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3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1213 PM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 041200Z - 051200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHWEST
TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND EASTERN MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe hail and wind are possible from mid-afternoon
Wednesday through early morning Thursday in parts of the Southwest.
Isolated damaging winds and marginally severe hail may occur across
the eastern Midwest from mid-afternoon to evening.
...Synopsis...
A broad, positively tilted trough will dominate much of the weather
pattern across the CONUS on Wednesday with a base across the
Southwest and a trough axis extending toward the northern Plains.
Multiple shortwaves will be embedded within this flow which may
result in focused regions of thunderstorms on Wednesday. At the
surface, a stalled front will extend from the Great Lakes to Far
West Texas. This front will be a focus for storm development
Wednesday afternoon/evening.
...Eastern Midwest...
Showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing along a frontal
zone from the Ozarks to the western Great Lakes Wednesday morning.
Convergence will be weak through the day as the front/composite
outflow slowly shifts east through the period. Weak to potentially
moderate instability will develop ahead of the front as temperatures
warm into the upper 70s to low 80s with dewpoints in the 60s.
Overall forcing will be weak with rising heights aloft and weakening
convergence along the frontal zone. Moderate shear will be present
through much of the day, but it will be oriented parallel to the
frontal zone which is less favorable for sustained severe storms. An
environment featuring weak to moderate instability and moderate
deep-layer shear will support some isolated large hail and damaging
wind gusts. However, a more organized threat does not appear likely.
...Southwest into Southern High Plains...
A weak mid-level shortwave trough and associated jet streak will
move east across the Southwest on Wednesday. Ahead of this feature,
low-level flow will veer and bring low-level moisture northwestward
across eastern New Mexico. Weak to potentially moderate instability
will develop by mid-day with thunderstorms likely initially over the
higher terrain and eventually shifting east. Moderate shear will
support the potential for a few supercells capable of large hail and
severe wind gusts. These storms may be somewhat on the smaller side
given the weaker buoyancy. However, there is a conditional risk for
one or two larger/stronger supercells to persist into the evening
across the Texas Panhandle if moisture/instability can recover ahead
of the storms moving out of New Mexico.
Strong shear will be present across southeast New Mexico into Far
West Texas beneath the mid-level jet streak. If sufficient
instability can develop far enough west into the higher terrain, a
few supercells are possible with a primary threat for large hail.
..Bentley.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1213 PM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 041200Z - 051200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHWEST
TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND EASTERN MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe hail and wind are possible from mid-afternoon
Wednesday through early morning Thursday in parts of the Southwest.
Isolated damaging winds and marginally severe hail may occur across
the eastern Midwest from mid-afternoon to evening.
...Synopsis...
A broad, positively tilted trough will dominate much of the weather
pattern across the CONUS on Wednesday with a base across the
Southwest and a trough axis extending toward the northern Plains.
Multiple shortwaves will be embedded within this flow which may
result in focused regions of thunderstorms on Wednesday. At the
surface, a stalled front will extend from the Great Lakes to Far
West Texas. This front will be a focus for storm development
Wednesday afternoon/evening.
...Eastern Midwest...
Showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing along a frontal
zone from the Ozarks to the western Great Lakes Wednesday morning.
Convergence will be weak through the day as the front/composite
outflow slowly shifts east through the period. Weak to potentially
moderate instability will develop ahead of the front as temperatures
warm into the upper 70s to low 80s with dewpoints in the 60s.
Overall forcing will be weak with rising heights aloft and weakening
convergence along the frontal zone. Moderate shear will be present
through much of the day, but it will be oriented parallel to the
frontal zone which is less favorable for sustained severe storms. An
environment featuring weak to moderate instability and moderate
deep-layer shear will support some isolated large hail and damaging
wind gusts. However, a more organized threat does not appear likely.
...Southwest into Southern High Plains...
A weak mid-level shortwave trough and associated jet streak will
move east across the Southwest on Wednesday. Ahead of this feature,
low-level flow will veer and bring low-level moisture northwestward
across eastern New Mexico. Weak to potentially moderate instability
will develop by mid-day with thunderstorms likely initially over the
higher terrain and eventually shifting east. Moderate shear will
support the potential for a few supercells capable of large hail and
severe wind gusts. These storms may be somewhat on the smaller side
given the weaker buoyancy. However, there is a conditional risk for
one or two larger/stronger supercells to persist into the evening
across the Texas Panhandle if moisture/instability can recover ahead
of the storms moving out of New Mexico.
Strong shear will be present across southeast New Mexico into Far
West Texas beneath the mid-level jet streak. If sufficient
instability can develop far enough west into the higher terrain, a
few supercells are possible with a primary threat for large hail.
..Bentley.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1213 PM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 041200Z - 051200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHWEST
TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND EASTERN MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe hail and wind are possible from mid-afternoon
Wednesday through early morning Thursday in parts of the Southwest.
Isolated damaging winds and marginally severe hail may occur across
the eastern Midwest from mid-afternoon to evening.
...Synopsis...
A broad, positively tilted trough will dominate much of the weather
pattern across the CONUS on Wednesday with a base across the
Southwest and a trough axis extending toward the northern Plains.
Multiple shortwaves will be embedded within this flow which may
result in focused regions of thunderstorms on Wednesday. At the
surface, a stalled front will extend from the Great Lakes to Far
West Texas. This front will be a focus for storm development
Wednesday afternoon/evening.
...Eastern Midwest...
Showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing along a frontal
zone from the Ozarks to the western Great Lakes Wednesday morning.
Convergence will be weak through the day as the front/composite
outflow slowly shifts east through the period. Weak to potentially
moderate instability will develop ahead of the front as temperatures
warm into the upper 70s to low 80s with dewpoints in the 60s.
Overall forcing will be weak with rising heights aloft and weakening
convergence along the frontal zone. Moderate shear will be present
through much of the day, but it will be oriented parallel to the
frontal zone which is less favorable for sustained severe storms. An
environment featuring weak to moderate instability and moderate
deep-layer shear will support some isolated large hail and damaging
wind gusts. However, a more organized threat does not appear likely.
...Southwest into Southern High Plains...
A weak mid-level shortwave trough and associated jet streak will
move east across the Southwest on Wednesday. Ahead of this feature,
low-level flow will veer and bring low-level moisture northwestward
across eastern New Mexico. Weak to potentially moderate instability
will develop by mid-day with thunderstorms likely initially over the
higher terrain and eventually shifting east. Moderate shear will
support the potential for a few supercells capable of large hail and
severe wind gusts. These storms may be somewhat on the smaller side
given the weaker buoyancy. However, there is a conditional risk for
one or two larger/stronger supercells to persist into the evening
across the Texas Panhandle if moisture/instability can recover ahead
of the storms moving out of New Mexico.
Strong shear will be present across southeast New Mexico into Far
West Texas beneath the mid-level jet streak. If sufficient
instability can develop far enough west into the higher terrain, a
few supercells are possible with a primary threat for large hail.
..Bentley.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1213 PM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 041200Z - 051200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHWEST
TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND EASTERN MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe hail and wind are possible from mid-afternoon
Wednesday through early morning Thursday in parts of the Southwest.
Isolated damaging winds and marginally severe hail may occur across
the eastern Midwest from mid-afternoon to evening.
...Synopsis...
A broad, positively tilted trough will dominate much of the weather
pattern across the CONUS on Wednesday with a base across the
Southwest and a trough axis extending toward the northern Plains.
Multiple shortwaves will be embedded within this flow which may
result in focused regions of thunderstorms on Wednesday. At the
surface, a stalled front will extend from the Great Lakes to Far
West Texas. This front will be a focus for storm development
Wednesday afternoon/evening.
...Eastern Midwest...
Showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing along a frontal
zone from the Ozarks to the western Great Lakes Wednesday morning.
Convergence will be weak through the day as the front/composite
outflow slowly shifts east through the period. Weak to potentially
moderate instability will develop ahead of the front as temperatures
warm into the upper 70s to low 80s with dewpoints in the 60s.
Overall forcing will be weak with rising heights aloft and weakening
convergence along the frontal zone. Moderate shear will be present
through much of the day, but it will be oriented parallel to the
frontal zone which is less favorable for sustained severe storms. An
environment featuring weak to moderate instability and moderate
deep-layer shear will support some isolated large hail and damaging
wind gusts. However, a more organized threat does not appear likely.
...Southwest into Southern High Plains...
A weak mid-level shortwave trough and associated jet streak will
move east across the Southwest on Wednesday. Ahead of this feature,
low-level flow will veer and bring low-level moisture northwestward
across eastern New Mexico. Weak to potentially moderate instability
will develop by mid-day with thunderstorms likely initially over the
higher terrain and eventually shifting east. Moderate shear will
support the potential for a few supercells capable of large hail and
severe wind gusts. These storms may be somewhat on the smaller side
given the weaker buoyancy. However, there is a conditional risk for
one or two larger/stronger supercells to persist into the evening
across the Texas Panhandle if moisture/instability can recover ahead
of the storms moving out of New Mexico.
Strong shear will be present across southeast New Mexico into Far
West Texas beneath the mid-level jet streak. If sufficient
instability can develop far enough west into the higher terrain, a
few supercells are possible with a primary threat for large hail.
..Bentley.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1213 PM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 041200Z - 051200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHWEST
TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND EASTERN MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe hail and wind are possible from mid-afternoon
Wednesday through early morning Thursday in parts of the Southwest.
Isolated damaging winds and marginally severe hail may occur across
the eastern Midwest from mid-afternoon to evening.
...Synopsis...
A broad, positively tilted trough will dominate much of the weather
pattern across the CONUS on Wednesday with a base across the
Southwest and a trough axis extending toward the northern Plains.
Multiple shortwaves will be embedded within this flow which may
result in focused regions of thunderstorms on Wednesday. At the
surface, a stalled front will extend from the Great Lakes to Far
West Texas. This front will be a focus for storm development
Wednesday afternoon/evening.
...Eastern Midwest...
Showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing along a frontal
zone from the Ozarks to the western Great Lakes Wednesday morning.
Convergence will be weak through the day as the front/composite
outflow slowly shifts east through the period. Weak to potentially
moderate instability will develop ahead of the front as temperatures
warm into the upper 70s to low 80s with dewpoints in the 60s.
Overall forcing will be weak with rising heights aloft and weakening
convergence along the frontal zone. Moderate shear will be present
through much of the day, but it will be oriented parallel to the
frontal zone which is less favorable for sustained severe storms. An
environment featuring weak to moderate instability and moderate
deep-layer shear will support some isolated large hail and damaging
wind gusts. However, a more organized threat does not appear likely.
...Southwest into Southern High Plains...
A weak mid-level shortwave trough and associated jet streak will
move east across the Southwest on Wednesday. Ahead of this feature,
low-level flow will veer and bring low-level moisture northwestward
across eastern New Mexico. Weak to potentially moderate instability
will develop by mid-day with thunderstorms likely initially over the
higher terrain and eventually shifting east. Moderate shear will
support the potential for a few supercells capable of large hail and
severe wind gusts. These storms may be somewhat on the smaller side
given the weaker buoyancy. However, there is a conditional risk for
one or two larger/stronger supercells to persist into the evening
across the Texas Panhandle if moisture/instability can recover ahead
of the storms moving out of New Mexico.
Strong shear will be present across southeast New Mexico into Far
West Texas beneath the mid-level jet streak. If sufficient
instability can develop far enough west into the higher terrain, a
few supercells are possible with a primary threat for large hail.
..Bentley.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1213 PM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 041200Z - 051200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHWEST
TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND EASTERN MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe hail and wind are possible from mid-afternoon
Wednesday through early morning Thursday in parts of the Southwest.
Isolated damaging winds and marginally severe hail may occur across
the eastern Midwest from mid-afternoon to evening.
...Synopsis...
A broad, positively tilted trough will dominate much of the weather
pattern across the CONUS on Wednesday with a base across the
Southwest and a trough axis extending toward the northern Plains.
Multiple shortwaves will be embedded within this flow which may
result in focused regions of thunderstorms on Wednesday. At the
surface, a stalled front will extend from the Great Lakes to Far
West Texas. This front will be a focus for storm development
Wednesday afternoon/evening.
...Eastern Midwest...
Showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing along a frontal
zone from the Ozarks to the western Great Lakes Wednesday morning.
Convergence will be weak through the day as the front/composite
outflow slowly shifts east through the period. Weak to potentially
moderate instability will develop ahead of the front as temperatures
warm into the upper 70s to low 80s with dewpoints in the 60s.
Overall forcing will be weak with rising heights aloft and weakening
convergence along the frontal zone. Moderate shear will be present
through much of the day, but it will be oriented parallel to the
frontal zone which is less favorable for sustained severe storms. An
environment featuring weak to moderate instability and moderate
deep-layer shear will support some isolated large hail and damaging
wind gusts. However, a more organized threat does not appear likely.
...Southwest into Southern High Plains...
A weak mid-level shortwave trough and associated jet streak will
move east across the Southwest on Wednesday. Ahead of this feature,
low-level flow will veer and bring low-level moisture northwestward
across eastern New Mexico. Weak to potentially moderate instability
will develop by mid-day with thunderstorms likely initially over the
higher terrain and eventually shifting east. Moderate shear will
support the potential for a few supercells capable of large hail and
severe wind gusts. These storms may be somewhat on the smaller side
given the weaker buoyancy. However, there is a conditional risk for
one or two larger/stronger supercells to persist into the evening
across the Texas Panhandle if moisture/instability can recover ahead
of the storms moving out of New Mexico.
Strong shear will be present across southeast New Mexico into Far
West Texas beneath the mid-level jet streak. If sufficient
instability can develop far enough west into the higher terrain, a
few supercells are possible with a primary threat for large hail.
..Bentley.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1213 PM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 041200Z - 051200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHWEST
TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND EASTERN MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe hail and wind are possible from mid-afternoon
Wednesday through early morning Thursday in parts of the Southwest.
Isolated damaging winds and marginally severe hail may occur across
the eastern Midwest from mid-afternoon to evening.
...Synopsis...
A broad, positively tilted trough will dominate much of the weather
pattern across the CONUS on Wednesday with a base across the
Southwest and a trough axis extending toward the northern Plains.
Multiple shortwaves will be embedded within this flow which may
result in focused regions of thunderstorms on Wednesday. At the
surface, a stalled front will extend from the Great Lakes to Far
West Texas. This front will be a focus for storm development
Wednesday afternoon/evening.
...Eastern Midwest...
Showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing along a frontal
zone from the Ozarks to the western Great Lakes Wednesday morning.
Convergence will be weak through the day as the front/composite
outflow slowly shifts east through the period. Weak to potentially
moderate instability will develop ahead of the front as temperatures
warm into the upper 70s to low 80s with dewpoints in the 60s.
Overall forcing will be weak with rising heights aloft and weakening
convergence along the frontal zone. Moderate shear will be present
through much of the day, but it will be oriented parallel to the
frontal zone which is less favorable for sustained severe storms. An
environment featuring weak to moderate instability and moderate
deep-layer shear will support some isolated large hail and damaging
wind gusts. However, a more organized threat does not appear likely.
...Southwest into Southern High Plains...
A weak mid-level shortwave trough and associated jet streak will
move east across the Southwest on Wednesday. Ahead of this feature,
low-level flow will veer and bring low-level moisture northwestward
across eastern New Mexico. Weak to potentially moderate instability
will develop by mid-day with thunderstorms likely initially over the
higher terrain and eventually shifting east. Moderate shear will
support the potential for a few supercells capable of large hail and
severe wind gusts. These storms may be somewhat on the smaller side
given the weaker buoyancy. However, there is a conditional risk for
one or two larger/stronger supercells to persist into the evening
across the Texas Panhandle if moisture/instability can recover ahead
of the storms moving out of New Mexico.
Strong shear will be present across southeast New Mexico into Far
West Texas beneath the mid-level jet streak. If sufficient
instability can develop far enough west into the higher terrain, a
few supercells are possible with a primary threat for large hail.
..Bentley.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1213 PM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 041200Z - 051200Z
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHWEST
TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND EASTERN MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Isolated severe hail and wind are possible from mid-afternoon
Wednesday through early morning Thursday in parts of the Southwest.
Isolated damaging winds and marginally severe hail may occur across
the eastern Midwest from mid-afternoon to evening.
...Synopsis...
A broad, positively tilted trough will dominate much of the weather
pattern across the CONUS on Wednesday with a base across the
Southwest and a trough axis extending toward the northern Plains.
Multiple shortwaves will be embedded within this flow which may
result in focused regions of thunderstorms on Wednesday. At the
surface, a stalled front will extend from the Great Lakes to Far
West Texas. This front will be a focus for storm development
Wednesday afternoon/evening.
...Eastern Midwest...
Showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing along a frontal
zone from the Ozarks to the western Great Lakes Wednesday morning.
Convergence will be weak through the day as the front/composite
outflow slowly shifts east through the period. Weak to potentially
moderate instability will develop ahead of the front as temperatures
warm into the upper 70s to low 80s with dewpoints in the 60s.
Overall forcing will be weak with rising heights aloft and weakening
convergence along the frontal zone. Moderate shear will be present
through much of the day, but it will be oriented parallel to the
frontal zone which is less favorable for sustained severe storms. An
environment featuring weak to moderate instability and moderate
deep-layer shear will support some isolated large hail and damaging
wind gusts. However, a more organized threat does not appear likely.
...Southwest into Southern High Plains...
A weak mid-level shortwave trough and associated jet streak will
move east across the Southwest on Wednesday. Ahead of this feature,
low-level flow will veer and bring low-level moisture northwestward
across eastern New Mexico. Weak to potentially moderate instability
will develop by mid-day with thunderstorms likely initially over the
higher terrain and eventually shifting east. Moderate shear will
support the potential for a few supercells capable of large hail and
severe wind gusts. These storms may be somewhat on the smaller side
given the weaker buoyancy. However, there is a conditional risk for
one or two larger/stronger supercells to persist into the evening
across the Texas Panhandle if moisture/instability can recover ahead
of the storms moving out of New Mexico.
Strong shear will be present across southeast New Mexico into Far
West Texas beneath the mid-level jet streak. If sufficient
instability can develop far enough west into the higher terrain, a
few supercells are possible with a primary threat for large hail.
..Bentley.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
3 months 1 week ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1127 AM CDT Tue Jun 03 2025
Valid 031630Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern Great
Plains to the Midwest. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary
concerns.
...Central/Southern Plains into the Midwest...
Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
trough over the central Great Plains, embedded within larger upper
troughing centered over MT/WY and the Dakotas that extends over much
of the north-central U.S. A cold front extends from the western
Great Lakes southwestward to a weak low near the OK/KS/TX Panhandle
region. An extensive area of showers and thunderstorms exists from
KS eastward into the mid MS Valley near the frontal zone.
A low-predictability forecast scenario regarding specific details of
storm evolution is expected this afternoon into the evening. A
relatively weak capping inversion was sampled by the 12 UTC Norman,
OK and Fort Worth/Midland, TX raobs (9 to 10 deg C at 700 mb) over
the southern Great Plains. Heating in wake of morning convection
and related cloud debris will promote a very unstable boundary layer
by early to mid afternoon. Expecting a diurnal increase in
low-level moisture coincident with the evapotranspiration cycle and
lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios increasing from 14-15 to 16-17 g/kg
(translated to surface dewpoints rising from 68-70 to 72-76 deg F).
Forecast soundings show 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE from southwest MO into
central TX. The 12 UTC model run of the NAM appears to be an
unrealistic outlier solution showing enhanced low-level shear across
OK during the afternoon. As convective inhibition erodes across the
southern Great Plains east of a dryline/cold front and south of
reinforced outflow draped across southern KS into northern MO,
expecting scattered to numerous thunderstorms to develop during the
afternoon into the evening period. Severe gusts and large hail
appear to be the primary severe hazards. Strong to occasionally
severe thunderstorms should continue along the front as it moves
into TX Hill Country tonight. An elongated corridor of low-tornado
potential will be maintained this outlook update from the southern
Great Plains northeastward through the lower MO Valley and into the
western Great Lakes. A belt of 40-kt 2 km southwesterly flow will
be maintained across western into northern MO and spatially
overlapping outflow in the lower MO Valley. Limited heating will
temper the overall buoyancy across the northern half of MO into IA,
likely tempering the overall severe risk. Additionally, with the
line-parallel orientation of the deep-layer shear across this
region, the expectation is for a predominantly linear storm mode,
with occasional bowing segments capable of producing damaging gusts.
..Smith/Flournoy.. 06/03/2025
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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