SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1135 AM CDT Fri Mar 24 2023 Valid 241700Z - 251200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF WESTERN TEXAS... Clear skies are evident across far eastern New Mexico into western Texas this morning, as a mid-level trough and associated surface low drifts away from the southern High Plains region. In the wake of the surface low, downslope flow and boundary-layer heating/mixing within the post-dryline environment are still expected to support dry and windy conditions. By afternoon peak heating, 20-25 mph sustained westerly surface winds should overlap with 15 percent RH for at least a few hours. Though fuel receptiveness is relatively modest, somewhat dry grasses should support some threat for fire spread amid the aforementioned surface meteorological conditions, warranting the continuation of Elevated/Critical highlights. These highlights were adjusted to account for the latest guidance consensus, and for recent rainfall across the Concho Valley. ..Squitieri.. 03/24/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0159 AM CDT Fri Mar 24 2023/ ...Synopsis... An amplified mid/upper-level trough accompanied by strong deep-layer westerly flow will advance eastward across the southern Plains through the day, while a Pacific cold front tracks eastward across east TX. ...West Texas... Behind the eastward-advancing cold front, mostly clear skies coupled with strong downslope warming/drying will favor deep boundary-layer mixing/drying across much of west TX -- yielding an expansive area of 10-15 percent minimum RH. At the same time, strong westerly flow through the depth of the boundary-layer will favor 20-30 mph sustained surface winds with gusts upwards of 35-40 mph. While this combination will support a large area of critical meteorological conditions over west into central TX, the Critical area has been confined to areas that missed out on recent precipitation (where fuels should be modestly receptive to large-fire spread). ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1135 AM CDT Fri Mar 24 2023 Valid 241700Z - 251200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF WESTERN TEXAS... Clear skies are evident across far eastern New Mexico into western Texas this morning, as a mid-level trough and associated surface low drifts away from the southern High Plains region. In the wake of the surface low, downslope flow and boundary-layer heating/mixing within the post-dryline environment are still expected to support dry and windy conditions. By afternoon peak heating, 20-25 mph sustained westerly surface winds should overlap with 15 percent RH for at least a few hours. Though fuel receptiveness is relatively modest, somewhat dry grasses should support some threat for fire spread amid the aforementioned surface meteorological conditions, warranting the continuation of Elevated/Critical highlights. These highlights were adjusted to account for the latest guidance consensus, and for recent rainfall across the Concho Valley. ..Squitieri.. 03/24/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0159 AM CDT Fri Mar 24 2023/ ...Synopsis... An amplified mid/upper-level trough accompanied by strong deep-layer westerly flow will advance eastward across the southern Plains through the day, while a Pacific cold front tracks eastward across east TX. ...West Texas... Behind the eastward-advancing cold front, mostly clear skies coupled with strong downslope warming/drying will favor deep boundary-layer mixing/drying across much of west TX -- yielding an expansive area of 10-15 percent minimum RH. At the same time, strong westerly flow through the depth of the boundary-layer will favor 20-30 mph sustained surface winds with gusts upwards of 35-40 mph. While this combination will support a large area of critical meteorological conditions over west into central TX, the Critical area has been confined to areas that missed out on recent precipitation (where fuels should be modestly receptive to large-fire spread). ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Mar 24, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1126 AM CDT Fri Mar 24 2023 Valid 241630Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF ARKANSAS/LOUISIANA/MISSISSIPPI AND SOUTHWEST TENNESSEE... ...SUMMARY... A severe weather outbreak is possible across the Lower Mississippi Valley and Mid-South this afternoon and tonight. The most likely time period for strong tornadoes is between 5 pm and Midnight CDT. ...Lower Mississippi Valley/Mid-South/Tennessee Valley... Upper-air analysis and more contemporary water vapor imagery features a relatively low amplitude shortwave trough centered near the New Mexico/Mexico/west Texas border vicinity, with a preceding broad belt of strong mid/high-level southwesterlies extending across the southern plains toward the Midwest. These westerlies are partially atop a convectively augmented front that extends from central/northeast Texas into the Ozarks, and then largely parallels the Lower Ohio River (but to the south). Within the warm sector, 12z upper-air analysis did feature a relative minimum of higher-caliber source-region moisture as noted in 850mb analysis (supplemented by GPS PW values) across parts of south-central/east Texas into southern Louisiana, although higher moisture content was noted across the ArkLaTex/Mid-South. Scattered thunderstorms are ongoing along the effective frontal zone from the ArkLatex into central/eastern Arkansas, and northeastward into western Tennessee and eastern Kentucky. Latest thinking is that initial development/intensification of surface-based storms should occur across northeast/east Texas, possibly far southeast Oklahoma, into western Arkansas in vicinity of the front/abating outflow and surface low vicinity. This severe threat should expand/organize east-northeastward as the surface cyclone steadily deepens and tracks northeast along the baroclinic zone through tonight. After some initial-discrete storms/supercells, it seems like that an intensifying QLCS will evolve across Arkansas and spread toward the Tennessee Valley through the evening. Strengthening low-level winds and enlarging hodographs should compensate for the northern gradient of the surface-based instability plume. This QLCS will likely contain embedded supercell and mesovortex structures supportive of tornadoes (including potential for a few EF2s) and significant damaging wind swaths (up to around 80-90 mph). Farther south, increasing low-level moisture across the Sabine Valley towards the ArkLaMiss should eventually yield a plume of moderate MLCAPE around 1500 J/kg by evening. This warm theta-e advection regime should also foster some discrete supercellular convection ahead and south/southeast of the QLCS towards late afternoon into early evening within the resultant MLCAPE gradient. Deep-layer shear profiles will support supercells, a few of which could become long-tracked across the ArkLaMiss region. Low-level hodographs, while not quite as enlarged as compared to farther north, will support a threat for strong tornadoes (EF2+) through much of the evening, until warm sector winds becomes increasingly veered from southwest to northeast overnight. ..Guyer/Moore.. 03/24/2023 Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 72

2 years 6 months ago
WW 72 SEVERE TSTM AR MO 232045Z - 240400Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED Severe Thunderstorm Watch Number 72 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 345 PM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023 The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a * Severe Thunderstorm Watch for portions of Northern Arkansas Southern Missouri * Effective this Thursday afternoon and evening from 345 PM until 1100 PM CDT. * Primary threats include... Scattered large hail and isolated very large hail events to 2 inches in diameter possible Scattered damaging wind gusts to 65 mph possible A tornado or two possible SUMMARY...Storms will continue to develop across the region and intensify through late afternoon and early evening, with these storms focused along and to the north of a southeastward-moving cold front. Large hail should be the most common severe hazard (aside from locally heavy rainfall), but locally damaging winds and perhaps a brief tornado could also occur with any storms near/south of the cold front. The severe thunderstorm watch area is approximately along and 65 statute miles north and south of a line from 20 miles north northwest of Fayetteville AR to 40 miles southeast of Fort Leonard Wood MO. For a complete depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU2). PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... REMEMBER...A Severe Thunderstorm Watch means conditions are favorable for severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch area. Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for threatening weather conditions and listen for later statements and possible warnings. Severe thunderstorms can and occasionally do produce tornadoes. && OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 71... AVIATION...A few severe thunderstorms with hail surface and aloft to 2 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind gusts to 55 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 500. Mean storm motion vector 24035. ...Guyer Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 71 Status Reports

2 years 6 months ago
WW 0071 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 71 THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA. ..SMITH..03/23/23 ATTN...WFO...TSA...OUN...SJT...LUB... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 71 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS OKC001-015-017-019-021-027-029-031-033-035-037-041-049-051-061- 063-065-067-069-075-077-079-081-085-087-091-095-097-099-101-107- 109-111-115-121-123-125-131-133-135-137-141-143-145-232200- OK . OKLAHOMA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ADAIR CADDO CANADIAN CARTER CHEROKEE CLEVELAND COAL COMANCHE COTTON CRAIG CREEK DELAWARE GARVIN GRADY HASKELL HUGHES JACKSON JEFFERSON JOHNSTON KIOWA LATIMER LE FLORE LINCOLN LOVE MCCLAIN MCINTOSH MARSHALL MAYES MURRAY MUSKOGEE OKFUSKEE OKLAHOMA OKMULGEE OTTAWA PITTSBURG PONTOTOC POTTAWATOMIE ROGERS SEMINOLE SEQUOYAH STEPHENS TILLMAN TULSA WAGONER TXC009-023-077-155-197-207-269-275-433-447-485-487-232200- Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 71

2 years 6 months ago
WW 71 SEVERE TSTM OK TX 232010Z - 240400Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED Severe Thunderstorm Watch Number 71 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 310 PM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023 The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a * Severe Thunderstorm Watch for portions of Oklahoma Western North Texas * Effective this Thursday afternoon and evening from 310 PM until 1100 PM CDT. * Primary threats include... Scattered large hail likely with isolated very large hail events to 2.5 inches in diameter possible Scattered damaging wind gusts to 65 mph possible A tornado or two possible SUMMARY...Strong to severe thunderstorms will continue to develop near/just north of a southeastward-moving cold front. Large hail will be the most common hazard. The severe thunderstorm watch area is approximately along and 60 statute miles north and south of a line from 80 miles southwest of Altus OK to 45 miles east northeast of Muskogee OK. For a complete depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU1). PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... REMEMBER...A Severe Thunderstorm Watch means conditions are favorable for severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch area. Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for threatening weather conditions and listen for later statements and possible warnings. Severe thunderstorms can and occasionally do produce tornadoes. && AVIATION...A few severe thunderstorms with hail surface and aloft to 2.5 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind gusts to 55 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 500. Mean storm motion vector 24035. ...Guyer Read more

SPC Mar 23, 2023 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0251 PM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023 Valid 232000Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms capable of large hail will be possible this afternoon into tonight across portions of Texas and Oklahoma. Isolated severe wind gusts or a tornado are possible as well. Little change was needed to the previous outlook. Storms will continue to form in a band near the front from northwest TX across OK and into southern MO through evening. The strongest instability and thus hail threat will exist over northwest TX and southern OK as storms develop, mature, and race northeastward nearly parallel to the surface front. Several rounds of storms are possible as the low-level jet increases this evening. Long hodographs as well as enhanced low-level storm relative flow may aid hail production in some of these storms, especially near and after 00Z. For more information, see mesoscale discussion 310. ..Jewell.. 03/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1130 AM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023/ ...Southern Plains to Ozarks/Lower Ohio Valley... A low-amplitude shortwave trough near the Arizona/Mexico border vicinity and preceding jet streak will transition northeastward toward the southern High Plains by tonight. A southwest/northeast-oriented cold front will continue to advance southeastward across Oklahoma and southern portions of Missouri/Illinois. Beneath a mid-level cap (reference 12z observed soundings), low-level moistening continues to steadily occur within the warm sector with upper 60s/near 70F surface dewpoints increasingly prevalent across central/east Texas toward the ArkLaTex. Warm-sector cloud cover remains semi-prevalent at late morning, but visible satellite imagery does reflect a gradual scattering of stratus across central/east Texas. Given warm-sector capping and forcing for ascent initially focused near and on the cool side of the boundary, scattered to eventually numerous thunderstorms are expected to develop by around mid-afternoon initially across Oklahoma near the front. Any development that can mature along/ahead of the front through late afternoon/early evening, without getting undercut by it, may pose a more consequential large hail risk, along with the potential for damaging wind gusts and possibly some tornado risk. Such wind/tornado potential may be modestly higher across far eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas/far southwest Missouri if a weak surface wave materializes along the front. Overall, forecast soundings suggest favorable deep-layer shear for supercells, with intense mid-level winds contributing to effective-shear magnitudes in the 55-70 kt range. With 60s F dewpoints pervasive in the moist sector, peak/preconvective MLCAPE around 1500 J/kg should be common from the Ozarks southwestward, diminishing below 1000 J/kg toward southern Indiana and locally reaching 2000 J/kg in parts of southwestern Oklahoma and northwest Texas. Farther southwest, a more isolated/conditional deep convective potential will exist over northwest Texas near the front/dryline intersection. Any persistent thunderstorms will develop in a greater instability/shear parameter space will have the potential to become supercells and offer significant/2+ inch diameter hailstones. As the front(s) overtake the dryline later this evening and overnight, the combined lift may overcome EML-related CINH enough to backbuild the convection into parts of west-central and perhaps southwest Texas. At least isolated thunderstorms (which also may become supercellular and offer substantial hail) are possible as far south as the Rio Grande. Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0135 PM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023 Valid 241200Z - 251200Z ...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF WEST TX... The previous forecast remains on track for critical fire-weather conditions in portions of West TX. Latest guidance suggests a broader area of windy conditions amidst critical relative humidities, warranting an expansion of the Critical area northward into the Rolling Plains. The southward extent of the Elevated area has been trimmed slightly, particularly in the Big Bend. Despite quite dry and windy conditions in this region, relatively high fuel moisture will limit the fire-weather threat. Current satellite/radar trends suggest that convective precipitation this afternoon should develop roughly along a meridian extending from the eastern Rolling Plains southward through the TX Hill Country. Given increased confidence in the absence of rainfall in the Rolling Plains, the Elevated area has been expanded northeastward to account for dry, windy conditions in an area with fuels supportive of fire spread. ..Flournoy/Wendt.. 03/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0204 AM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... A strong mid-level trough will pass over the southern Plains through D2/Friday. 80-100 kt mid-level flow behind the trough will support gusty downslope surface winds behind a dryline/pacific front as it moves to the east. Widespread fire-weather concerns are expected, given the strong winds and low humidity across portions of West TX. ...Western and central TX... In the wake of the pacific front/dryline passing through early D2/Friday morning, dry westerly winds are expected over much of the southern Plains into central TX. Model soundings show surface humidity will fall below 20% with winds of 20-30 mph expected over much of west TX. Widespread elevated meteorological conditions appear likely, despite only modestly receptive fuels. A focused corridor of critical conditions may also develop with enhanced surface winds and locally drier fuels across portions of west TX and the far southern TX Panhandle. Here, gusts may exceeded 35 mph with pockets of humidity below 15% through the afternoon. The primary uncertainty this outlook is the state of fuels across the region in the wake of precipitation the preceding day. Already slightly wetter than seasonal averages, fuels may be further tempered by widespread precipitation. Models show an area of 0.25+ inch QPF across portions of central and West TX from thunderstorms on D1/Thursday. Uncertainty on the western bound of the higher precipitation is high, lending little confidence in the fire-weather risk across the eastern portions of the outlook area. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Mar 23, 2023 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1225 PM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023 Valid 241200Z - 251200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are likely from the Lower Mississippi Valley toward the lower Ohio Valley Friday afternoon and evening. Tornadoes, some strong, as well as damaging winds and hail are expected. ...Synopsis... A shortwave trough with positive tilt will move across the Southern Plains on Friday, and into the middle MS/lower OH Valley by Saturday morning. The primary zone of cooling aloft will remain roughly along and north of a Texarkana to Memphis to Evansville line, but height falls will occur even south of the jet core toward the northern Gulf Coast. This wave will impinge upon a prominent upper high over the Southeast, with a leading anticyclonically curved jet lifting north across the OH River and toward the Upper Great Lakes. The combination of differential divergence and low-level warm advection looks to be maximized from the Ozarks into the lower OH Valley from 21 to 06Z. Coincidentally, the surface low will deepen most after 00Z as it moves from northern AR northeastward up the OH Valley overnight. The low will move along an existing synoptic front, with a northward-jumping warm front possible just ahead of the low track from far southeast MO/southern IL into southern IN after 00Z. A cold front will develop behind the low, with low-level convergence maximized from northeast TX into western AR by 00Z, pushing east across northern MS and western TN/KY after 06Z. More subtle convergence is anticipated over southern portions of the warm sector across the Sabine River and into LA. The warm sector will be characterized by mid 60s F dewpoints from the low track southward, with upper 60s to 70 F likely into northern LA and central MS. Strong deep-layer shear will overspread the region, with increasing low-level shear developing late in the day/evening from the lower MS valley to the OH Valley as 850 winds increase into the 50-70 kt range. ...Western and northern AR into the OH Valley... Early day storms will be ongoing from eastern OK across northern AR and toward the OH River along and north of a surface front in a zone of glancing warm advection with a veered low-level jet. Some of this activity could contain hail from OK into AR given elevated MUCAPE over 1000 J/kg and long hodographs. In the wake of the earlier activity, diurnal storms are expected to form near the surface low and front extending south across western AR by mid afternoon, with additional activity extending northeastward along the developing warm front into southeast MO and to the OH River. Supercells may mature over AR, producing tornadoes especially later in the day toward 00Z as the low-level jet strengthens rapidly. This threat will expand quickly northeastward across the OH Valley, with a corridor of tornado or damaging winds anticipated near the surface low track. Given the very strong shear Friday evening, minimal uncapped surface-based instability will be needed to produce significant severe storms. As additional model guidance arrives and better observations exist into the Day 1 period, it is plausible that parts of the Moderate Risk could be extended/shifted northward a bit across AR given the more favorable large-scale lift over northern areas. ...Lower MS Valley... The air mass will destabilize across this area well into the evening, which will remain open warm sector with the cold front stalling to the west. Severe weather is most likely late in the day and evening as low-level moisture remains favorable, gradual cooling aloft occurs, and the low-level shear increases substantially. The fact that convergence will be subtle may be beneficial to the supercell tornado threat, and deepening bands of convection may eventually produce tornadoes from northern LA into central MS. Even if storms in this area remain isolated, impressive hodographs with 0-1 SRH over 300 m2/s2 will favor supercells and tornadoes, perhaps tracking for long distances given the lack of cold/stable air. Therefore despite perhaps a weaker model signal over these southern areas, the Moderate Risk has been maintained. ..Jewell.. 03/23/2023 Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1137 AM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023 Valid 231700Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The previous discussion remains on track with minimal fire-weather concerns today. Confidence remains low regarding the overlap of dry and windy conditions -- anticipated in the Permian Basin southward toward the Big Bend -- with more supportive fuels farther north in the TX Panhandle. High-cloud cover currently overspreads West TX and is expected to persist throughout the day. Locally elevated fire-weather conditions may materialize, but the overall threat does not warrant an Elevated area. Please see the previous discussion for more information. ..Flournoy/Wendt.. 03/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0158 AM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... A significant shortwave trough is forecast to cross the Rockies into the Plains accompanied by strong mid-level flow this afternoon and evening. At the surface, a stalled cold front over the southern Plains will keep temperatures relatively cool as it slowly moves south across portions of the southern Plains. Strengthening mid-level flow may support a few hours of drier, downsloping winds from southeast CO, into eastern NM, and portions of west TX, but the overlap of sustained fire-weather conditions and receptive fuels appears low. ...Portions of West TX and the southern Plains... As the lee cyclone moves eastward into Day2/Thursday, a trailing dryline will pass through portions of southwest TX and the southern High Plains. In its wake, area RAP soundings show deep and well-mixed boundary layers with afternoon RH values in the teens to low 20s percent. Coincident with winds of 15-20 mph, a few hours of local elevated meteorological conditions appear possible from the TX Big Bend, northwestward into far southeastern NM. However, uncertainty on fuels in this area is high. Area ERC values near or slightly below seasonal averages suggest any fire-weather threat will likely remain local in nature. Thus, confidence is too low to introduce an Elevated area, despite modestly supportive meteorological conditions. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Mar 23, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1130 AM CDT Thu Mar 23 2023 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS TO OZARKS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms with large and potentially destructive hail will be possible this afternoon into tonight across portions of Texas and Oklahoma. Isolated severe wind gusts or a tornado are possible as well. ...Southern Plains to Ozarks/Lower Ohio Valley... A low-amplitude shortwave trough near the Arizona/Mexico border vicinity and preceding jet streak will transition northeastward toward the southern High Plains by tonight. A southwest/northeast-oriented cold front will continue to advance southeastward across Oklahoma and southern portions of Missouri/Illinois. Beneath a mid-level cap (reference 12z observed soundings), low-level moistening continues to steadily occur within the warm sector with upper 60s/near 70F surface dewpoints increasingly prevalent across central/east Texas toward the ArkLaTex. Warm-sector cloud cover remains semi-prevalent at late morning, but visible satellite imagery does reflect a gradual scattering of stratus across central/east Texas. Given warm-sector capping and forcing for ascent initially focused near and on the cool side of the boundary, scattered to eventually numerous thunderstorms are expected to develop by around mid-afternoon initially across Oklahoma near the front. Any development that can mature along/ahead of the front through late afternoon/early evening, without getting undercut by it, may pose a more consequential large hail risk, along with the potential for damaging wind gusts and possibly some tornado risk. Such wind/tornado potential may be modestly higher across far eastern Oklahoma into western Arkansas/far southwest Missouri if a weak surface wave materializes along the front. Overall, forecast soundings suggest favorable deep-layer shear for supercells, with intense mid-level winds contributing to effective-shear magnitudes in the 55-70 kt range. With 60s F dewpoints pervasive in the moist sector, peak/preconvective MLCAPE around 1500 J/kg should be common from the Ozarks southwestward, diminishing below 1000 J/kg toward southern Indiana and locally reaching 2000 J/kg in parts of southwestern Oklahoma and northwest Texas. Farther southwest, a more isolated/conditional deep convective potential will exist over northwest Texas near the front/dryline intersection. Any persistent thunderstorms will develop in a greater instability/shear parameter space will have the potential to become supercells and offer significant/2+ inch diameter hailstones. As the front(s) overtake the dryline later this evening and overnight, the combined lift may overcome EML-related CINH enough to backbuild the convection into parts of west-central and perhaps southwest Texas. At least isolated thunderstorms (which also may become supercellular and offer substantial hail) are possible as far south as the Rio Grande. ..Guyer/Squitieri.. 03/23/2023 Read more

SPC Mar 22, 2023 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0255 PM CDT Wed Mar 22 2023 Valid 222000Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM CENTRAL/NORTHERN MISSOURI AND SOUTHEAST IOWA INTO NORTHERN/CENTRAL INDIANA... ...SUMMARY... Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms -- capable of large hail -- are possible from central/northern Missouri and southern Iowa eastward to northern Indiana. ...Discussion... Only minor changes were made to the 10-percent thunderstorm probability boundary based on visible satellite trends and calibrated thunderstorm guidance. ..Smith.. 03/22/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1106 AM CDT Wed Mar 22 2023/ ...MO/IA/IL/IN... A cluster of elevated thunderstorms is ongoing across central IL late this morning. This activity will continue eastward into parts of IN/OH through the afternoon on the nose of a modest southwesterly low-level jet and warm advection regime. Weak elevated instability may support small hail in the short term. By late afternoon into this evening, upper 50s to low 60s F surface dewpoints will spread northward into central MO/IL ahead of a southeastward-advancing cold front. As the low-level jet increases to around 40-50 kt, organized thunderstorms are expected to develop across north-central MO into southeast IA and central IL near/after 00z. This activity will likely remain elevated as it spreads eastward across IN into western OH overnight. Nevertheless, effective shear magnitudes around 30-35 kt will support organized convection. Elongated hodographs above 3 km, along with the bulk of instability in the 700-400 mb layer, will support large hail potential with strongest activity this evening/overnight. Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0124 PM CDT Wed Mar 22 2023 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The previous forecast remains on track for no widespread elevated or critical fire-weather conditions on D2/Thursday. Localized elevated fire-weather conditions are possible Thursday afternoon in some portions of the southern High Plains. Strengthening mid-level flow will yield dry, downsloping winds in southeast CO, but the extent of boundary-layer mixing is questionable. Further south in West TX and southeastern NM, the meteorological and fuel factors mentioned in the previous discussion preclude the introduction of an Elevated area at this time. ..Flournoy/Wendt.. 03/22/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0157 AM CDT Wed Mar 22 2023/ ...Synopsis... Southwesterly flow aloft over the southern half of the CONUS will continue to amplify ahead of trough ejecting out of the Desert Southwest D2/Thursday. A lee cyclone initially over eastern CO is forecast to move eastward, supporting gusty winds over the southern and central High Plains. Isolated fire-weather conditions may develop over portions of southwest TX and the southern High Plains, but area fuels remain mostly unfavorable for significant fire-weather concerns. ...Southwest Texas and the southern High Plains... As the lee cyclone moves eastward into Day2/Thursday, a trailing surface pressure trough/weak dryline will pass through portions of southwest TX and the southern High Plains. Behind this boundary, model soundings show deep and well-mixed boundary layers with afternoon RH values in the teens. Coincident with winds of 15-25 mph, a few hours of elevated meteorological conditions appear possible from the TX Big Bend, northwestward into far southeastern NM. However, fuels across this area appear only marginally receptive to fire spread. Area ERC values near or slightly below seasonal averages suggest any fire-weather threat will likely remain local in nature. While meteorological conditions would normally necessitate an categorical upgrade to Elevated, confidence in the coverage of sustained fire-weather concerns remains low, owing to marginal fuels. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Mar 22, 2023 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 years 6 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1234 PM CDT Wed Mar 22 2023 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF EASTERN AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA INTO PARTS OF CENTRAL TEXAS... ...SUMMARY... Thunderstorms capable of hail, some very large, are possible Thursday afternoon through Friday morning across parts of the southern Great Plains. ...Southern Great Plains into the mid MS Valley... Models show a strong upper jet centered over the Great Lakes and moving to the Northeast during the period. A frontal zone will sag southward across parts of the lower MO Valley and OK during the day before stalling during the late afternoon. Southerly low-level flow will maintain a persistent fetch of a seasonably moisture-rich air across the southern Great Plains, featuring mid 60s dewpoints across north TX and into southern/central OK south of the boundary. Large-scale troughing located over the Desert Southwest will gradually move east and approach the southern High Plains by early Friday morning. Low-level warm-air advection and the front will likely aid in storm development of an initially capped airmass. Models indicate moderate buoyancy developing by mid-late afternoon with MLCAPE ranging from 1000-2000 J/kg from the western part of the Ozark Plateau west-southwestward parts of western north TX. The lack of appreciable cyclogenesis over the Red River Valley will likely play a role in limiting both low-level flow (i.e., low-level shear) and an overall supercell tornado risk. However, strong deep-layer shear will promote updraft organization with the more intense storms and favor a mix mode of supercells and multicellular clusters with time. Large to very large hail is possible with the stronger storms. Additional storms are possible farther south along a dryline over parts of the Edwards Plateau during the evening. Upscale growth into one or more convective bands with some lingering severe risk will be possible into the overnight hours as the activity moves east/southeast to near the north TX I-35 corridor. Farther northeast over MO/IL, weaker buoyancy is progged by model guidance. Scattered thunderstorms are forecast to develop near and north of the front during the evening. A couple of stronger storms could yield an isolated risk for large hail before convective overturning occurs. ...Southern Great Lakes... Elevated thunderstorms will likely be ongoing near a weak surface low across northern IL/northern IN early Thursday morning. Weak buoyancy on the northeast periphery of steeper mid-level lapse rates may result in a stronger storm or two during the morning. However, the coverage/magnitude of a hail threat precludes low-severe probabilities. ..Smith.. 03/22/2023 Read more

SPC MD 306

2 years 6 months ago
MD 0306 CONCERNING HEAVY SNOW FOR NORTHEAST SOUTH DAKOTA...SOUTHEAST NORTH DAKOTA...AND WEST-CENTRAL MINNESOTA.
Mesoscale Discussion 0306 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0357 PM CDT Tue Mar 21 2023 Areas affected...Northeast South Dakota...southeast North Dakota...and west-central Minnesota. Concerning...Heavy snow Valid 212057Z - 220100Z SUMMARY...An area of moderate to heavy snow is expanding across the northern Plains this afternoon/evening. DISCUSSION...Afternoon water vapor imagery shows a shortwave trough moving out of northeast Wyoming and into western South Dakota. Low-level southerly flow has strengthened ahead of this trough with 1km flow increasing from ~15 knots to ~35 kts on the KABR VWP over the past 3-4 hours. As a result, moderate to locally heavy snowfall has expanded across northeast South Dakota this afternoon with heavy snow reported at Aberdeen at 20Z. Expect this area of moderate to heavy snow to increase north-northeastward this evening as isentropic ascent strengthens and a weak surface low develops. Initially, expect heavy snow and 1+ inch per hour snowfall rates to remain isolated with more widespread 1 to 1.5 inch per hour snowfall rates starting between 23-00Z across southeast North Dakota as the system strengthens. ..Bentley/Leitman.. 03/21/2023 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...FGF...ABR...BIS... LAT...LON 45589993 46899911 47169628 46439564 45219763 45319894 45589993 Read more
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5 years 11 months ago
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