remnant outflow boundary that arcs northwestward across east TX and intersects a slow-moving front. Relatively greatest potential for sustained development should be across northeast TX to southeast OK, where a few storms may produce isolated large hail. In the wake of extensive overturning, a dearth of downstream instability suggest the severe threat should remain relatively short-lived and wane after dusk. Elevated convection within a weaker sheared environment may persist longer across the Mid-South with small hail being the most likely hazard. No adjustments have been made to the FL risk area, with some convective potential this evening and more probable thunderstorm occurrence overnight. ..Grams.. 03/05/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL/ ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a low-amplitude, zonal to gently cyclonic flow pattern is present over most of the CONUS, ahead of a synoptic trough over the northeastern Pacific between 130W-140W. That trough will approach coastal northern/central CA near the end of the period with an embedded 500-mb low west of MRY, then move inland on day 2. Downstream, a southern-stream shortwave trough -- with several associated/small-scale vorticity maxima -- was apparent in moisture-channel imagery over eastern parts of OK/TX to the mid/upper TX Coast. This feature is expected to shift eastward across the Gulf Coast States and northern Gulf through the period, reaching parts of MS/AL and the FL Panhandle by 00Z, then moving across GA/FL in piecemeal fashion around the end of the period and early day 2. A weaker perturbation -- initially evident over parts of the Mid-Atlantic region and adjoining ocean waters -- should deamplify as it moves northeastward across New England through tonight. At the surface, a cold front was analyzed at 16Z from western QC across Lake Huron to southern MO, southeastern OK, north-central TX, and the TX South Plains region. A weak, attached low initially east of DAL should drift southward with the boundary and weaken further today, while another frontal-wave low forms ahead of the front over northern AL overnight. The front itself should move slowly southward across central/east TX, AR, and the lower Ohio Valley through the period. ...Arklatex to lower Mississippi Valley/Delta regions... The threat for marginally severe hail is ongoing with widely scattered elevated thunderstorms ongoing over portions of AR into the Arklatex region and nearby LA/east TX. Though predominantly multicellular in character, due to lack of more intense vertical shear, MUCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range, supported by patches of favorable low-level moisture away from convectively modified air masses, should continue to support episodic development generally shifting eastward to east-southeastward across the outlook area into this afternoon. Sporadic large hail on a pulse basis will remain a threat, though isolated damaging to severe gusts cannot be ruled out as well. Several clusters or small complexes of thunderstorms may develop as the morning activity moves toward the lower Mississippi Valley, with the messier mode lessening hail potential locally but maintaining some pulse-wind threat. Strongest mid/upper winds also will be displaced over the Great Lakes and northern Gulf in distinct northern and subtropical streams -- north and south of the greatest concentrations of convection. This should maintain modest deep shear and a mostly multicell mode for inland activity. Though the prefrontal boundary layer should destabilize diurnally, especially over western parts of the outlook area ahead of the cold front -- mid/upper forcing for ascent will be displaced farther east into the Delta region with time -- and ultimately over parts of the Southeast containing less-suitable low-level moisture and instability. Though isolated strong-severe afternoon thunderstorms may form closer to the front in east TX, AR and LA, large-scale subsidence behind the trough will foster stable layers that may inhibit sustained convection over the greatest low-level instability today. With associated coverage uncertainties, overall unconditional severe probabilities are kept at marginal levels for the time being. ...FL... As the large-scale ascent/destabilization passes over the north- central/northeastern Gulf waters -- including the Loop Current -- low/middle-level lapse rates should steepen with weakening MLCINH. This may support upscale organization of convection now near and off the northern coastline into a quasi-linear MCS that would move east-southeastward across the Gulf, reaching the West Coast of FL late this evening or overnight, before shifting eastward over at least parts of the peninsula. Additional convection may form late during the diurnal heating cycle this afternoon, and/or in a zone of increasing warm advection and low-level convergence/lift ahead of the MCS this evening. While both synoptic and convection-allowing guidance is inconsistent on mesoscale timing of the complex, or greatest coverage areas of pre-MCS activity, the general notion of increasing convective potential from late afternoon onward over FL is supported by the pattern and by ongoing offshore convective trends. As such, while the severe threat still looks conditional (especially given some nocturnal stabilization likely to occur inland over FL), at least a marginal unconditional risk now is apparent, given increasing deep shear progged across most of the area, and at least marginal low-level instability with around 500-1500 J/kg MLCAPE away from convective outflows. Progged hodographs generally are not particularly large, though storm-scale and boundary interactions can modify them locally to become more favorable, amidst 35-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes. Read more

SPC Mar 5, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0159 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 052000Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE SOUTH-CENTRAL STATES AND THE FL PENINSULA... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms remain possible across a portion of the South-Central States into this evening, and across central to south Florida this evening through late tonight. ...20Z Update... Primary change has been to reorient the cat 1-MRGL risk area over the South-Central States in the wake of extensive convection that has largely weakened across LA and MS. Redevelopment should focus on the remnant outflow boundary that arcs northwestward across east TX and intersects a slow-moving front. Relatively greatest potential for sustained development should be across northeast TX to southeast OK, where a few storms may produce isolated large hail. In the wake of extensive overturning, a dearth of downstream instability suggest the severe threat should remain relatively short-lived and wane after dusk. Elevated convection within a weaker sheared environment may persist longer across the Mid-South with small hail being the most likely hazard. No adjustments have been made to the FL risk area, with some convective potential this evening and more probable thunderstorm occurrence overnight. ..Grams.. 03/05/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL/ ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a low-amplitude, zonal to gently cyclonic flow pattern is present over most of the CONUS, ahead of a synoptic trough over the northeastern Pacific between 130W-140W. That trough will approach coastal northern/central CA near the end of the period with an embedded 500-mb low west of MRY, then move inland on day 2. Downstream, a southern-stream shortwave trough -- with several associated/small-scale vorticity maxima -- was apparent in moisture-channel imagery over eastern parts of OK/TX to the mid/upper TX Coast. This feature is expected to shift eastward across the Gulf Coast States and northern Gulf through the period, reaching parts of MS/AL and the FL Panhandle by 00Z, then moving across GA/FL in piecemeal fashion around the end of the period and early day 2. A weaker perturbation -- initially evident over parts of the Mid-Atlantic region and adjoining ocean waters -- should deamplify as it moves northeastward across New England through tonight. At the surface, a cold front was analyzed at 16Z from western QC across Lake Huron to southern MO, southeastern OK, north-central TX, and the TX South Plains region. A weak, attached low initially east of DAL should drift southward with the boundary and weaken further today, while another frontal-wave low forms ahead of the front over northern AL overnight. The front itself should move slowly southward across central/east TX, AR, and the lower Ohio Valley through the period. ...Arklatex to lower Mississippi Valley/Delta regions... The threat for marginally severe hail is ongoing with widely scattered elevated thunderstorms ongoing over portions of AR into the Arklatex region and nearby LA/east TX. Though predominantly multicellular in character, due to lack of more intense vertical shear, MUCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range, supported by patches of favorable low-level moisture away from convectively modified air masses, should continue to support episodic development generally shifting eastward to east-southeastward across the outlook area into this afternoon. Sporadic large hail on a pulse basis will remain a threat, though isolated damaging to severe gusts cannot be ruled out as well. Several clusters or small complexes of thunderstorms may develop as the morning activity moves toward the lower Mississippi Valley, with the messier mode lessening hail potential locally but maintaining some pulse-wind threat. Strongest mid/upper winds also will be displaced over the Great Lakes and northern Gulf in distinct northern and subtropical streams -- north and south of the greatest concentrations of convection. This should maintain modest deep shear and a mostly multicell mode for inland activity. Though the prefrontal boundary layer should destabilize diurnally, especially over western parts of the outlook area ahead of the cold front -- mid/upper forcing for ascent will be displaced farther east into the Delta region with time -- and ultimately over parts of the Southeast containing less-suitable low-level moisture and instability. Though isolated strong-severe afternoon thunderstorms may form closer to the front in east TX, AR and LA, large-scale subsidence behind the trough will foster stable layers that may inhibit sustained convection over the greatest low-level instability today. With associated coverage uncertainties, overall unconditional severe probabilities are kept at marginal levels for the time being. ...FL... As the large-scale ascent/destabilization passes over the north- central/northeastern Gulf waters -- including the Loop Current -- low/middle-level lapse rates should steepen with weakening MLCINH. This may support upscale organization of convection now near and off the northern coastline into a quasi-linear MCS that would move east-southeastward across the Gulf, reaching the West Coast of FL late this evening or overnight, before shifting eastward over at least parts of the peninsula. Additional convection may form late during the diurnal heating cycle this afternoon, and/or in a zone of increasing warm advection and low-level convergence/lift ahead of the MCS this evening. While both synoptic and convection-allowing guidance is inconsistent on mesoscale timing of the complex, or greatest coverage areas of pre-MCS activity, the general notion of increasing convective potential from late afternoon onward over FL is supported by the pattern and by ongoing offshore convective trends. As such, while the severe threat still looks conditional (especially given some nocturnal stabilization likely to occur inland over FL), at least a marginal unconditional risk now is apparent, given increasing deep shear progged across most of the area, and at least marginal low-level instability with around 500-1500 J/kg MLCAPE away from convective outflows. Progged hodographs generally are not particularly large, though storm-scale and boundary interactions can modify them locally to become more favorable, amidst 35-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes. Read more

SPC Mar 5, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0159 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 052000Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE SOUTH-CENTRAL STATES AND THE FL PENINSULA... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms remain possible across a portion of the South-Central States into this evening, and across central to south Florida this evening through late tonight. ...20Z Update... Primary change has been to reorient the cat 1-MRGL risk area over the South-Central States in the wake of extensive convection that has largely weakened across LA and MS. Redevelopment should focus on the remnant outflow boundary that arcs northwestward across east TX and intersects a slow-moving front. Relatively greatest potential for sustained development should be across northeast TX to southeast OK, where a few storms may produce isolated large hail. In the wake of extensive overturning, a dearth of downstream instability suggest the severe threat should remain relatively short-lived and wane after dusk. Elevated convection within a weaker sheared environment may persist longer across the Mid-South with small hail being the most likely hazard. No adjustments have been made to the FL risk area, with some convective potential this evening and more probable thunderstorm occurrence overnight. ..Grams.. 03/05/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL/ ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a low-amplitude, zonal to gently cyclonic flow pattern is present over most of the CONUS, ahead of a synoptic trough over the northeastern Pacific between 130W-140W. That trough will approach coastal northern/central CA near the end of the period with an embedded 500-mb low west of MRY, then move inland on day 2. Downstream, a southern-stream shortwave trough -- with several associated/small-scale vorticity maxima -- was apparent in moisture-channel imagery over eastern parts of OK/TX to the mid/upper TX Coast. This feature is expected to shift eastward across the Gulf Coast States and northern Gulf through the period, reaching parts of MS/AL and the FL Panhandle by 00Z, then moving across GA/FL in piecemeal fashion around the end of the period and early day 2. A weaker perturbation -- initially evident over parts of the Mid-Atlantic region and adjoining ocean waters -- should deamplify as it moves northeastward across New England through tonight. At the surface, a cold front was analyzed at 16Z from western QC across Lake Huron to southern MO, southeastern OK, north-central TX, and the TX South Plains region. A weak, attached low initially east of DAL should drift southward with the boundary and weaken further today, while another frontal-wave low forms ahead of the front over northern AL overnight. The front itself should move slowly southward across central/east TX, AR, and the lower Ohio Valley through the period. ...Arklatex to lower Mississippi Valley/Delta regions... The threat for marginally severe hail is ongoing with widely scattered elevated thunderstorms ongoing over portions of AR into the Arklatex region and nearby LA/east TX. Though predominantly multicellular in character, due to lack of more intense vertical shear, MUCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range, supported by patches of favorable low-level moisture away from convectively modified air masses, should continue to support episodic development generally shifting eastward to east-southeastward across the outlook area into this afternoon. Sporadic large hail on a pulse basis will remain a threat, though isolated damaging to severe gusts cannot be ruled out as well. Several clusters or small complexes of thunderstorms may develop as the morning activity moves toward the lower Mississippi Valley, with the messier mode lessening hail potential locally but maintaining some pulse-wind threat. Strongest mid/upper winds also will be displaced over the Great Lakes and northern Gulf in distinct northern and subtropical streams -- north and south of the greatest concentrations of convection. This should maintain modest deep shear and a mostly multicell mode for inland activity. Though the prefrontal boundary layer should destabilize diurnally, especially over western parts of the outlook area ahead of the cold front -- mid/upper forcing for ascent will be displaced farther east into the Delta region with time -- and ultimately over parts of the Southeast containing less-suitable low-level moisture and instability. Though isolated strong-severe afternoon thunderstorms may form closer to the front in east TX, AR and LA, large-scale subsidence behind the trough will foster stable layers that may inhibit sustained convection over the greatest low-level instability today. With associated coverage uncertainties, overall unconditional severe probabilities are kept at marginal levels for the time being. ...FL... As the large-scale ascent/destabilization passes over the north- central/northeastern Gulf waters -- including the Loop Current -- low/middle-level lapse rates should steepen with weakening MLCINH. This may support upscale organization of convection now near and off the northern coastline into a quasi-linear MCS that would move east-southeastward across the Gulf, reaching the West Coast of FL late this evening or overnight, before shifting eastward over at least parts of the peninsula. Additional convection may form late during the diurnal heating cycle this afternoon, and/or in a zone of increasing warm advection and low-level convergence/lift ahead of the MCS this evening. While both synoptic and convection-allowing guidance is inconsistent on mesoscale timing of the complex, or greatest coverage areas of pre-MCS activity, the general notion of increasing convective potential from late afternoon onward over FL is supported by the pattern and by ongoing offshore convective trends. As such, while the severe threat still looks conditional (especially given some nocturnal stabilization likely to occur inland over FL), at least a marginal unconditional risk now is apparent, given increasing deep shear progged across most of the area, and at least marginal low-level instability with around 500-1500 J/kg MLCAPE away from convective outflows. Progged hodographs generally are not particularly large, though storm-scale and boundary interactions can modify them locally to become more favorable, amidst 35-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes. Read more

SPC Mar 5, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 5 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0159 PM CST Tue Mar 05 2024 Valid 052000Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE SOUTH-CENTRAL STATES AND THE FL PENINSULA... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms remain possible across a portion of the South-Central States into this evening, and across central to south Florida this evening through late tonight. ...20Z Update... Primary change has been to reorient the cat 1-MRGL risk area over the South-Central States in the wake of extensive convection that has largely weakened across LA and MS. Redevelopment should focus on the remnant outflow boundary that arcs northwestward across east TX and intersects a slow-moving front. Relatively greatest potential for sustained development should be across northeast TX to southeast OK, where a few storms may produce isolated large hail. In the wake of extensive overturning, a dearth of downstream instability suggest the severe threat should remain relatively short-lived and wane after dusk. Elevated convection within a weaker sheared environment may persist longer across the Mid-South with small hail being the most likely hazard. No adjustments have been made to the FL risk area, with some convective potential this evening and more probable thunderstorm occurrence overnight. ..Grams.. 03/05/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL/ ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a low-amplitude, zonal to gently cyclonic flow pattern is present over most of the CONUS, ahead of a synoptic trough over the northeastern Pacific between 130W-140W. That trough will approach coastal northern/central CA near the end of the period with an embedded 500-mb low west of MRY, then move inland on day 2. Downstream, a southern-stream shortwave trough -- with several associated/small-scale vorticity maxima -- was apparent in moisture-channel imagery over eastern parts of OK/TX to the mid/upper TX Coast. This feature is expected to shift eastward across the Gulf Coast States and northern Gulf through the period, reaching parts of MS/AL and the FL Panhandle by 00Z, then moving across GA/FL in piecemeal fashion around the end of the period and early day 2. A weaker perturbation -- initially evident over parts of the Mid-Atlantic region and adjoining ocean waters -- should deamplify as it moves northeastward across New England through tonight. At the surface, a cold front was analyzed at 16Z from western QC across Lake Huron to southern MO, southeastern OK, north-central TX, and the TX South Plains region. A weak, attached low initially east of DAL should drift southward with the boundary and weaken further today, while another frontal-wave low forms ahead of the front over northern AL overnight. The front itself should move slowly southward across central/east TX, AR, and the lower Ohio Valley through the period. ...Arklatex to lower Mississippi Valley/Delta regions... The threat for marginally severe hail is ongoing with widely scattered elevated thunderstorms ongoing over portions of AR into the Arklatex region and nearby LA/east TX. Though predominantly multicellular in character, due to lack of more intense vertical shear, MUCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range, supported by patches of favorable low-level moisture away from convectively modified air masses, should continue to support episodic development generally shifting eastward to east-southeastward across the outlook area into this afternoon. Sporadic large hail on a pulse basis will remain a threat, though isolated damaging to severe gusts cannot be ruled out as well. Several clusters or small complexes of thunderstorms may develop as the morning activity moves toward the lower Mississippi Valley, with the messier mode lessening hail potential locally but maintaining some pulse-wind threat. Strongest mid/upper winds also will be displaced over the Great Lakes and northern Gulf in distinct northern and subtropical streams -- north and south of the greatest concentrations of convection. This should maintain modest deep shear and a mostly multicell mode for inland activity. Though the prefrontal boundary layer should destabilize diurnally, especially over western parts of the outlook area ahead of the cold front -- mid/upper forcing for ascent will be displaced farther east into the Delta region with time -- and ultimately over parts of the Southeast containing less-suitable low-level moisture and instability. Though isolated strong-severe afternoon thunderstorms may form closer to the front in east TX, AR and LA, large-scale subsidence behind the trough will foster stable layers that may inhibit sustained convection over the greatest low-level instability today. With associated coverage uncertainties, overall unconditional severe probabilities are kept at marginal levels for the time being. ...FL... As the large-scale ascent/destabilization passes over the north- central/northeastern Gulf waters -- including the Loop Current -- low/middle-level lapse rates should steepen with weakening MLCINH. This may support upscale organization of convection now near and off the northern coastline into a quasi-linear MCS that would move east-southeastward across the Gulf, reaching the West Coast of FL late this evening or overnight, before shifting eastward over at least parts of the peninsula. Additional convection may form late during the diurnal heating cycle this afternoon, and/or in a zone of increasing warm advection and low-level convergence/lift ahead of the MCS this evening. While both synoptic and convection-allowing guidance is inconsistent on mesoscale timing of the complex, or greatest coverage areas of pre-MCS activity, the general notion of increasing convective potential from late afternoon onward over FL is supported by the pattern and by ongoing offshore convective trends. As such, while the severe threat still looks conditional (especially given some nocturnal stabilization likely to occur inland over FL), at least a marginal unconditional risk now is apparent, given increasing deep shear progged across most of the area, and at least marginal low-level instability with around 500-1500 J/kg MLCAPE away from convective outflows. Progged hodographs generally are not particularly large, though storm-scale and boundary interactions can modify them locally to become more favorable, amidst 35-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes. Read more
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Severe Storms
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