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1 year 6 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0719 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 101300Z - 111200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
Severe storms are not expected.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, a progressive pattern will continue over the
CONUS, led by a substantial, synoptic-scale cyclone now centered
over the eastern Lower MI/Lake Huron region. A strong, preceding
shortwave perturbation -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over
parts of NY and western New England -- will eject out of the
Northeast today as the mid/upper low approaches. In the meantime, a
few elevated, non-severe thunderstorms may occur over portions of
coastal eastern New England, atop the related conveyor of low-level
warm advection and frontal forcing. By 00Z, the 500-mb low should
be in the NYC area, moving well offshore of Cape Cod by 12Z. The
trailing cold front -- analyzed at 11Z across parts of central FL,
is preceded by a thin band of convection on a low-level prefrontal
trough. While weak MLCINH and rich surface moisture will persist
along/ahead of these boundaries, with some diurnal heating prior to
frontal passage, warm-sector southwesterlies will contribute to
limited thunderstorm coverage due to lack of stronger lift.
Elsewhere, a series of shortwave troughs will continue to traverse
high-latitude westerlies over the North Pacific, south of mean
troughing over AK and the Gulf of Alaska. One already is well
inland over the Canadian Great Plains. The next -- initially
extending from a low offshore of Vancouver Island, southward near
130W -- will move ashore today and deamplify to an open-wave trough.
Associated midlevel cooling and steepening lapse rates -- atop weak
but locally sufficient low-level moisture -- may support isolated
lightning over portions of the Northwest today, shutting down this
evening and from west-east with trough passage.
..Edwards/Jewell.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0719 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 101300Z - 111200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
Severe storms are not expected.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, a progressive pattern will continue over the
CONUS, led by a substantial, synoptic-scale cyclone now centered
over the eastern Lower MI/Lake Huron region. A strong, preceding
shortwave perturbation -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over
parts of NY and western New England -- will eject out of the
Northeast today as the mid/upper low approaches. In the meantime, a
few elevated, non-severe thunderstorms may occur over portions of
coastal eastern New England, atop the related conveyor of low-level
warm advection and frontal forcing. By 00Z, the 500-mb low should
be in the NYC area, moving well offshore of Cape Cod by 12Z. The
trailing cold front -- analyzed at 11Z across parts of central FL,
is preceded by a thin band of convection on a low-level prefrontal
trough. While weak MLCINH and rich surface moisture will persist
along/ahead of these boundaries, with some diurnal heating prior to
frontal passage, warm-sector southwesterlies will contribute to
limited thunderstorm coverage due to lack of stronger lift.
Elsewhere, a series of shortwave troughs will continue to traverse
high-latitude westerlies over the North Pacific, south of mean
troughing over AK and the Gulf of Alaska. One already is well
inland over the Canadian Great Plains. The next -- initially
extending from a low offshore of Vancouver Island, southward near
130W -- will move ashore today and deamplify to an open-wave trough.
Associated midlevel cooling and steepening lapse rates -- atop weak
but locally sufficient low-level moisture -- may support isolated
lightning over portions of the Northwest today, shutting down this
evening and from west-east with trough passage.
..Edwards/Jewell.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0719 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 101300Z - 111200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
Severe storms are not expected.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, a progressive pattern will continue over the
CONUS, led by a substantial, synoptic-scale cyclone now centered
over the eastern Lower MI/Lake Huron region. A strong, preceding
shortwave perturbation -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over
parts of NY and western New England -- will eject out of the
Northeast today as the mid/upper low approaches. In the meantime, a
few elevated, non-severe thunderstorms may occur over portions of
coastal eastern New England, atop the related conveyor of low-level
warm advection and frontal forcing. By 00Z, the 500-mb low should
be in the NYC area, moving well offshore of Cape Cod by 12Z. The
trailing cold front -- analyzed at 11Z across parts of central FL,
is preceded by a thin band of convection on a low-level prefrontal
trough. While weak MLCINH and rich surface moisture will persist
along/ahead of these boundaries, with some diurnal heating prior to
frontal passage, warm-sector southwesterlies will contribute to
limited thunderstorm coverage due to lack of stronger lift.
Elsewhere, a series of shortwave troughs will continue to traverse
high-latitude westerlies over the North Pacific, south of mean
troughing over AK and the Gulf of Alaska. One already is well
inland over the Canadian Great Plains. The next -- initially
extending from a low offshore of Vancouver Island, southward near
130W -- will move ashore today and deamplify to an open-wave trough.
Associated midlevel cooling and steepening lapse rates -- atop weak
but locally sufficient low-level moisture -- may support isolated
lightning over portions of the Northwest today, shutting down this
evening and from west-east with trough passage.
..Edwards/Jewell.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0719 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 101300Z - 111200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
Severe storms are not expected.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, a progressive pattern will continue over the
CONUS, led by a substantial, synoptic-scale cyclone now centered
over the eastern Lower MI/Lake Huron region. A strong, preceding
shortwave perturbation -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over
parts of NY and western New England -- will eject out of the
Northeast today as the mid/upper low approaches. In the meantime, a
few elevated, non-severe thunderstorms may occur over portions of
coastal eastern New England, atop the related conveyor of low-level
warm advection and frontal forcing. By 00Z, the 500-mb low should
be in the NYC area, moving well offshore of Cape Cod by 12Z. The
trailing cold front -- analyzed at 11Z across parts of central FL,
is preceded by a thin band of convection on a low-level prefrontal
trough. While weak MLCINH and rich surface moisture will persist
along/ahead of these boundaries, with some diurnal heating prior to
frontal passage, warm-sector southwesterlies will contribute to
limited thunderstorm coverage due to lack of stronger lift.
Elsewhere, a series of shortwave troughs will continue to traverse
high-latitude westerlies over the North Pacific, south of mean
troughing over AK and the Gulf of Alaska. One already is well
inland over the Canadian Great Plains. The next -- initially
extending from a low offshore of Vancouver Island, southward near
130W -- will move ashore today and deamplify to an open-wave trough.
Associated midlevel cooling and steepening lapse rates -- atop weak
but locally sufficient low-level moisture -- may support isolated
lightning over portions of the Northwest today, shutting down this
evening and from west-east with trough passage.
..Edwards/Jewell.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0719 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 101300Z - 111200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
Severe storms are not expected.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, a progressive pattern will continue over the
CONUS, led by a substantial, synoptic-scale cyclone now centered
over the eastern Lower MI/Lake Huron region. A strong, preceding
shortwave perturbation -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over
parts of NY and western New England -- will eject out of the
Northeast today as the mid/upper low approaches. In the meantime, a
few elevated, non-severe thunderstorms may occur over portions of
coastal eastern New England, atop the related conveyor of low-level
warm advection and frontal forcing. By 00Z, the 500-mb low should
be in the NYC area, moving well offshore of Cape Cod by 12Z. The
trailing cold front -- analyzed at 11Z across parts of central FL,
is preceded by a thin band of convection on a low-level prefrontal
trough. While weak MLCINH and rich surface moisture will persist
along/ahead of these boundaries, with some diurnal heating prior to
frontal passage, warm-sector southwesterlies will contribute to
limited thunderstorm coverage due to lack of stronger lift.
Elsewhere, a series of shortwave troughs will continue to traverse
high-latitude westerlies over the North Pacific, south of mean
troughing over AK and the Gulf of Alaska. One already is well
inland over the Canadian Great Plains. The next -- initially
extending from a low offshore of Vancouver Island, southward near
130W -- will move ashore today and deamplify to an open-wave trough.
Associated midlevel cooling and steepening lapse rates -- atop weak
but locally sufficient low-level moisture -- may support isolated
lightning over portions of the Northwest today, shutting down this
evening and from west-east with trough passage.
..Edwards/Jewell.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0719 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 101300Z - 111200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
Severe storms are not expected.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, a progressive pattern will continue over the
CONUS, led by a substantial, synoptic-scale cyclone now centered
over the eastern Lower MI/Lake Huron region. A strong, preceding
shortwave perturbation -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over
parts of NY and western New England -- will eject out of the
Northeast today as the mid/upper low approaches. In the meantime, a
few elevated, non-severe thunderstorms may occur over portions of
coastal eastern New England, atop the related conveyor of low-level
warm advection and frontal forcing. By 00Z, the 500-mb low should
be in the NYC area, moving well offshore of Cape Cod by 12Z. The
trailing cold front -- analyzed at 11Z across parts of central FL,
is preceded by a thin band of convection on a low-level prefrontal
trough. While weak MLCINH and rich surface moisture will persist
along/ahead of these boundaries, with some diurnal heating prior to
frontal passage, warm-sector southwesterlies will contribute to
limited thunderstorm coverage due to lack of stronger lift.
Elsewhere, a series of shortwave troughs will continue to traverse
high-latitude westerlies over the North Pacific, south of mean
troughing over AK and the Gulf of Alaska. One already is well
inland over the Canadian Great Plains. The next -- initially
extending from a low offshore of Vancouver Island, southward near
130W -- will move ashore today and deamplify to an open-wave trough.
Associated midlevel cooling and steepening lapse rates -- atop weak
but locally sufficient low-level moisture -- may support isolated
lightning over portions of the Northwest today, shutting down this
evening and from west-east with trough passage.
..Edwards/Jewell.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0412 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 131200Z - 181200Z
...DISCUSSION...
Upper trough amplification will occur over the West during the
middle part of the week, with the likelihood that an upper low will
gradually become cut-off over the Southwest Deserts late in the
week. Low-level moisture return will continue to occur through Days
4-5 across the southern Plains/Ozarks. For Day 4/Wednesday, at least
some risk for severe thunderstorms may exist near the Texas/southern
Oklahoma dryline, and perhaps more so, northeastward along the
synoptic front across eastern Kansas toward the lower Missouri
Valley beneath the upper jet exit region. A categorical Slight Risk
could be warranted in future outlooks for Wednesday; however,
lingering uncertainties regarding moisture return and
destabilization preclude a 15% severe risk area at this time.
A somewhat higher probability and greater coverage of severe risk is
still expected for Day 5/Thursday, especially across
central/northeast Texas toward the ArkLaTex and southeast Oklahoma.
Moderately strong southwesterly winds aloft are expected atop 60s F
surface dewpoints, to the east of the dryline and near/southeast of
the southeastward-accelerating synoptic front across the southern
Plains to lower Missouri Valley/Ozarks.
At least some severe risk will probably expand eastward toward the
Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast into Day 6/Friday, but
predictability is considerably more limited into this time frame,
especially given the potential for fairly extensive early-day
convection across the region.
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0412 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 131200Z - 181200Z
...DISCUSSION...
Upper trough amplification will occur over the West during the
middle part of the week, with the likelihood that an upper low will
gradually become cut-off over the Southwest Deserts late in the
week. Low-level moisture return will continue to occur through Days
4-5 across the southern Plains/Ozarks. For Day 4/Wednesday, at least
some risk for severe thunderstorms may exist near the Texas/southern
Oklahoma dryline, and perhaps more so, northeastward along the
synoptic front across eastern Kansas toward the lower Missouri
Valley beneath the upper jet exit region. A categorical Slight Risk
could be warranted in future outlooks for Wednesday; however,
lingering uncertainties regarding moisture return and
destabilization preclude a 15% severe risk area at this time.
A somewhat higher probability and greater coverage of severe risk is
still expected for Day 5/Thursday, especially across
central/northeast Texas toward the ArkLaTex and southeast Oklahoma.
Moderately strong southwesterly winds aloft are expected atop 60s F
surface dewpoints, to the east of the dryline and near/southeast of
the southeastward-accelerating synoptic front across the southern
Plains to lower Missouri Valley/Ozarks.
At least some severe risk will probably expand eastward toward the
Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast into Day 6/Friday, but
predictability is considerably more limited into this time frame,
especially given the potential for fairly extensive early-day
convection across the region.
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0412 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 131200Z - 181200Z
...DISCUSSION...
Upper trough amplification will occur over the West during the
middle part of the week, with the likelihood that an upper low will
gradually become cut-off over the Southwest Deserts late in the
week. Low-level moisture return will continue to occur through Days
4-5 across the southern Plains/Ozarks. For Day 4/Wednesday, at least
some risk for severe thunderstorms may exist near the Texas/southern
Oklahoma dryline, and perhaps more so, northeastward along the
synoptic front across eastern Kansas toward the lower Missouri
Valley beneath the upper jet exit region. A categorical Slight Risk
could be warranted in future outlooks for Wednesday; however,
lingering uncertainties regarding moisture return and
destabilization preclude a 15% severe risk area at this time.
A somewhat higher probability and greater coverage of severe risk is
still expected for Day 5/Thursday, especially across
central/northeast Texas toward the ArkLaTex and southeast Oklahoma.
Moderately strong southwesterly winds aloft are expected atop 60s F
surface dewpoints, to the east of the dryline and near/southeast of
the southeastward-accelerating synoptic front across the southern
Plains to lower Missouri Valley/Ozarks.
At least some severe risk will probably expand eastward toward the
Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast into Day 6/Friday, but
predictability is considerably more limited into this time frame,
especially given the potential for fairly extensive early-day
convection across the region.
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0412 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 131200Z - 181200Z
...DISCUSSION...
Upper trough amplification will occur over the West during the
middle part of the week, with the likelihood that an upper low will
gradually become cut-off over the Southwest Deserts late in the
week. Low-level moisture return will continue to occur through Days
4-5 across the southern Plains/Ozarks. For Day 4/Wednesday, at least
some risk for severe thunderstorms may exist near the Texas/southern
Oklahoma dryline, and perhaps more so, northeastward along the
synoptic front across eastern Kansas toward the lower Missouri
Valley beneath the upper jet exit region. A categorical Slight Risk
could be warranted in future outlooks for Wednesday; however,
lingering uncertainties regarding moisture return and
destabilization preclude a 15% severe risk area at this time.
A somewhat higher probability and greater coverage of severe risk is
still expected for Day 5/Thursday, especially across
central/northeast Texas toward the ArkLaTex and southeast Oklahoma.
Moderately strong southwesterly winds aloft are expected atop 60s F
surface dewpoints, to the east of the dryline and near/southeast of
the southeastward-accelerating synoptic front across the southern
Plains to lower Missouri Valley/Ozarks.
At least some severe risk will probably expand eastward toward the
Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast into Day 6/Friday, but
predictability is considerably more limited into this time frame,
especially given the potential for fairly extensive early-day
convection across the region.
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0412 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 131200Z - 181200Z
...DISCUSSION...
Upper trough amplification will occur over the West during the
middle part of the week, with the likelihood that an upper low will
gradually become cut-off over the Southwest Deserts late in the
week. Low-level moisture return will continue to occur through Days
4-5 across the southern Plains/Ozarks. For Day 4/Wednesday, at least
some risk for severe thunderstorms may exist near the Texas/southern
Oklahoma dryline, and perhaps more so, northeastward along the
synoptic front across eastern Kansas toward the lower Missouri
Valley beneath the upper jet exit region. A categorical Slight Risk
could be warranted in future outlooks for Wednesday; however,
lingering uncertainties regarding moisture return and
destabilization preclude a 15% severe risk area at this time.
A somewhat higher probability and greater coverage of severe risk is
still expected for Day 5/Thursday, especially across
central/northeast Texas toward the ArkLaTex and southeast Oklahoma.
Moderately strong southwesterly winds aloft are expected atop 60s F
surface dewpoints, to the east of the dryline and near/southeast of
the southeastward-accelerating synoptic front across the southern
Plains to lower Missouri Valley/Ozarks.
At least some severe risk will probably expand eastward toward the
Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast into Day 6/Friday, but
predictability is considerably more limited into this time frame,
especially given the potential for fairly extensive early-day
convection across the region.
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0412 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 131200Z - 181200Z
...DISCUSSION...
Upper trough amplification will occur over the West during the
middle part of the week, with the likelihood that an upper low will
gradually become cut-off over the Southwest Deserts late in the
week. Low-level moisture return will continue to occur through Days
4-5 across the southern Plains/Ozarks. For Day 4/Wednesday, at least
some risk for severe thunderstorms may exist near the Texas/southern
Oklahoma dryline, and perhaps more so, northeastward along the
synoptic front across eastern Kansas toward the lower Missouri
Valley beneath the upper jet exit region. A categorical Slight Risk
could be warranted in future outlooks for Wednesday; however,
lingering uncertainties regarding moisture return and
destabilization preclude a 15% severe risk area at this time.
A somewhat higher probability and greater coverage of severe risk is
still expected for Day 5/Thursday, especially across
central/northeast Texas toward the ArkLaTex and southeast Oklahoma.
Moderately strong southwesterly winds aloft are expected atop 60s F
surface dewpoints, to the east of the dryline and near/southeast of
the southeastward-accelerating synoptic front across the southern
Plains to lower Missouri Valley/Ozarks.
At least some severe risk will probably expand eastward toward the
Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast into Day 6/Friday, but
predictability is considerably more limited into this time frame,
especially given the potential for fairly extensive early-day
convection across the region.
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0412 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 131200Z - 181200Z
...DISCUSSION...
Upper trough amplification will occur over the West during the
middle part of the week, with the likelihood that an upper low will
gradually become cut-off over the Southwest Deserts late in the
week. Low-level moisture return will continue to occur through Days
4-5 across the southern Plains/Ozarks. For Day 4/Wednesday, at least
some risk for severe thunderstorms may exist near the Texas/southern
Oklahoma dryline, and perhaps more so, northeastward along the
synoptic front across eastern Kansas toward the lower Missouri
Valley beneath the upper jet exit region. A categorical Slight Risk
could be warranted in future outlooks for Wednesday; however,
lingering uncertainties regarding moisture return and
destabilization preclude a 15% severe risk area at this time.
A somewhat higher probability and greater coverage of severe risk is
still expected for Day 5/Thursday, especially across
central/northeast Texas toward the ArkLaTex and southeast Oklahoma.
Moderately strong southwesterly winds aloft are expected atop 60s F
surface dewpoints, to the east of the dryline and near/southeast of
the southeastward-accelerating synoptic front across the southern
Plains to lower Missouri Valley/Ozarks.
At least some severe risk will probably expand eastward toward the
Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast into Day 6/Friday, but
predictability is considerably more limited into this time frame,
especially given the potential for fairly extensive early-day
convection across the region.
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0412 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 131200Z - 181200Z
...DISCUSSION...
Upper trough amplification will occur over the West during the
middle part of the week, with the likelihood that an upper low will
gradually become cut-off over the Southwest Deserts late in the
week. Low-level moisture return will continue to occur through Days
4-5 across the southern Plains/Ozarks. For Day 4/Wednesday, at least
some risk for severe thunderstorms may exist near the Texas/southern
Oklahoma dryline, and perhaps more so, northeastward along the
synoptic front across eastern Kansas toward the lower Missouri
Valley beneath the upper jet exit region. A categorical Slight Risk
could be warranted in future outlooks for Wednesday; however,
lingering uncertainties regarding moisture return and
destabilization preclude a 15% severe risk area at this time.
A somewhat higher probability and greater coverage of severe risk is
still expected for Day 5/Thursday, especially across
central/northeast Texas toward the ArkLaTex and southeast Oklahoma.
Moderately strong southwesterly winds aloft are expected atop 60s F
surface dewpoints, to the east of the dryline and near/southeast of
the southeastward-accelerating synoptic front across the southern
Plains to lower Missouri Valley/Ozarks.
At least some severe risk will probably expand eastward toward the
Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast into Day 6/Friday, but
predictability is considerably more limited into this time frame,
especially given the potential for fairly extensive early-day
convection across the region.
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
MD 0214 CONCERNING HEAVY SNOW FOR PARTS OF NORTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE INTO WESTERN MAINE
Mesoscale Discussion 0214
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1027 PM CST Sat Mar 09 2024
Areas affected...parts of northern New Hampshire into western Maine
Concerning...Heavy snow
Valid 100427Z - 100930Z
SUMMARY...Sustained heavy snow appears most likely to become focused
across the mountains of northern New Hampshire into northwestern
Maine overnight into daybreak Sunday, including hourly rates
increasing to 1-2+ inches per hour.
DISCUSSION...A developing surface cyclone appears to be undergoing a
period of more rapid deepening as it migrates across the northern
Mid Atlantic region toward southern New England. Strengthening
deep-layer ascent to the north-northeast of this feature, supported
by lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection beneath an increasingly
difluent and divergent upper flow field, is in the process of
overspreading much of eastern New York and western New England,
accompanied by moderate to heavy precipitation.
Thermodynamic profiles near or below freezing are generally focused
across the higher terrain, and with further low-level warming, may
become increasingly confined to the mountains of northern New
Hampshire into northwestern Maine overnight. This is where ensemble
output (including the latest NCEP SREF and HREF) suggest highest
probabilities for heavy snow rates developing and being maintained,
perhaps at rates in excess of 2 inches per hour by 09-12Z.
It appears that precipitable water within the saturating,
sub-freezing profiles across this region may increase up to around
.70 inches. Rapid Refresh forecast soundings indicate that this
will coincide with a period of intensifying lift within a layer
between roughly 600-500 mb, where the environment will become most
conducive to large dendritic ice crystal growth with temperatures
around -15 C. It appears that a fairly deep layer layer through the
lowest few kilometers above ground level may become characterized by
isothermal profiles near freezing, contributing to potential for
considerable continuing snow flake growth via aggregation before
reaching the surface as a "heavy, wet" snow.
..Kerr.. 03/10/2024
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...GYX...
LAT...LON 45247007 44937001 44097102 43867142 44037185 44787129
45567048 45247007
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0318 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS AND OZARKS...
...SUMMARY...
A few strong to severe thunderstorms may occur across the
south-central Plains and Ozarks on Tuesday.
...South-central Plains to Ozarks/Lower Missouri Valley...
A complex forecast scenario exists on Tuesday attributable to
limited initial moisture return, uncertainties regarding mid-level
capping, as well as Day 3-typical guidance variability regarding
mass fields and thermodynamic details. Current bottom-line
assessment is that a few strong to severe thunderstorms could occur
mainly across parts of eastern Oklahoma into eastern Kansas and
western Missouri/northwest Arkansas Tuesday afternoon and evening.
Lee-side cyclogenesis will become increasingly prevalent across the
central Plains on Tuesday, while a low-amplitude shortwave trough
progresses eastward across the south-central Plains. Low-level
moisture will occur during the day, but surface dewpoints should
still generally be limited to the upper 40s/lower 50s F to the east
of the Oklahoma/north Texas dryline, and the southeast of a front
across eastern Kansas and the nearby Missouri Valley. While
early-season moisture content will be limited, a few surface-based
thunderstorms may develop near the dryline/triple-point vicinity
within a marginally unstable environment, with a slightly higher
potential for increasingly elevated thunderstorm development Tuesday
night including areas from northeast Oklahoma into Missouri.
Marginal buoyancy and steepening mid-level lapse rates, in the
presence of 40+ kt westerlies, could yield a few strong to severe
thunderstorms capable of hail and gusty winds.
..Guyer.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0318 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS AND OZARKS...
...SUMMARY...
A few strong to severe thunderstorms may occur across the
south-central Plains and Ozarks on Tuesday.
...South-central Plains to Ozarks/Lower Missouri Valley...
A complex forecast scenario exists on Tuesday attributable to
limited initial moisture return, uncertainties regarding mid-level
capping, as well as Day 3-typical guidance variability regarding
mass fields and thermodynamic details. Current bottom-line
assessment is that a few strong to severe thunderstorms could occur
mainly across parts of eastern Oklahoma into eastern Kansas and
western Missouri/northwest Arkansas Tuesday afternoon and evening.
Lee-side cyclogenesis will become increasingly prevalent across the
central Plains on Tuesday, while a low-amplitude shortwave trough
progresses eastward across the south-central Plains. Low-level
moisture will occur during the day, but surface dewpoints should
still generally be limited to the upper 40s/lower 50s F to the east
of the Oklahoma/north Texas dryline, and the southeast of a front
across eastern Kansas and the nearby Missouri Valley. While
early-season moisture content will be limited, a few surface-based
thunderstorms may develop near the dryline/triple-point vicinity
within a marginally unstable environment, with a slightly higher
potential for increasingly elevated thunderstorm development Tuesday
night including areas from northeast Oklahoma into Missouri.
Marginal buoyancy and steepening mid-level lapse rates, in the
presence of 40+ kt westerlies, could yield a few strong to severe
thunderstorms capable of hail and gusty winds.
..Guyer.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0318 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS AND OZARKS...
...SUMMARY...
A few strong to severe thunderstorms may occur across the
south-central Plains and Ozarks on Tuesday.
...South-central Plains to Ozarks/Lower Missouri Valley...
A complex forecast scenario exists on Tuesday attributable to
limited initial moisture return, uncertainties regarding mid-level
capping, as well as Day 3-typical guidance variability regarding
mass fields and thermodynamic details. Current bottom-line
assessment is that a few strong to severe thunderstorms could occur
mainly across parts of eastern Oklahoma into eastern Kansas and
western Missouri/northwest Arkansas Tuesday afternoon and evening.
Lee-side cyclogenesis will become increasingly prevalent across the
central Plains on Tuesday, while a low-amplitude shortwave trough
progresses eastward across the south-central Plains. Low-level
moisture will occur during the day, but surface dewpoints should
still generally be limited to the upper 40s/lower 50s F to the east
of the Oklahoma/north Texas dryline, and the southeast of a front
across eastern Kansas and the nearby Missouri Valley. While
early-season moisture content will be limited, a few surface-based
thunderstorms may develop near the dryline/triple-point vicinity
within a marginally unstable environment, with a slightly higher
potential for increasingly elevated thunderstorm development Tuesday
night including areas from northeast Oklahoma into Missouri.
Marginal buoyancy and steepening mid-level lapse rates, in the
presence of 40+ kt westerlies, could yield a few strong to severe
thunderstorms capable of hail and gusty winds.
..Guyer.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0318 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS AND OZARKS...
...SUMMARY...
A few strong to severe thunderstorms may occur across the
south-central Plains and Ozarks on Tuesday.
...South-central Plains to Ozarks/Lower Missouri Valley...
A complex forecast scenario exists on Tuesday attributable to
limited initial moisture return, uncertainties regarding mid-level
capping, as well as Day 3-typical guidance variability regarding
mass fields and thermodynamic details. Current bottom-line
assessment is that a few strong to severe thunderstorms could occur
mainly across parts of eastern Oklahoma into eastern Kansas and
western Missouri/northwest Arkansas Tuesday afternoon and evening.
Lee-side cyclogenesis will become increasingly prevalent across the
central Plains on Tuesday, while a low-amplitude shortwave trough
progresses eastward across the south-central Plains. Low-level
moisture will occur during the day, but surface dewpoints should
still generally be limited to the upper 40s/lower 50s F to the east
of the Oklahoma/north Texas dryline, and the southeast of a front
across eastern Kansas and the nearby Missouri Valley. While
early-season moisture content will be limited, a few surface-based
thunderstorms may develop near the dryline/triple-point vicinity
within a marginally unstable environment, with a slightly higher
potential for increasingly elevated thunderstorm development Tuesday
night including areas from northeast Oklahoma into Missouri.
Marginal buoyancy and steepening mid-level lapse rates, in the
presence of 40+ kt westerlies, could yield a few strong to severe
thunderstorms capable of hail and gusty winds.
..Guyer.. 03/10/2024
Read more
1 year 6 months ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0318 AM CDT Sun Mar 10 2024
Valid 121200Z - 131200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS AND OZARKS...
...SUMMARY...
A few strong to severe thunderstorms may occur across the
south-central Plains and Ozarks on Tuesday.
...South-central Plains to Ozarks/Lower Missouri Valley...
A complex forecast scenario exists on Tuesday attributable to
limited initial moisture return, uncertainties regarding mid-level
capping, as well as Day 3-typical guidance variability regarding
mass fields and thermodynamic details. Current bottom-line
assessment is that a few strong to severe thunderstorms could occur
mainly across parts of eastern Oklahoma into eastern Kansas and
western Missouri/northwest Arkansas Tuesday afternoon and evening.
Lee-side cyclogenesis will become increasingly prevalent across the
central Plains on Tuesday, while a low-amplitude shortwave trough
progresses eastward across the south-central Plains. Low-level
moisture will occur during the day, but surface dewpoints should
still generally be limited to the upper 40s/lower 50s F to the east
of the Oklahoma/north Texas dryline, and the southeast of a front
across eastern Kansas and the nearby Missouri Valley. While
early-season moisture content will be limited, a few surface-based
thunderstorms may develop near the dryline/triple-point vicinity
within a marginally unstable environment, with a slightly higher
potential for increasingly elevated thunderstorm development Tuesday
night including areas from northeast Oklahoma into Missouri.
Marginal buoyancy and steepening mid-level lapse rates, in the
presence of 40+ kt westerlies, could yield a few strong to severe
thunderstorms capable of hail and gusty winds.
..Guyer.. 03/10/2024
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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