SPC Jun 21, 2025 1930 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0214 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF THE GREAT LAKES... ...SUMMARY... Strong to potentially severe storms may develop on Monday, from parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing across the western U.S., as well as upper ridging across the eastern CONUS, will remain in place Monday. The embedded mid-level shortwave trough and associated surface low over the northern U.S. on Day 2 (Sunday) will eject into Ontario on Monday. As such, overall synoptic ascent will decrease across the northern/central CONUS through the period. Nonetheless, surface lee troughing and a trailing frontal boundary will serve as the impetus for thunderstorm development across parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains, where adequate buoyancy will support strong to potentially severe thunderstorms. ...Great Lakes/Upper Midwest... Thunderstorm development is likely along or immediately ahead of the frontal boundary by Monday afternoon. Deep-layer flow/shear will be oriented roughly parallel to the surface boundary, encouraging mainly multicellular/linear structures. 30 kts of effective bulk shear will be in place, amid 2000 J/kg MLCAPE, driven by 7 C/km mid-level lapse rates atop 70 F surface dewpoints. As such, the more robust, longer-lived storms may support a few instances of severe wind and/or hail. ...Portions of the central Plains... Thunderstorms may develop immediately along the surface boundary, as well as behind the front across the central Plains by afternoon peak heating. Deep-layer shear will be weaker here compared to the Great Lakes, though low-level lapse rates may be steeper (i.e. over 8.5 C/km), yielding MLCAPE values at least in the 2000-3000 J/kg range. As such, any of the more intense pulse cellular or multicellular storms that develop may produce few severe gusts. ...New England... Strong to locally extreme buoyancy, driven by a residual EML, will meander over the Mid Atlantic to New England on Monday as a surface anticyclone and associated upper ridge remains in place. Upper support is lacking for appreciable thunderstorm development. Some of the latest guidance suggests that strong thunderstorm potential will be confined to the periphery of the upper ridge over central Quebec. However, thunderstorm probabilities have been maintained given the possibility of a trailing stray storm over southern Quebec potentially impinging on northern New England. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1930 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0214 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF THE GREAT LAKES... ...SUMMARY... Strong to potentially severe storms may develop on Monday, from parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing across the western U.S., as well as upper ridging across the eastern CONUS, will remain in place Monday. The embedded mid-level shortwave trough and associated surface low over the northern U.S. on Day 2 (Sunday) will eject into Ontario on Monday. As such, overall synoptic ascent will decrease across the northern/central CONUS through the period. Nonetheless, surface lee troughing and a trailing frontal boundary will serve as the impetus for thunderstorm development across parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains, where adequate buoyancy will support strong to potentially severe thunderstorms. ...Great Lakes/Upper Midwest... Thunderstorm development is likely along or immediately ahead of the frontal boundary by Monday afternoon. Deep-layer flow/shear will be oriented roughly parallel to the surface boundary, encouraging mainly multicellular/linear structures. 30 kts of effective bulk shear will be in place, amid 2000 J/kg MLCAPE, driven by 7 C/km mid-level lapse rates atop 70 F surface dewpoints. As such, the more robust, longer-lived storms may support a few instances of severe wind and/or hail. ...Portions of the central Plains... Thunderstorms may develop immediately along the surface boundary, as well as behind the front across the central Plains by afternoon peak heating. Deep-layer shear will be weaker here compared to the Great Lakes, though low-level lapse rates may be steeper (i.e. over 8.5 C/km), yielding MLCAPE values at least in the 2000-3000 J/kg range. As such, any of the more intense pulse cellular or multicellular storms that develop may produce few severe gusts. ...New England... Strong to locally extreme buoyancy, driven by a residual EML, will meander over the Mid Atlantic to New England on Monday as a surface anticyclone and associated upper ridge remains in place. Upper support is lacking for appreciable thunderstorm development. Some of the latest guidance suggests that strong thunderstorm potential will be confined to the periphery of the upper ridge over central Quebec. However, thunderstorm probabilities have been maintained given the possibility of a trailing stray storm over southern Quebec potentially impinging on northern New England. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1930 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0214 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF THE GREAT LAKES... ...SUMMARY... Strong to potentially severe storms may develop on Monday, from parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing across the western U.S., as well as upper ridging across the eastern CONUS, will remain in place Monday. The embedded mid-level shortwave trough and associated surface low over the northern U.S. on Day 2 (Sunday) will eject into Ontario on Monday. As such, overall synoptic ascent will decrease across the northern/central CONUS through the period. Nonetheless, surface lee troughing and a trailing frontal boundary will serve as the impetus for thunderstorm development across parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains, where adequate buoyancy will support strong to potentially severe thunderstorms. ...Great Lakes/Upper Midwest... Thunderstorm development is likely along or immediately ahead of the frontal boundary by Monday afternoon. Deep-layer flow/shear will be oriented roughly parallel to the surface boundary, encouraging mainly multicellular/linear structures. 30 kts of effective bulk shear will be in place, amid 2000 J/kg MLCAPE, driven by 7 C/km mid-level lapse rates atop 70 F surface dewpoints. As such, the more robust, longer-lived storms may support a few instances of severe wind and/or hail. ...Portions of the central Plains... Thunderstorms may develop immediately along the surface boundary, as well as behind the front across the central Plains by afternoon peak heating. Deep-layer shear will be weaker here compared to the Great Lakes, though low-level lapse rates may be steeper (i.e. over 8.5 C/km), yielding MLCAPE values at least in the 2000-3000 J/kg range. As such, any of the more intense pulse cellular or multicellular storms that develop may produce few severe gusts. ...New England... Strong to locally extreme buoyancy, driven by a residual EML, will meander over the Mid Atlantic to New England on Monday as a surface anticyclone and associated upper ridge remains in place. Upper support is lacking for appreciable thunderstorm development. Some of the latest guidance suggests that strong thunderstorm potential will be confined to the periphery of the upper ridge over central Quebec. However, thunderstorm probabilities have been maintained given the possibility of a trailing stray storm over southern Quebec potentially impinging on northern New England. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1930 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0214 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF THE GREAT LAKES... ...SUMMARY... Strong to potentially severe storms may develop on Monday, from parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing across the western U.S., as well as upper ridging across the eastern CONUS, will remain in place Monday. The embedded mid-level shortwave trough and associated surface low over the northern U.S. on Day 2 (Sunday) will eject into Ontario on Monday. As such, overall synoptic ascent will decrease across the northern/central CONUS through the period. Nonetheless, surface lee troughing and a trailing frontal boundary will serve as the impetus for thunderstorm development across parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains, where adequate buoyancy will support strong to potentially severe thunderstorms. ...Great Lakes/Upper Midwest... Thunderstorm development is likely along or immediately ahead of the frontal boundary by Monday afternoon. Deep-layer flow/shear will be oriented roughly parallel to the surface boundary, encouraging mainly multicellular/linear structures. 30 kts of effective bulk shear will be in place, amid 2000 J/kg MLCAPE, driven by 7 C/km mid-level lapse rates atop 70 F surface dewpoints. As such, the more robust, longer-lived storms may support a few instances of severe wind and/or hail. ...Portions of the central Plains... Thunderstorms may develop immediately along the surface boundary, as well as behind the front across the central Plains by afternoon peak heating. Deep-layer shear will be weaker here compared to the Great Lakes, though low-level lapse rates may be steeper (i.e. over 8.5 C/km), yielding MLCAPE values at least in the 2000-3000 J/kg range. As such, any of the more intense pulse cellular or multicellular storms that develop may produce few severe gusts. ...New England... Strong to locally extreme buoyancy, driven by a residual EML, will meander over the Mid Atlantic to New England on Monday as a surface anticyclone and associated upper ridge remains in place. Upper support is lacking for appreciable thunderstorm development. Some of the latest guidance suggests that strong thunderstorm potential will be confined to the periphery of the upper ridge over central Quebec. However, thunderstorm probabilities have been maintained given the possibility of a trailing stray storm over southern Quebec potentially impinging on northern New England. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1930 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0214 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 231200Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF THE GREAT LAKES... ...SUMMARY... Strong to potentially severe storms may develop on Monday, from parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing across the western U.S., as well as upper ridging across the eastern CONUS, will remain in place Monday. The embedded mid-level shortwave trough and associated surface low over the northern U.S. on Day 2 (Sunday) will eject into Ontario on Monday. As such, overall synoptic ascent will decrease across the northern/central CONUS through the period. Nonetheless, surface lee troughing and a trailing frontal boundary will serve as the impetus for thunderstorm development across parts of the Great Lakes into the central Plains, where adequate buoyancy will support strong to potentially severe thunderstorms. ...Great Lakes/Upper Midwest... Thunderstorm development is likely along or immediately ahead of the frontal boundary by Monday afternoon. Deep-layer flow/shear will be oriented roughly parallel to the surface boundary, encouraging mainly multicellular/linear structures. 30 kts of effective bulk shear will be in place, amid 2000 J/kg MLCAPE, driven by 7 C/km mid-level lapse rates atop 70 F surface dewpoints. As such, the more robust, longer-lived storms may support a few instances of severe wind and/or hail. ...Portions of the central Plains... Thunderstorms may develop immediately along the surface boundary, as well as behind the front across the central Plains by afternoon peak heating. Deep-layer shear will be weaker here compared to the Great Lakes, though low-level lapse rates may be steeper (i.e. over 8.5 C/km), yielding MLCAPE values at least in the 2000-3000 J/kg range. As such, any of the more intense pulse cellular or multicellular storms that develop may produce few severe gusts. ...New England... Strong to locally extreme buoyancy, driven by a residual EML, will meander over the Mid Atlantic to New England on Monday as a surface anticyclone and associated upper ridge remains in place. Upper support is lacking for appreciable thunderstorm development. Some of the latest guidance suggests that strong thunderstorm potential will be confined to the periphery of the upper ridge over central Quebec. However, thunderstorm probabilities have been maintained given the possibility of a trailing stray storm over southern Quebec potentially impinging on northern New England. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0202 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z No changes are needed to the D2 Fire Weather Outlook. See previous discussion below for more information. ..Thornton.. 06/21/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0201 AM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather concerns are expected to persist across portions of the Intermountain West through the end of the weekend, and may emerge within parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West... The base of the upper trough currently amplifying over the Pacific Northwest is forecast to pivot into the Four Corners/central Rockies through the day Sunday. As this occurs, a belt of moderate mid-level flow will overspread a region with active ongoing fires. Limited precipitation through the next 48 hours will maintain very dry fuels, but the passage of cold front today into early Sunday will help modulate diurnal RH reductions to some degree for Sunday afternoon. Although areas of sub-15% RH are expected, slightly improved RH coupled with weaker low-level winds should result in an overall reduced fire weather concern compared to previous days. Nonetheless, areas of elevated fire weather conditions are probable, and isolated pockets of critical conditions are possible. ...Central High Plains... Latest guidance shows the greatest potential for sustained 20+ mph winds and 15-20% RH across eastern CO into adjacent portions of far southwest NE and northwest KS behind a sharpening dryline. Despite fairly high confidence in critical conditions, green up of grasses across the region should largely mitigate a more robust fire weather threat. However, preceding days of hot/dry/windy conditions should yield at least pockets of dry fuels that may support a low-end fire weather concern. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0202 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z No changes are needed to the D2 Fire Weather Outlook. See previous discussion below for more information. ..Thornton.. 06/21/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0201 AM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather concerns are expected to persist across portions of the Intermountain West through the end of the weekend, and may emerge within parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West... The base of the upper trough currently amplifying over the Pacific Northwest is forecast to pivot into the Four Corners/central Rockies through the day Sunday. As this occurs, a belt of moderate mid-level flow will overspread a region with active ongoing fires. Limited precipitation through the next 48 hours will maintain very dry fuels, but the passage of cold front today into early Sunday will help modulate diurnal RH reductions to some degree for Sunday afternoon. Although areas of sub-15% RH are expected, slightly improved RH coupled with weaker low-level winds should result in an overall reduced fire weather concern compared to previous days. Nonetheless, areas of elevated fire weather conditions are probable, and isolated pockets of critical conditions are possible. ...Central High Plains... Latest guidance shows the greatest potential for sustained 20+ mph winds and 15-20% RH across eastern CO into adjacent portions of far southwest NE and northwest KS behind a sharpening dryline. Despite fairly high confidence in critical conditions, green up of grasses across the region should largely mitigate a more robust fire weather threat. However, preceding days of hot/dry/windy conditions should yield at least pockets of dry fuels that may support a low-end fire weather concern. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0202 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z No changes are needed to the D2 Fire Weather Outlook. See previous discussion below for more information. ..Thornton.. 06/21/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0201 AM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather concerns are expected to persist across portions of the Intermountain West through the end of the weekend, and may emerge within parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West... The base of the upper trough currently amplifying over the Pacific Northwest is forecast to pivot into the Four Corners/central Rockies through the day Sunday. As this occurs, a belt of moderate mid-level flow will overspread a region with active ongoing fires. Limited precipitation through the next 48 hours will maintain very dry fuels, but the passage of cold front today into early Sunday will help modulate diurnal RH reductions to some degree for Sunday afternoon. Although areas of sub-15% RH are expected, slightly improved RH coupled with weaker low-level winds should result in an overall reduced fire weather concern compared to previous days. Nonetheless, areas of elevated fire weather conditions are probable, and isolated pockets of critical conditions are possible. ...Central High Plains... Latest guidance shows the greatest potential for sustained 20+ mph winds and 15-20% RH across eastern CO into adjacent portions of far southwest NE and northwest KS behind a sharpening dryline. Despite fairly high confidence in critical conditions, green up of grasses across the region should largely mitigate a more robust fire weather threat. However, preceding days of hot/dry/windy conditions should yield at least pockets of dry fuels that may support a low-end fire weather concern. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0202 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z No changes are needed to the D2 Fire Weather Outlook. See previous discussion below for more information. ..Thornton.. 06/21/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0201 AM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather concerns are expected to persist across portions of the Intermountain West through the end of the weekend, and may emerge within parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West... The base of the upper trough currently amplifying over the Pacific Northwest is forecast to pivot into the Four Corners/central Rockies through the day Sunday. As this occurs, a belt of moderate mid-level flow will overspread a region with active ongoing fires. Limited precipitation through the next 48 hours will maintain very dry fuels, but the passage of cold front today into early Sunday will help modulate diurnal RH reductions to some degree for Sunday afternoon. Although areas of sub-15% RH are expected, slightly improved RH coupled with weaker low-level winds should result in an overall reduced fire weather concern compared to previous days. Nonetheless, areas of elevated fire weather conditions are probable, and isolated pockets of critical conditions are possible. ...Central High Plains... Latest guidance shows the greatest potential for sustained 20+ mph winds and 15-20% RH across eastern CO into adjacent portions of far southwest NE and northwest KS behind a sharpening dryline. Despite fairly high confidence in critical conditions, green up of grasses across the region should largely mitigate a more robust fire weather threat. However, preceding days of hot/dry/windy conditions should yield at least pockets of dry fuels that may support a low-end fire weather concern. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0202 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z No changes are needed to the D2 Fire Weather Outlook. See previous discussion below for more information. ..Thornton.. 06/21/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0201 AM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather concerns are expected to persist across portions of the Intermountain West through the end of the weekend, and may emerge within parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West... The base of the upper trough currently amplifying over the Pacific Northwest is forecast to pivot into the Four Corners/central Rockies through the day Sunday. As this occurs, a belt of moderate mid-level flow will overspread a region with active ongoing fires. Limited precipitation through the next 48 hours will maintain very dry fuels, but the passage of cold front today into early Sunday will help modulate diurnal RH reductions to some degree for Sunday afternoon. Although areas of sub-15% RH are expected, slightly improved RH coupled with weaker low-level winds should result in an overall reduced fire weather concern compared to previous days. Nonetheless, areas of elevated fire weather conditions are probable, and isolated pockets of critical conditions are possible. ...Central High Plains... Latest guidance shows the greatest potential for sustained 20+ mph winds and 15-20% RH across eastern CO into adjacent portions of far southwest NE and northwest KS behind a sharpening dryline. Despite fairly high confidence in critical conditions, green up of grasses across the region should largely mitigate a more robust fire weather threat. However, preceding days of hot/dry/windy conditions should yield at least pockets of dry fuels that may support a low-end fire weather concern. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0202 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z No changes are needed to the D2 Fire Weather Outlook. See previous discussion below for more information. ..Thornton.. 06/21/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0201 AM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather concerns are expected to persist across portions of the Intermountain West through the end of the weekend, and may emerge within parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West... The base of the upper trough currently amplifying over the Pacific Northwest is forecast to pivot into the Four Corners/central Rockies through the day Sunday. As this occurs, a belt of moderate mid-level flow will overspread a region with active ongoing fires. Limited precipitation through the next 48 hours will maintain very dry fuels, but the passage of cold front today into early Sunday will help modulate diurnal RH reductions to some degree for Sunday afternoon. Although areas of sub-15% RH are expected, slightly improved RH coupled with weaker low-level winds should result in an overall reduced fire weather concern compared to previous days. Nonetheless, areas of elevated fire weather conditions are probable, and isolated pockets of critical conditions are possible. ...Central High Plains... Latest guidance shows the greatest potential for sustained 20+ mph winds and 15-20% RH across eastern CO into adjacent portions of far southwest NE and northwest KS behind a sharpening dryline. Despite fairly high confidence in critical conditions, green up of grasses across the region should largely mitigate a more robust fire weather threat. However, preceding days of hot/dry/windy conditions should yield at least pockets of dry fuels that may support a low-end fire weather concern. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0202 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z No changes are needed to the D2 Fire Weather Outlook. See previous discussion below for more information. ..Thornton.. 06/21/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0201 AM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather concerns are expected to persist across portions of the Intermountain West through the end of the weekend, and may emerge within parts of the High Plains. ...Intermountain West... The base of the upper trough currently amplifying over the Pacific Northwest is forecast to pivot into the Four Corners/central Rockies through the day Sunday. As this occurs, a belt of moderate mid-level flow will overspread a region with active ongoing fires. Limited precipitation through the next 48 hours will maintain very dry fuels, but the passage of cold front today into early Sunday will help modulate diurnal RH reductions to some degree for Sunday afternoon. Although areas of sub-15% RH are expected, slightly improved RH coupled with weaker low-level winds should result in an overall reduced fire weather concern compared to previous days. Nonetheless, areas of elevated fire weather conditions are probable, and isolated pockets of critical conditions are possible. ...Central High Plains... Latest guidance shows the greatest potential for sustained 20+ mph winds and 15-20% RH across eastern CO into adjacent portions of far southwest NE and northwest KS behind a sharpening dryline. Despite fairly high confidence in critical conditions, green up of grasses across the region should largely mitigate a more robust fire weather threat. However, preceding days of hot/dry/windy conditions should yield at least pockets of dry fuels that may support a low-end fire weather concern. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1230 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms remain possible on Sunday from parts of the central and northern Plains into the upper Midwest. Significant hail and wind are possible across parts of eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota, along with some tornado potential. A few severe storms are also possible across the Northeast. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing will prevail across the western U.S. as an upper ridge continues to build over the eastern CONUS tomorrow (Sunday). A pronounced mid-level impulse/shortwave trough will eject into the northern Plains Sunday afternoon, supporting rapid surface cyclone development/strengthening over the central High Plains. This surface low is poised to move northeast toward the Upper MS Valley, encouraging the northward transport of warm, moist air to the Great Lakes while a trailing frontal boundary slowly advances eastward along the High Plains, down to the Rio Grande. Along the warm front and trailing frontal boundary, scattered severe thunderstorm development is possible. Remnant thunderstorms will also crest the ridge and propagate into the Northeast from southeastern Ontario Sunday morning and afternoon. These storms will traverse the eastern periphery of moderate to strong buoyancy and modest wind shear, which may aid in some severe potential. ...Northern Mississippi Valley... A warm front should reach the international border by Sunday afternoon, with 70+ F surface dewpoints beneath 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates expected over much of the Upper MS Valley by Sunday afternoon. This thermodynamic profile will yield widespread 3000+ J/kg MLCAPE (over 4000 J/kg in some locales), but with appreciable MLCINH. Rapid strengthening and gradual veering of the vertical wind profile, from the surface to about 500 mb, will support sizeable and curved low-level hodographs (e.g. 200+ m2/s2 effective SRH), but with modest mid to upper-level elongation. A such, if storms can develop ahead of the frontal boundary, supercells and short bowing segments capable of all severe hazards (including 75+ mph gusts, 2+ inch diameter hail, and a few tornadoes) are all possible. The overall coverage of the severe risk is strongly dependent on cap erosion and the ability for the more robust updrafts to overcome inhibition. The best chance for this occurring is over northern MN, closer to the warm front, where locally backed low-level flow will also yield the best chance for tornadoes. Higher severe probabilities may be warranted if confidence in MLCINH erosion increases. ...Northern High Plains... A few thunderstorms may develop across the northern High Plains by afternoon peak heating, behind the frontal boundary. The pronounced mid-level shortwave trough will overspread this region, which will experience the greatest deep-layer ascent, along with strong speed shear (as shown via forecast soundings as elongated, straight hodographs/50 kts of effective bulk shear). 8+ C/km low and mid-level lapse rates will yield around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE in this environment. A couple of multicells or transient supercells may occur, accompanied by some risk for severe wind/hail. ...Central and southern High Plains... Maximum daytime surface heating, and modest convergence along a trailing surface frontal boundary, will aid in the development of at least scattered thunderstorms amid a warm/well-mixed boundary layer. Vertical wind shear will be weak in this region. Nonetheless, 8-9 C/km low-level lapse rates will support 1500+ J/kg SBCAPE and associated severe gust potential with the stronger, longer-lived multicellular complexes, especially where cold-pool mergers may occur. A couple instances of severe hail also cannot be ruled out. ...Northeast... A somewhat complex severe weather scenario exists for the Northeast, from Sunday morning into the afternoon hours. Scattered strong thunderstorms (perhaps a remnant MCS) may cross from southeastern Ontario and progress toward the Hudson Valley region during the morning. Should this occur, convective restrengthening is possible along the leading edge of outflow over the Mid Atlantic, with strong to potentially severe wind gusts likely. However, if convection moving into the Northeast by Sunday morning is less robust, convective re-intensification may be more likely farther north into southern New England. A more focused severe threat would be highly dependent on the placement and evolution of earlier convection/MCS morphology across Ontario during the late Day 1 period, which currently has low predictability. Despite weak vertical wind shear, of concern is the eastward advection of a modest EML into the Northeast, which may boost MLCAPE well over 3000 J/kg (perhaps over 4000 J/kg locally). Higher severe probabilities may be needed if confidence in the placement and/or timing of more organized convection increases. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1230 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms remain possible on Sunday from parts of the central and northern Plains into the upper Midwest. Significant hail and wind are possible across parts of eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota, along with some tornado potential. A few severe storms are also possible across the Northeast. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing will prevail across the western U.S. as an upper ridge continues to build over the eastern CONUS tomorrow (Sunday). A pronounced mid-level impulse/shortwave trough will eject into the northern Plains Sunday afternoon, supporting rapid surface cyclone development/strengthening over the central High Plains. This surface low is poised to move northeast toward the Upper MS Valley, encouraging the northward transport of warm, moist air to the Great Lakes while a trailing frontal boundary slowly advances eastward along the High Plains, down to the Rio Grande. Along the warm front and trailing frontal boundary, scattered severe thunderstorm development is possible. Remnant thunderstorms will also crest the ridge and propagate into the Northeast from southeastern Ontario Sunday morning and afternoon. These storms will traverse the eastern periphery of moderate to strong buoyancy and modest wind shear, which may aid in some severe potential. ...Northern Mississippi Valley... A warm front should reach the international border by Sunday afternoon, with 70+ F surface dewpoints beneath 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates expected over much of the Upper MS Valley by Sunday afternoon. This thermodynamic profile will yield widespread 3000+ J/kg MLCAPE (over 4000 J/kg in some locales), but with appreciable MLCINH. Rapid strengthening and gradual veering of the vertical wind profile, from the surface to about 500 mb, will support sizeable and curved low-level hodographs (e.g. 200+ m2/s2 effective SRH), but with modest mid to upper-level elongation. A such, if storms can develop ahead of the frontal boundary, supercells and short bowing segments capable of all severe hazards (including 75+ mph gusts, 2+ inch diameter hail, and a few tornadoes) are all possible. The overall coverage of the severe risk is strongly dependent on cap erosion and the ability for the more robust updrafts to overcome inhibition. The best chance for this occurring is over northern MN, closer to the warm front, where locally backed low-level flow will also yield the best chance for tornadoes. Higher severe probabilities may be warranted if confidence in MLCINH erosion increases. ...Northern High Plains... A few thunderstorms may develop across the northern High Plains by afternoon peak heating, behind the frontal boundary. The pronounced mid-level shortwave trough will overspread this region, which will experience the greatest deep-layer ascent, along with strong speed shear (as shown via forecast soundings as elongated, straight hodographs/50 kts of effective bulk shear). 8+ C/km low and mid-level lapse rates will yield around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE in this environment. A couple of multicells or transient supercells may occur, accompanied by some risk for severe wind/hail. ...Central and southern High Plains... Maximum daytime surface heating, and modest convergence along a trailing surface frontal boundary, will aid in the development of at least scattered thunderstorms amid a warm/well-mixed boundary layer. Vertical wind shear will be weak in this region. Nonetheless, 8-9 C/km low-level lapse rates will support 1500+ J/kg SBCAPE and associated severe gust potential with the stronger, longer-lived multicellular complexes, especially where cold-pool mergers may occur. A couple instances of severe hail also cannot be ruled out. ...Northeast... A somewhat complex severe weather scenario exists for the Northeast, from Sunday morning into the afternoon hours. Scattered strong thunderstorms (perhaps a remnant MCS) may cross from southeastern Ontario and progress toward the Hudson Valley region during the morning. Should this occur, convective restrengthening is possible along the leading edge of outflow over the Mid Atlantic, with strong to potentially severe wind gusts likely. However, if convection moving into the Northeast by Sunday morning is less robust, convective re-intensification may be more likely farther north into southern New England. A more focused severe threat would be highly dependent on the placement and evolution of earlier convection/MCS morphology across Ontario during the late Day 1 period, which currently has low predictability. Despite weak vertical wind shear, of concern is the eastward advection of a modest EML into the Northeast, which may boost MLCAPE well over 3000 J/kg (perhaps over 4000 J/kg locally). Higher severe probabilities may be needed if confidence in the placement and/or timing of more organized convection increases. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1230 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms remain possible on Sunday from parts of the central and northern Plains into the upper Midwest. Significant hail and wind are possible across parts of eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota, along with some tornado potential. A few severe storms are also possible across the Northeast. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing will prevail across the western U.S. as an upper ridge continues to build over the eastern CONUS tomorrow (Sunday). A pronounced mid-level impulse/shortwave trough will eject into the northern Plains Sunday afternoon, supporting rapid surface cyclone development/strengthening over the central High Plains. This surface low is poised to move northeast toward the Upper MS Valley, encouraging the northward transport of warm, moist air to the Great Lakes while a trailing frontal boundary slowly advances eastward along the High Plains, down to the Rio Grande. Along the warm front and trailing frontal boundary, scattered severe thunderstorm development is possible. Remnant thunderstorms will also crest the ridge and propagate into the Northeast from southeastern Ontario Sunday morning and afternoon. These storms will traverse the eastern periphery of moderate to strong buoyancy and modest wind shear, which may aid in some severe potential. ...Northern Mississippi Valley... A warm front should reach the international border by Sunday afternoon, with 70+ F surface dewpoints beneath 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates expected over much of the Upper MS Valley by Sunday afternoon. This thermodynamic profile will yield widespread 3000+ J/kg MLCAPE (over 4000 J/kg in some locales), but with appreciable MLCINH. Rapid strengthening and gradual veering of the vertical wind profile, from the surface to about 500 mb, will support sizeable and curved low-level hodographs (e.g. 200+ m2/s2 effective SRH), but with modest mid to upper-level elongation. A such, if storms can develop ahead of the frontal boundary, supercells and short bowing segments capable of all severe hazards (including 75+ mph gusts, 2+ inch diameter hail, and a few tornadoes) are all possible. The overall coverage of the severe risk is strongly dependent on cap erosion and the ability for the more robust updrafts to overcome inhibition. The best chance for this occurring is over northern MN, closer to the warm front, where locally backed low-level flow will also yield the best chance for tornadoes. Higher severe probabilities may be warranted if confidence in MLCINH erosion increases. ...Northern High Plains... A few thunderstorms may develop across the northern High Plains by afternoon peak heating, behind the frontal boundary. The pronounced mid-level shortwave trough will overspread this region, which will experience the greatest deep-layer ascent, along with strong speed shear (as shown via forecast soundings as elongated, straight hodographs/50 kts of effective bulk shear). 8+ C/km low and mid-level lapse rates will yield around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE in this environment. A couple of multicells or transient supercells may occur, accompanied by some risk for severe wind/hail. ...Central and southern High Plains... Maximum daytime surface heating, and modest convergence along a trailing surface frontal boundary, will aid in the development of at least scattered thunderstorms amid a warm/well-mixed boundary layer. Vertical wind shear will be weak in this region. Nonetheless, 8-9 C/km low-level lapse rates will support 1500+ J/kg SBCAPE and associated severe gust potential with the stronger, longer-lived multicellular complexes, especially where cold-pool mergers may occur. A couple instances of severe hail also cannot be ruled out. ...Northeast... A somewhat complex severe weather scenario exists for the Northeast, from Sunday morning into the afternoon hours. Scattered strong thunderstorms (perhaps a remnant MCS) may cross from southeastern Ontario and progress toward the Hudson Valley region during the morning. Should this occur, convective restrengthening is possible along the leading edge of outflow over the Mid Atlantic, with strong to potentially severe wind gusts likely. However, if convection moving into the Northeast by Sunday morning is less robust, convective re-intensification may be more likely farther north into southern New England. A more focused severe threat would be highly dependent on the placement and evolution of earlier convection/MCS morphology across Ontario during the late Day 1 period, which currently has low predictability. Despite weak vertical wind shear, of concern is the eastward advection of a modest EML into the Northeast, which may boost MLCAPE well over 3000 J/kg (perhaps over 4000 J/kg locally). Higher severe probabilities may be needed if confidence in the placement and/or timing of more organized convection increases. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1230 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms remain possible on Sunday from parts of the central and northern Plains into the upper Midwest. Significant hail and wind are possible across parts of eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota, along with some tornado potential. A few severe storms are also possible across the Northeast. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing will prevail across the western U.S. as an upper ridge continues to build over the eastern CONUS tomorrow (Sunday). A pronounced mid-level impulse/shortwave trough will eject into the northern Plains Sunday afternoon, supporting rapid surface cyclone development/strengthening over the central High Plains. This surface low is poised to move northeast toward the Upper MS Valley, encouraging the northward transport of warm, moist air to the Great Lakes while a trailing frontal boundary slowly advances eastward along the High Plains, down to the Rio Grande. Along the warm front and trailing frontal boundary, scattered severe thunderstorm development is possible. Remnant thunderstorms will also crest the ridge and propagate into the Northeast from southeastern Ontario Sunday morning and afternoon. These storms will traverse the eastern periphery of moderate to strong buoyancy and modest wind shear, which may aid in some severe potential. ...Northern Mississippi Valley... A warm front should reach the international border by Sunday afternoon, with 70+ F surface dewpoints beneath 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates expected over much of the Upper MS Valley by Sunday afternoon. This thermodynamic profile will yield widespread 3000+ J/kg MLCAPE (over 4000 J/kg in some locales), but with appreciable MLCINH. Rapid strengthening and gradual veering of the vertical wind profile, from the surface to about 500 mb, will support sizeable and curved low-level hodographs (e.g. 200+ m2/s2 effective SRH), but with modest mid to upper-level elongation. A such, if storms can develop ahead of the frontal boundary, supercells and short bowing segments capable of all severe hazards (including 75+ mph gusts, 2+ inch diameter hail, and a few tornadoes) are all possible. The overall coverage of the severe risk is strongly dependent on cap erosion and the ability for the more robust updrafts to overcome inhibition. The best chance for this occurring is over northern MN, closer to the warm front, where locally backed low-level flow will also yield the best chance for tornadoes. Higher severe probabilities may be warranted if confidence in MLCINH erosion increases. ...Northern High Plains... A few thunderstorms may develop across the northern High Plains by afternoon peak heating, behind the frontal boundary. The pronounced mid-level shortwave trough will overspread this region, which will experience the greatest deep-layer ascent, along with strong speed shear (as shown via forecast soundings as elongated, straight hodographs/50 kts of effective bulk shear). 8+ C/km low and mid-level lapse rates will yield around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE in this environment. A couple of multicells or transient supercells may occur, accompanied by some risk for severe wind/hail. ...Central and southern High Plains... Maximum daytime surface heating, and modest convergence along a trailing surface frontal boundary, will aid in the development of at least scattered thunderstorms amid a warm/well-mixed boundary layer. Vertical wind shear will be weak in this region. Nonetheless, 8-9 C/km low-level lapse rates will support 1500+ J/kg SBCAPE and associated severe gust potential with the stronger, longer-lived multicellular complexes, especially where cold-pool mergers may occur. A couple instances of severe hail also cannot be ruled out. ...Northeast... A somewhat complex severe weather scenario exists for the Northeast, from Sunday morning into the afternoon hours. Scattered strong thunderstorms (perhaps a remnant MCS) may cross from southeastern Ontario and progress toward the Hudson Valley region during the morning. Should this occur, convective restrengthening is possible along the leading edge of outflow over the Mid Atlantic, with strong to potentially severe wind gusts likely. However, if convection moving into the Northeast by Sunday morning is less robust, convective re-intensification may be more likely farther north into southern New England. A more focused severe threat would be highly dependent on the placement and evolution of earlier convection/MCS morphology across Ontario during the late Day 1 period, which currently has low predictability. Despite weak vertical wind shear, of concern is the eastward advection of a modest EML into the Northeast, which may boost MLCAPE well over 3000 J/kg (perhaps over 4000 J/kg locally). Higher severe probabilities may be needed if confidence in the placement and/or timing of more organized convection increases. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1230 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms remain possible on Sunday from parts of the central and northern Plains into the upper Midwest. Significant hail and wind are possible across parts of eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota, along with some tornado potential. A few severe storms are also possible across the Northeast. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing will prevail across the western U.S. as an upper ridge continues to build over the eastern CONUS tomorrow (Sunday). A pronounced mid-level impulse/shortwave trough will eject into the northern Plains Sunday afternoon, supporting rapid surface cyclone development/strengthening over the central High Plains. This surface low is poised to move northeast toward the Upper MS Valley, encouraging the northward transport of warm, moist air to the Great Lakes while a trailing frontal boundary slowly advances eastward along the High Plains, down to the Rio Grande. Along the warm front and trailing frontal boundary, scattered severe thunderstorm development is possible. Remnant thunderstorms will also crest the ridge and propagate into the Northeast from southeastern Ontario Sunday morning and afternoon. These storms will traverse the eastern periphery of moderate to strong buoyancy and modest wind shear, which may aid in some severe potential. ...Northern Mississippi Valley... A warm front should reach the international border by Sunday afternoon, with 70+ F surface dewpoints beneath 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates expected over much of the Upper MS Valley by Sunday afternoon. This thermodynamic profile will yield widespread 3000+ J/kg MLCAPE (over 4000 J/kg in some locales), but with appreciable MLCINH. Rapid strengthening and gradual veering of the vertical wind profile, from the surface to about 500 mb, will support sizeable and curved low-level hodographs (e.g. 200+ m2/s2 effective SRH), but with modest mid to upper-level elongation. A such, if storms can develop ahead of the frontal boundary, supercells and short bowing segments capable of all severe hazards (including 75+ mph gusts, 2+ inch diameter hail, and a few tornadoes) are all possible. The overall coverage of the severe risk is strongly dependent on cap erosion and the ability for the more robust updrafts to overcome inhibition. The best chance for this occurring is over northern MN, closer to the warm front, where locally backed low-level flow will also yield the best chance for tornadoes. Higher severe probabilities may be warranted if confidence in MLCINH erosion increases. ...Northern High Plains... A few thunderstorms may develop across the northern High Plains by afternoon peak heating, behind the frontal boundary. The pronounced mid-level shortwave trough will overspread this region, which will experience the greatest deep-layer ascent, along with strong speed shear (as shown via forecast soundings as elongated, straight hodographs/50 kts of effective bulk shear). 8+ C/km low and mid-level lapse rates will yield around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE in this environment. A couple of multicells or transient supercells may occur, accompanied by some risk for severe wind/hail. ...Central and southern High Plains... Maximum daytime surface heating, and modest convergence along a trailing surface frontal boundary, will aid in the development of at least scattered thunderstorms amid a warm/well-mixed boundary layer. Vertical wind shear will be weak in this region. Nonetheless, 8-9 C/km low-level lapse rates will support 1500+ J/kg SBCAPE and associated severe gust potential with the stronger, longer-lived multicellular complexes, especially where cold-pool mergers may occur. A couple instances of severe hail also cannot be ruled out. ...Northeast... A somewhat complex severe weather scenario exists for the Northeast, from Sunday morning into the afternoon hours. Scattered strong thunderstorms (perhaps a remnant MCS) may cross from southeastern Ontario and progress toward the Hudson Valley region during the morning. Should this occur, convective restrengthening is possible along the leading edge of outflow over the Mid Atlantic, with strong to potentially severe wind gusts likely. However, if convection moving into the Northeast by Sunday morning is less robust, convective re-intensification may be more likely farther north into southern New England. A more focused severe threat would be highly dependent on the placement and evolution of earlier convection/MCS morphology across Ontario during the late Day 1 period, which currently has low predictability. Despite weak vertical wind shear, of concern is the eastward advection of a modest EML into the Northeast, which may boost MLCAPE well over 3000 J/kg (perhaps over 4000 J/kg locally). Higher severe probabilities may be needed if confidence in the placement and/or timing of more organized convection increases. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1230 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms remain possible on Sunday from parts of the central and northern Plains into the upper Midwest. Significant hail and wind are possible across parts of eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota, along with some tornado potential. A few severe storms are also possible across the Northeast. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing will prevail across the western U.S. as an upper ridge continues to build over the eastern CONUS tomorrow (Sunday). A pronounced mid-level impulse/shortwave trough will eject into the northern Plains Sunday afternoon, supporting rapid surface cyclone development/strengthening over the central High Plains. This surface low is poised to move northeast toward the Upper MS Valley, encouraging the northward transport of warm, moist air to the Great Lakes while a trailing frontal boundary slowly advances eastward along the High Plains, down to the Rio Grande. Along the warm front and trailing frontal boundary, scattered severe thunderstorm development is possible. Remnant thunderstorms will also crest the ridge and propagate into the Northeast from southeastern Ontario Sunday morning and afternoon. These storms will traverse the eastern periphery of moderate to strong buoyancy and modest wind shear, which may aid in some severe potential. ...Northern Mississippi Valley... A warm front should reach the international border by Sunday afternoon, with 70+ F surface dewpoints beneath 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates expected over much of the Upper MS Valley by Sunday afternoon. This thermodynamic profile will yield widespread 3000+ J/kg MLCAPE (over 4000 J/kg in some locales), but with appreciable MLCINH. Rapid strengthening and gradual veering of the vertical wind profile, from the surface to about 500 mb, will support sizeable and curved low-level hodographs (e.g. 200+ m2/s2 effective SRH), but with modest mid to upper-level elongation. A such, if storms can develop ahead of the frontal boundary, supercells and short bowing segments capable of all severe hazards (including 75+ mph gusts, 2+ inch diameter hail, and a few tornadoes) are all possible. The overall coverage of the severe risk is strongly dependent on cap erosion and the ability for the more robust updrafts to overcome inhibition. The best chance for this occurring is over northern MN, closer to the warm front, where locally backed low-level flow will also yield the best chance for tornadoes. Higher severe probabilities may be warranted if confidence in MLCINH erosion increases. ...Northern High Plains... A few thunderstorms may develop across the northern High Plains by afternoon peak heating, behind the frontal boundary. The pronounced mid-level shortwave trough will overspread this region, which will experience the greatest deep-layer ascent, along with strong speed shear (as shown via forecast soundings as elongated, straight hodographs/50 kts of effective bulk shear). 8+ C/km low and mid-level lapse rates will yield around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE in this environment. A couple of multicells or transient supercells may occur, accompanied by some risk for severe wind/hail. ...Central and southern High Plains... Maximum daytime surface heating, and modest convergence along a trailing surface frontal boundary, will aid in the development of at least scattered thunderstorms amid a warm/well-mixed boundary layer. Vertical wind shear will be weak in this region. Nonetheless, 8-9 C/km low-level lapse rates will support 1500+ J/kg SBCAPE and associated severe gust potential with the stronger, longer-lived multicellular complexes, especially where cold-pool mergers may occur. A couple instances of severe hail also cannot be ruled out. ...Northeast... A somewhat complex severe weather scenario exists for the Northeast, from Sunday morning into the afternoon hours. Scattered strong thunderstorms (perhaps a remnant MCS) may cross from southeastern Ontario and progress toward the Hudson Valley region during the morning. Should this occur, convective restrengthening is possible along the leading edge of outflow over the Mid Atlantic, with strong to potentially severe wind gusts likely. However, if convection moving into the Northeast by Sunday morning is less robust, convective re-intensification may be more likely farther north into southern New England. A more focused severe threat would be highly dependent on the placement and evolution of earlier convection/MCS morphology across Ontario during the late Day 1 period, which currently has low predictability. Despite weak vertical wind shear, of concern is the eastward advection of a modest EML into the Northeast, which may boost MLCAPE well over 3000 J/kg (perhaps over 4000 J/kg locally). Higher severe probabilities may be needed if confidence in the placement and/or timing of more organized convection increases. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1230 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms remain possible on Sunday from parts of the central and northern Plains into the upper Midwest. Significant hail and wind are possible across parts of eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota, along with some tornado potential. A few severe storms are also possible across the Northeast. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing will prevail across the western U.S. as an upper ridge continues to build over the eastern CONUS tomorrow (Sunday). A pronounced mid-level impulse/shortwave trough will eject into the northern Plains Sunday afternoon, supporting rapid surface cyclone development/strengthening over the central High Plains. This surface low is poised to move northeast toward the Upper MS Valley, encouraging the northward transport of warm, moist air to the Great Lakes while a trailing frontal boundary slowly advances eastward along the High Plains, down to the Rio Grande. Along the warm front and trailing frontal boundary, scattered severe thunderstorm development is possible. Remnant thunderstorms will also crest the ridge and propagate into the Northeast from southeastern Ontario Sunday morning and afternoon. These storms will traverse the eastern periphery of moderate to strong buoyancy and modest wind shear, which may aid in some severe potential. ...Northern Mississippi Valley... A warm front should reach the international border by Sunday afternoon, with 70+ F surface dewpoints beneath 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates expected over much of the Upper MS Valley by Sunday afternoon. This thermodynamic profile will yield widespread 3000+ J/kg MLCAPE (over 4000 J/kg in some locales), but with appreciable MLCINH. Rapid strengthening and gradual veering of the vertical wind profile, from the surface to about 500 mb, will support sizeable and curved low-level hodographs (e.g. 200+ m2/s2 effective SRH), but with modest mid to upper-level elongation. A such, if storms can develop ahead of the frontal boundary, supercells and short bowing segments capable of all severe hazards (including 75+ mph gusts, 2+ inch diameter hail, and a few tornadoes) are all possible. The overall coverage of the severe risk is strongly dependent on cap erosion and the ability for the more robust updrafts to overcome inhibition. The best chance for this occurring is over northern MN, closer to the warm front, where locally backed low-level flow will also yield the best chance for tornadoes. Higher severe probabilities may be warranted if confidence in MLCINH erosion increases. ...Northern High Plains... A few thunderstorms may develop across the northern High Plains by afternoon peak heating, behind the frontal boundary. The pronounced mid-level shortwave trough will overspread this region, which will experience the greatest deep-layer ascent, along with strong speed shear (as shown via forecast soundings as elongated, straight hodographs/50 kts of effective bulk shear). 8+ C/km low and mid-level lapse rates will yield around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE in this environment. A couple of multicells or transient supercells may occur, accompanied by some risk for severe wind/hail. ...Central and southern High Plains... Maximum daytime surface heating, and modest convergence along a trailing surface frontal boundary, will aid in the development of at least scattered thunderstorms amid a warm/well-mixed boundary layer. Vertical wind shear will be weak in this region. Nonetheless, 8-9 C/km low-level lapse rates will support 1500+ J/kg SBCAPE and associated severe gust potential with the stronger, longer-lived multicellular complexes, especially where cold-pool mergers may occur. A couple instances of severe hail also cannot be ruled out. ...Northeast... A somewhat complex severe weather scenario exists for the Northeast, from Sunday morning into the afternoon hours. Scattered strong thunderstorms (perhaps a remnant MCS) may cross from southeastern Ontario and progress toward the Hudson Valley region during the morning. Should this occur, convective restrengthening is possible along the leading edge of outflow over the Mid Atlantic, with strong to potentially severe wind gusts likely. However, if convection moving into the Northeast by Sunday morning is less robust, convective re-intensification may be more likely farther north into southern New England. A more focused severe threat would be highly dependent on the placement and evolution of earlier convection/MCS morphology across Ontario during the late Day 1 period, which currently has low predictability. Despite weak vertical wind shear, of concern is the eastward advection of a modest EML into the Northeast, which may boost MLCAPE well over 3000 J/kg (perhaps over 4000 J/kg locally). Higher severe probabilities may be needed if confidence in the placement and/or timing of more organized convection increases. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more

SPC Jun 21, 2025 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1230 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms remain possible on Sunday from parts of the central and northern Plains into the upper Midwest. Significant hail and wind are possible across parts of eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota, along with some tornado potential. A few severe storms are also possible across the Northeast. ...Synopsis... Broad mid-level troughing will prevail across the western U.S. as an upper ridge continues to build over the eastern CONUS tomorrow (Sunday). A pronounced mid-level impulse/shortwave trough will eject into the northern Plains Sunday afternoon, supporting rapid surface cyclone development/strengthening over the central High Plains. This surface low is poised to move northeast toward the Upper MS Valley, encouraging the northward transport of warm, moist air to the Great Lakes while a trailing frontal boundary slowly advances eastward along the High Plains, down to the Rio Grande. Along the warm front and trailing frontal boundary, scattered severe thunderstorm development is possible. Remnant thunderstorms will also crest the ridge and propagate into the Northeast from southeastern Ontario Sunday morning and afternoon. These storms will traverse the eastern periphery of moderate to strong buoyancy and modest wind shear, which may aid in some severe potential. ...Northern Mississippi Valley... A warm front should reach the international border by Sunday afternoon, with 70+ F surface dewpoints beneath 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates expected over much of the Upper MS Valley by Sunday afternoon. This thermodynamic profile will yield widespread 3000+ J/kg MLCAPE (over 4000 J/kg in some locales), but with appreciable MLCINH. Rapid strengthening and gradual veering of the vertical wind profile, from the surface to about 500 mb, will support sizeable and curved low-level hodographs (e.g. 200+ m2/s2 effective SRH), but with modest mid to upper-level elongation. A such, if storms can develop ahead of the frontal boundary, supercells and short bowing segments capable of all severe hazards (including 75+ mph gusts, 2+ inch diameter hail, and a few tornadoes) are all possible. The overall coverage of the severe risk is strongly dependent on cap erosion and the ability for the more robust updrafts to overcome inhibition. The best chance for this occurring is over northern MN, closer to the warm front, where locally backed low-level flow will also yield the best chance for tornadoes. Higher severe probabilities may be warranted if confidence in MLCINH erosion increases. ...Northern High Plains... A few thunderstorms may develop across the northern High Plains by afternoon peak heating, behind the frontal boundary. The pronounced mid-level shortwave trough will overspread this region, which will experience the greatest deep-layer ascent, along with strong speed shear (as shown via forecast soundings as elongated, straight hodographs/50 kts of effective bulk shear). 8+ C/km low and mid-level lapse rates will yield around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE in this environment. A couple of multicells or transient supercells may occur, accompanied by some risk for severe wind/hail. ...Central and southern High Plains... Maximum daytime surface heating, and modest convergence along a trailing surface frontal boundary, will aid in the development of at least scattered thunderstorms amid a warm/well-mixed boundary layer. Vertical wind shear will be weak in this region. Nonetheless, 8-9 C/km low-level lapse rates will support 1500+ J/kg SBCAPE and associated severe gust potential with the stronger, longer-lived multicellular complexes, especially where cold-pool mergers may occur. A couple instances of severe hail also cannot be ruled out. ...Northeast... A somewhat complex severe weather scenario exists for the Northeast, from Sunday morning into the afternoon hours. Scattered strong thunderstorms (perhaps a remnant MCS) may cross from southeastern Ontario and progress toward the Hudson Valley region during the morning. Should this occur, convective restrengthening is possible along the leading edge of outflow over the Mid Atlantic, with strong to potentially severe wind gusts likely. However, if convection moving into the Northeast by Sunday morning is less robust, convective re-intensification may be more likely farther north into southern New England. A more focused severe threat would be highly dependent on the placement and evolution of earlier convection/MCS morphology across Ontario during the late Day 1 period, which currently has low predictability. Despite weak vertical wind shear, of concern is the eastward advection of a modest EML into the Northeast, which may boost MLCAPE well over 3000 J/kg (perhaps over 4000 J/kg locally). Higher severe probabilities may be needed if confidence in the placement and/or timing of more organized convection increases. ..Squitieri.. 06/21/2025 Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Severe Storms
Storm Prediction Center
Subscribe to Severe Storms feed