SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 Status Reports

7 months ago
WW 0717 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 NW ACT TO 30 S FTW TO 15 ENE TXK. ..SQUITIERI..12/28/24 ATTN...WFO...SHV...FWD... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC027-057-073-091-099-139-281640- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE COLUMBIA HEMPSTEAD LAFAYETTE MILLER NEVADA UNION TXC035-037-063-067-139-213-217-251-257-315-343-349-423-459-467- 499-281640- TX . TEXAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BOSQUE BOWIE CAMP CASS ELLIS HENDERSON HILL JOHNSON KAUFMAN MARION MORRIS NAVARRO SMITH UPSHUR VAN ZANDT WOOD THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE REFER TO WATCH COUNTY NOTIFICATION STATEMENTS FOR OFFICIAL Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 Status Reports

7 months ago
WW 0717 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 NW ACT TO 30 S FTW TO 15 ENE TXK. ..SQUITIERI..12/28/24 ATTN...WFO...SHV...FWD... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC027-057-073-091-099-139-281640- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE COLUMBIA HEMPSTEAD LAFAYETTE MILLER NEVADA UNION TXC035-037-063-067-139-213-217-251-257-315-343-349-423-459-467- 499-281640- TX . TEXAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BOSQUE BOWIE CAMP CASS ELLIS HENDERSON HILL JOHNSON KAUFMAN MARION MORRIS NAVARRO SMITH UPSHUR VAN ZANDT WOOD THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE REFER TO WATCH COUNTY NOTIFICATION STATEMENTS FOR OFFICIAL Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 Status Reports

7 months ago
WW 0717 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 NW ACT TO 30 S FTW TO 15 ENE TXK. ..SQUITIERI..12/28/24 ATTN...WFO...SHV...FWD... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC027-057-073-091-099-139-281640- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE COLUMBIA HEMPSTEAD LAFAYETTE MILLER NEVADA UNION TXC035-037-063-067-139-213-217-251-257-315-343-349-423-459-467- 499-281640- TX . TEXAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BOSQUE BOWIE CAMP CASS ELLIS HENDERSON HILL JOHNSON KAUFMAN MARION MORRIS NAVARRO SMITH UPSHUR VAN ZANDT WOOD THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE REFER TO WATCH COUNTY NOTIFICATION STATEMENTS FOR OFFICIAL Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717

7 months ago
WW 717 SEVERE TSTM AR OK TX 281125Z - 281800Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED Severe Thunderstorm Watch Number 717 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 525 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a * Severe Thunderstorm Watch for portions of Southwestern Arkansas Extreme southeastern Oklahoma North-central and northeast Texas * Effective this Saturday morning from 525 AM until NOON CST. * Primary threats include... Scattered large hail and isolated very large hail events to 2 inches in diameter possible SUMMARY...Increasing coverage and intensity of elevated thunderstorms, with potential for large hail, are expected through the remainder of the morning, with activity spreading from the DFW Metroplex vicinity into the Arklatex. A separate tornado threat may evolve later this morning in or near the southern/eastern parts of this watch, and would be addressed then and separately. The severe thunderstorm watch area is approximately along and 50 statute miles north and south of a line from 25 miles north northwest of Stephenville TX to 10 miles north northeast of Texarkana AR. For a complete depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU7). PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... REMEMBER...A Severe Thunderstorm Watch means conditions are favorable for severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch area. Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for threatening weather conditions and listen for later statements and possible warnings. Severe thunderstorms can and occasionally do produce tornadoes. && AVIATION...A few severe thunderstorms with hail surface and aloft to 2 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind gusts to 50 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 450. Mean storm motion vector 25030. ...Edwards Read more

SPC MD 2297

7 months ago
MD 2297 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH LIKELY FOR PORTIONS OF CENTRAL TEXAS
Mesoscale Discussion 2297 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0838 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Areas affected...portions of central Texas Concerning...Severe potential...Watch likely Valid 281438Z - 281615Z Probability of Watch Issuance...80 percent SUMMARY...The severe threat is increasing across central portions of Texas. Severe wind and hail appear to be the predominant threats with the stronger storms that develop, though a tornado or two cannot be ruled out. A WW issuance may be needed in the next couple of hours. DISCUSSION...The boundary layer is expected to gradually warm through the morning (given diurnal heating), where upper 60s F surface dewpoints are in place. 7 C/km mid-level lapse rates and deep-layer ascent are overspreading central TX in tandem with the mid-level trough and associated 70-90 kt upper-level jet streak. As such, thunderstorms are already developing along a Bosque-Kendall County line ahead of the cold front, and they should continue to gradually organize/intensify further throughout the morning. 50+ kt effective bulk shear is already present over the warm sector, and shear (as well as boundary-layer based buoyancy) should only increase with time. Supercells are possible within this developing band of storms, as well as with any storms that can develop and mature ahead of the line, as suggested by high-resolution model guidance. Given relatively steep lapse rates amid curved and elongated hodographs, severe hail and wind are likely with the stronger storms. Low-level hodographs are not particularly large (evident via the GRK VAD). However, given rich low-level moisture and strong deep-layer forcing/shear, a tornado or two cannot be ruled out, especially with any sustained supercell preceding the main line of storms. A WW issuance will likely be needed over the next hour or so. ..Squitieri/Hart.. 12/28/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...HGX...FWD...EWX... LAT...LON 30949556 30339580 30059667 29979765 29989837 30239858 30909832 31469797 31779719 32019619 31929566 31539555 30949556 Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 718 Status Reports

7 months ago
WW 0718 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 718 THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SEE MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 2298 ..SQUITIERI..12/28/24 ATTN...WFO...LCH...LIX...SHV...JAN...HGX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 718 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS LAC001-003-005-009-011-013-015-017-019-021-025-027-029-031-033- 037-039-041-043-047-049-053-055-059-061-063-065-069-073-077-079- 081-083-085-091-097-099-103-105-107-111-115-117-119-121-125-127- 281640- LA . LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE ACADIA ALLEN ASCENSION AVOYELLES BEAUREGARD BIENVILLE BOSSIER CADDO CALCASIEU CALDWELL CATAHOULA CLAIBORNE CONCORDIA DE SOTO EAST BATON ROUGE EAST FELICIANA EVANGELINE FRANKLIN GRANT IBERVILLE JACKSON JEFFERSON DAVIS LAFAYETTE LA SALLE LINCOLN LIVINGSTON MADISON NATCHITOCHES OUACHITA POINTE COUPEE RAPIDES RED RIVER RICHLAND SABINE ST. HELENA ST. LANDRY ST. MARTIN ST. TAMMANY TANGIPAHOA TENSAS UNION VERNON WASHINGTON WEBSTER WEST BATON ROUGE WEST FELICIANA WINN Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 718 Status Reports

7 months ago
WW 0718 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 718 THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SEE MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 2298 ..SQUITIERI..12/28/24 ATTN...WFO...LCH...LIX...SHV...JAN...HGX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 718 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS LAC001-003-005-009-011-013-015-017-019-021-025-027-029-031-033- 037-039-041-043-047-049-053-055-059-061-063-065-069-073-077-079- 081-083-085-091-097-099-103-105-107-111-115-117-119-121-125-127- 281640- LA . LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE ACADIA ALLEN ASCENSION AVOYELLES BEAUREGARD BIENVILLE BOSSIER CADDO CALCASIEU CALDWELL CATAHOULA CLAIBORNE CONCORDIA DE SOTO EAST BATON ROUGE EAST FELICIANA EVANGELINE FRANKLIN GRANT IBERVILLE JACKSON JEFFERSON DAVIS LAFAYETTE LA SALLE LINCOLN LIVINGSTON MADISON NATCHITOCHES OUACHITA POINTE COUPEE RAPIDES RED RIVER RICHLAND SABINE ST. HELENA ST. LANDRY ST. MARTIN ST. TAMMANY TANGIPAHOA TENSAS UNION VERNON WASHINGTON WEBSTER WEST BATON ROUGE WEST FELICIANA WINN Read more

SPC MD 2296

7 months ago
MD 2296 CONCERNING SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH 717... FOR NORTH-CENTRAL TX TO THE ARK-LA-TEX
Mesoscale Discussion 2296 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0738 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Areas affected...North-central TX to the Ark-La-Tex Concerning...Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717... Valid 281338Z - 281445Z The severe weather threat for Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 continues. SUMMARY...An isolated severe threat may persist into late morning, mainly within the southern portion of WW 717. DISCUSSION...Despite fairly extensive elevated convective development through daybreak, much of the activity has struggled to greatly intensify. Elevated MUCAPE appears most pronounced near the Ark-La-Tex, per the 12Z SHV sounding, but has supported only marginally severe activity thus far. Meanwhile, convection farther southwest in north-central to northeast TX has largely clustered and failed to sustain supercell structures despite adequate deep-layer shear. Convection may continue to struggle within WW 717. More prominent severe potential should develop though, to the south and east of this watch (see MCD 2294/WW 718 for forecast info in that region). ..Grams.. 12/28/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...LZK...SHV...FWD... LAT...LON 33819344 33819310 33489299 33009305 32629380 32209511 31889657 31549776 31809820 32139802 32449697 33089535 33459488 33589407 33819344 Read more

SPC MD 2295

7 months ago
MD 2295 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH POSSIBLE FOR EASTERN LA AND SOUTHERN MS
Mesoscale Discussion 2295 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0649 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Areas affected...eastern LA and southern MS Concerning...Severe potential...Watch possible Valid 281249Z - 281445Z Probability of Watch Issuance...60 percent SUMMARY...A long-duration severe threat may begin this morning near and east of the Mississippi River in Louisiana/Mississippi. This threat should remain lower-end and isolated for several hours before greater intensity/coverage occurs this afternoon. While a tornado watch will undoubtedly be needed later today, confidence is low on needing one through mid-morning. DISCUSSION...Scattered thunderstorms have developed across parts of LA into southwest MS. Regenerative development may persist for many hours in the southeast LA/southwest MS corridor where low-level warm theta-e advection continues in the wake of long-lived, quasistationary convection over the north-central Gulf. 12Z JAN/LCH observed soundings sampled relatively modest low-level hodograph curvature but favorable effective bulk shear for occasional updraft rotation. This could yield an isolated threat for all hazards this morning. A more prominent increase in severe potential is expected into the afternoon, as low-level shear increases substantially midday and beyond. ..Grams/Edwards.. 12/28/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...JAN...LIX...LCH... LAT...LON 31409191 31829181 32059164 32359117 32439063 32409007 32078967 31638930 31208930 30898938 30228946 30008975 29919016 29959070 30149118 30439184 30699205 31409191 Read more

SPC MD 2294

7 months ago
MD 2294 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...TORNADO WATCH LIKELY FOR PARTS OF EAST TX TO WESTERN LA
Mesoscale Discussion 2294 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0625 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Areas affected...parts of east TX to western LA Concerning...Severe potential...Tornado Watch likely Valid 281225Z - 281430Z Probability of Watch Issuance...80 percent SUMMARY...Surface-based supercell potential is expected to rapidly increase in the late morning to midday. A tornado watch will likely be needed by 14-15Z. DISCUSSION...The east TX to western LA warm-moist sector characterized by 66-71 F surface dew points has roughly reached a TPL to 20 S CRS to IER line as of 12Z. Pervasive cloud coverage will slow diabatic surface heating after sunrise, but the rich moisture profile will only need a few degrees of warming to yield a marked increase in surface-based convection. This will be favorably timed with strengthening large-scale ascent and flow fields ahead of a pronounced shortwave trough near central TX. 06Z ECMWF and recent HRRR guidance suggest scattered to widespread warm-moist sector thunderstorms will occur by midday. A strengthening kinematic profile should foster several to numerous supercells. Tornado potential will become more favorable with eastern extent in TX to LA, as hodographs enlarge midday into the afternoon. ..Grams/Edwards.. 12/28/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...LCH...SHV...HGX...FWD...EWX... LAT...LON 30789744 31429734 32089652 32599457 32629384 32639289 32189221 31419209 30989212 30759305 30769313 30689438 29799642 30369727 30789744 Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 Status Reports

7 months ago
WW 0717 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 15 NW SEP TO 15 NNE TXK. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SEE FORTHCOMING MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 2296. ..GRAMS..12/28/24 ATTN...WFO...SHV...FWD... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC057-081-091-281440- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE HEMPSTEAD LITTLE RIVER MILLER TXC035-037-063-067-139-143-159-213-217-221-223-251-257-315-343- 349-379-423-425-449-459-467-499-281440- TX . TEXAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BOSQUE BOWIE CAMP CASS ELLIS ERATH FRANKLIN HENDERSON HILL HOOD HOPKINS JOHNSON KAUFMAN MARION MORRIS NAVARRO RAINS SMITH SOMERVELL TITUS UPSHUR VAN ZANDT WOOD Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 Status Reports

7 months ago
WW 0717 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 15 NW SEP TO 15 NNE TXK. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SEE FORTHCOMING MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 2296. ..GRAMS..12/28/24 ATTN...WFO...SHV...FWD... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 717 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC057-081-091-281440- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE HEMPSTEAD LITTLE RIVER MILLER TXC035-037-063-067-139-143-159-213-217-221-223-251-257-315-343- 349-379-423-425-449-459-467-499-281440- TX . TEXAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BOSQUE BOWIE CAMP CASS ELLIS ERATH FRANKLIN HENDERSON HILL HOOD HOPKINS JOHNSON KAUFMAN MARION MORRIS NAVARRO RAINS SMITH SOMERVELL TITUS UPSHUR VAN ZANDT WOOD Read more

SPC Dec 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0651 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF EAST TEXAS...CENTRAL/NORTHERN LOUISIANA...CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI...AND WESTERN ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... Tornadoes (some strong with at least EF2 damage possible), severe gusts and hail are expected today into tonight. The threat area will shift eastward from parts of north and central Texas early, across east Texas and the lower Mississippi Valley today, then over the Tennessee Valley, parts of Georgia, and the central Gulf Coast tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow will persist and shift eastward across the central CONUS through the period. The most important feature aloft will be an embedded shortwave trough, now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the southern High Plains, lowest Pecos Valley and northern Coahuila. This perturbation will move eastward across much of the remainder of TX today, reaching a position from eastern OK to east TX to the northwestern Gulf by 00Z. Overnight, this trough should pivot northeastward, reaching southern IL, western parts of KY/TN, and MS by 12Z tomorrow. The 11Z surface analysis showed a wavy, mostly warm to locally quasistationary frontal zone across the southeastern Hill Country of TX, eastward over central/east TX and central LA to western/central MS, then southeastward diffusely into outflow air over coastal areas near MOB/PNS, related to offshore activity. A low was drawn over northwest TX between SPS-ABI. The low is expected to migrate east-southeastward across north TX this morning, meet the returning warm sector, then pivot east-northeastward to the northern LA/ southern AR area by 00Z, when the attached cold front should extend southwestward over portions of east and south TX. By 12Z, the low should deepen considerably and reach western KY, with cold front across middle TN, northern AL, southeastern MS, southeastern LA, and the northwestern Gulf. Well-organized convective band(s) should precede the cold front from this afternoon through tonight. Prior to the low's arrival, the warm/marine front should advance northward into the Arklatex, and across parts of southern AR and northern MS. The warm front should move northeastward across AL and the FL Panhandle tonight, bounding the northeastern rim of a narrowing warm sector. ...Southern Plains to Southern Appalachians and central Gulf Coast... Convection is increasing in two main regimes either side of the warm/marine front: 1. Elevated convection to its north over north-central TX, predominantly of a hail concern, and forecast to move/expand into the Arklatex over the next few hours. See Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 and related mesoscale discussions for near-term details. 2. Warm-sector thunderstorms building gradually from east TX across parts of LA to southern MS. This activity will pose a threat for tornadoes, isolated hail, and occasional severe gusts. See SPC Mesoscale discussions 2294 and 2295, with watches likely over these areas today as well. Peak tornado and severe-gust potential should be from this afternoon into tonight, in and near the "Moderate" and "Enhanced" areas. Perhaps the greatest uncertainty at this time is coverage of supercells in the warm sector during peak instability this afternoon and into evening, following the morning episode, given 1) the need for recovery behind earlier activity and 2) subtle and gradual boundary-layer forcing/convergence would be the main factor contributing to their development. A broad area of favorable moisture, represented by mid-60s to near 70 F surface dewpoints, will contribute to peak MLCAPE in the 2000-2500 J/kg range from east TX to southwestern MS, and around 1000-1500 J/kg from central MS into central/southern AL where diurnal heating will be less a factor than theta-e advection for preconvective destabilization. Hodographs will favor supercells and tornado potential during the day -- especially near the marine/warm front -- but largest after 00Z east of the Mississippi River where a 45-60-kt LLJ will overlap at least marginally surface-based inflow parcels. SRH of 150-250 J/kg in the lowest 1/2 km, and 200-400 J/kg in the effective-inflow layer, should be attainable. Any sustained, discrete supercell in this environment will pose a threat for cyclic, strong tornado production. As the primary convective band organizes and moves into increasing moisture and LLJ-enlarged hodographs in low levels this evening, embedded LEWP/bowing features may produce both severe gusts and tornadoes. The cumulative tornado threat suggests maintaining "moderate" level probabilities with this outlook cycle, but enough uncertainty remains to preclude a greater unconditional risk area. As the event proceeds through the overnight hours, one or two dominant QLCSs should continue across AL and into portions of GA and the FL Panhandle, with a threat persisting for embedded severe gusts and at least a few tornadoes. ..Edwards/Grams.. 12/28/2024 Read more

SPC Dec 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0651 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF EAST TEXAS...CENTRAL/NORTHERN LOUISIANA...CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI...AND WESTERN ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... Tornadoes (some strong with at least EF2 damage possible), severe gusts and hail are expected today into tonight. The threat area will shift eastward from parts of north and central Texas early, across east Texas and the lower Mississippi Valley today, then over the Tennessee Valley, parts of Georgia, and the central Gulf Coast tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow will persist and shift eastward across the central CONUS through the period. The most important feature aloft will be an embedded shortwave trough, now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the southern High Plains, lowest Pecos Valley and northern Coahuila. This perturbation will move eastward across much of the remainder of TX today, reaching a position from eastern OK to east TX to the northwestern Gulf by 00Z. Overnight, this trough should pivot northeastward, reaching southern IL, western parts of KY/TN, and MS by 12Z tomorrow. The 11Z surface analysis showed a wavy, mostly warm to locally quasistationary frontal zone across the southeastern Hill Country of TX, eastward over central/east TX and central LA to western/central MS, then southeastward diffusely into outflow air over coastal areas near MOB/PNS, related to offshore activity. A low was drawn over northwest TX between SPS-ABI. The low is expected to migrate east-southeastward across north TX this morning, meet the returning warm sector, then pivot east-northeastward to the northern LA/ southern AR area by 00Z, when the attached cold front should extend southwestward over portions of east and south TX. By 12Z, the low should deepen considerably and reach western KY, with cold front across middle TN, northern AL, southeastern MS, southeastern LA, and the northwestern Gulf. Well-organized convective band(s) should precede the cold front from this afternoon through tonight. Prior to the low's arrival, the warm/marine front should advance northward into the Arklatex, and across parts of southern AR and northern MS. The warm front should move northeastward across AL and the FL Panhandle tonight, bounding the northeastern rim of a narrowing warm sector. ...Southern Plains to Southern Appalachians and central Gulf Coast... Convection is increasing in two main regimes either side of the warm/marine front: 1. Elevated convection to its north over north-central TX, predominantly of a hail concern, and forecast to move/expand into the Arklatex over the next few hours. See Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 and related mesoscale discussions for near-term details. 2. Warm-sector thunderstorms building gradually from east TX across parts of LA to southern MS. This activity will pose a threat for tornadoes, isolated hail, and occasional severe gusts. See SPC Mesoscale discussions 2294 and 2295, with watches likely over these areas today as well. Peak tornado and severe-gust potential should be from this afternoon into tonight, in and near the "Moderate" and "Enhanced" areas. Perhaps the greatest uncertainty at this time is coverage of supercells in the warm sector during peak instability this afternoon and into evening, following the morning episode, given 1) the need for recovery behind earlier activity and 2) subtle and gradual boundary-layer forcing/convergence would be the main factor contributing to their development. A broad area of favorable moisture, represented by mid-60s to near 70 F surface dewpoints, will contribute to peak MLCAPE in the 2000-2500 J/kg range from east TX to southwestern MS, and around 1000-1500 J/kg from central MS into central/southern AL where diurnal heating will be less a factor than theta-e advection for preconvective destabilization. Hodographs will favor supercells and tornado potential during the day -- especially near the marine/warm front -- but largest after 00Z east of the Mississippi River where a 45-60-kt LLJ will overlap at least marginally surface-based inflow parcels. SRH of 150-250 J/kg in the lowest 1/2 km, and 200-400 J/kg in the effective-inflow layer, should be attainable. Any sustained, discrete supercell in this environment will pose a threat for cyclic, strong tornado production. As the primary convective band organizes and moves into increasing moisture and LLJ-enlarged hodographs in low levels this evening, embedded LEWP/bowing features may produce both severe gusts and tornadoes. The cumulative tornado threat suggests maintaining "moderate" level probabilities with this outlook cycle, but enough uncertainty remains to preclude a greater unconditional risk area. As the event proceeds through the overnight hours, one or two dominant QLCSs should continue across AL and into portions of GA and the FL Panhandle, with a threat persisting for embedded severe gusts and at least a few tornadoes. ..Edwards/Grams.. 12/28/2024 Read more

SPC Dec 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0651 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF EAST TEXAS...CENTRAL/NORTHERN LOUISIANA...CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI...AND WESTERN ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... Tornadoes (some strong with at least EF2 damage possible), severe gusts and hail are expected today into tonight. The threat area will shift eastward from parts of north and central Texas early, across east Texas and the lower Mississippi Valley today, then over the Tennessee Valley, parts of Georgia, and the central Gulf Coast tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow will persist and shift eastward across the central CONUS through the period. The most important feature aloft will be an embedded shortwave trough, now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the southern High Plains, lowest Pecos Valley and northern Coahuila. This perturbation will move eastward across much of the remainder of TX today, reaching a position from eastern OK to east TX to the northwestern Gulf by 00Z. Overnight, this trough should pivot northeastward, reaching southern IL, western parts of KY/TN, and MS by 12Z tomorrow. The 11Z surface analysis showed a wavy, mostly warm to locally quasistationary frontal zone across the southeastern Hill Country of TX, eastward over central/east TX and central LA to western/central MS, then southeastward diffusely into outflow air over coastal areas near MOB/PNS, related to offshore activity. A low was drawn over northwest TX between SPS-ABI. The low is expected to migrate east-southeastward across north TX this morning, meet the returning warm sector, then pivot east-northeastward to the northern LA/ southern AR area by 00Z, when the attached cold front should extend southwestward over portions of east and south TX. By 12Z, the low should deepen considerably and reach western KY, with cold front across middle TN, northern AL, southeastern MS, southeastern LA, and the northwestern Gulf. Well-organized convective band(s) should precede the cold front from this afternoon through tonight. Prior to the low's arrival, the warm/marine front should advance northward into the Arklatex, and across parts of southern AR and northern MS. The warm front should move northeastward across AL and the FL Panhandle tonight, bounding the northeastern rim of a narrowing warm sector. ...Southern Plains to Southern Appalachians and central Gulf Coast... Convection is increasing in two main regimes either side of the warm/marine front: 1. Elevated convection to its north over north-central TX, predominantly of a hail concern, and forecast to move/expand into the Arklatex over the next few hours. See Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 and related mesoscale discussions for near-term details. 2. Warm-sector thunderstorms building gradually from east TX across parts of LA to southern MS. This activity will pose a threat for tornadoes, isolated hail, and occasional severe gusts. See SPC Mesoscale discussions 2294 and 2295, with watches likely over these areas today as well. Peak tornado and severe-gust potential should be from this afternoon into tonight, in and near the "Moderate" and "Enhanced" areas. Perhaps the greatest uncertainty at this time is coverage of supercells in the warm sector during peak instability this afternoon and into evening, following the morning episode, given 1) the need for recovery behind earlier activity and 2) subtle and gradual boundary-layer forcing/convergence would be the main factor contributing to their development. A broad area of favorable moisture, represented by mid-60s to near 70 F surface dewpoints, will contribute to peak MLCAPE in the 2000-2500 J/kg range from east TX to southwestern MS, and around 1000-1500 J/kg from central MS into central/southern AL where diurnal heating will be less a factor than theta-e advection for preconvective destabilization. Hodographs will favor supercells and tornado potential during the day -- especially near the marine/warm front -- but largest after 00Z east of the Mississippi River where a 45-60-kt LLJ will overlap at least marginally surface-based inflow parcels. SRH of 150-250 J/kg in the lowest 1/2 km, and 200-400 J/kg in the effective-inflow layer, should be attainable. Any sustained, discrete supercell in this environment will pose a threat for cyclic, strong tornado production. As the primary convective band organizes and moves into increasing moisture and LLJ-enlarged hodographs in low levels this evening, embedded LEWP/bowing features may produce both severe gusts and tornadoes. The cumulative tornado threat suggests maintaining "moderate" level probabilities with this outlook cycle, but enough uncertainty remains to preclude a greater unconditional risk area. As the event proceeds through the overnight hours, one or two dominant QLCSs should continue across AL and into portions of GA and the FL Panhandle, with a threat persisting for embedded severe gusts and at least a few tornadoes. ..Edwards/Grams.. 12/28/2024 Read more

SPC Dec 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0651 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF EAST TEXAS...CENTRAL/NORTHERN LOUISIANA...CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI...AND WESTERN ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... Tornadoes (some strong with at least EF2 damage possible), severe gusts and hail are expected today into tonight. The threat area will shift eastward from parts of north and central Texas early, across east Texas and the lower Mississippi Valley today, then over the Tennessee Valley, parts of Georgia, and the central Gulf Coast tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow will persist and shift eastward across the central CONUS through the period. The most important feature aloft will be an embedded shortwave trough, now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the southern High Plains, lowest Pecos Valley and northern Coahuila. This perturbation will move eastward across much of the remainder of TX today, reaching a position from eastern OK to east TX to the northwestern Gulf by 00Z. Overnight, this trough should pivot northeastward, reaching southern IL, western parts of KY/TN, and MS by 12Z tomorrow. The 11Z surface analysis showed a wavy, mostly warm to locally quasistationary frontal zone across the southeastern Hill Country of TX, eastward over central/east TX and central LA to western/central MS, then southeastward diffusely into outflow air over coastal areas near MOB/PNS, related to offshore activity. A low was drawn over northwest TX between SPS-ABI. The low is expected to migrate east-southeastward across north TX this morning, meet the returning warm sector, then pivot east-northeastward to the northern LA/ southern AR area by 00Z, when the attached cold front should extend southwestward over portions of east and south TX. By 12Z, the low should deepen considerably and reach western KY, with cold front across middle TN, northern AL, southeastern MS, southeastern LA, and the northwestern Gulf. Well-organized convective band(s) should precede the cold front from this afternoon through tonight. Prior to the low's arrival, the warm/marine front should advance northward into the Arklatex, and across parts of southern AR and northern MS. The warm front should move northeastward across AL and the FL Panhandle tonight, bounding the northeastern rim of a narrowing warm sector. ...Southern Plains to Southern Appalachians and central Gulf Coast... Convection is increasing in two main regimes either side of the warm/marine front: 1. Elevated convection to its north over north-central TX, predominantly of a hail concern, and forecast to move/expand into the Arklatex over the next few hours. See Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 and related mesoscale discussions for near-term details. 2. Warm-sector thunderstorms building gradually from east TX across parts of LA to southern MS. This activity will pose a threat for tornadoes, isolated hail, and occasional severe gusts. See SPC Mesoscale discussions 2294 and 2295, with watches likely over these areas today as well. Peak tornado and severe-gust potential should be from this afternoon into tonight, in and near the "Moderate" and "Enhanced" areas. Perhaps the greatest uncertainty at this time is coverage of supercells in the warm sector during peak instability this afternoon and into evening, following the morning episode, given 1) the need for recovery behind earlier activity and 2) subtle and gradual boundary-layer forcing/convergence would be the main factor contributing to their development. A broad area of favorable moisture, represented by mid-60s to near 70 F surface dewpoints, will contribute to peak MLCAPE in the 2000-2500 J/kg range from east TX to southwestern MS, and around 1000-1500 J/kg from central MS into central/southern AL where diurnal heating will be less a factor than theta-e advection for preconvective destabilization. Hodographs will favor supercells and tornado potential during the day -- especially near the marine/warm front -- but largest after 00Z east of the Mississippi River where a 45-60-kt LLJ will overlap at least marginally surface-based inflow parcels. SRH of 150-250 J/kg in the lowest 1/2 km, and 200-400 J/kg in the effective-inflow layer, should be attainable. Any sustained, discrete supercell in this environment will pose a threat for cyclic, strong tornado production. As the primary convective band organizes and moves into increasing moisture and LLJ-enlarged hodographs in low levels this evening, embedded LEWP/bowing features may produce both severe gusts and tornadoes. The cumulative tornado threat suggests maintaining "moderate" level probabilities with this outlook cycle, but enough uncertainty remains to preclude a greater unconditional risk area. As the event proceeds through the overnight hours, one or two dominant QLCSs should continue across AL and into portions of GA and the FL Panhandle, with a threat persisting for embedded severe gusts and at least a few tornadoes. ..Edwards/Grams.. 12/28/2024 Read more

SPC Dec 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0651 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF EAST TEXAS...CENTRAL/NORTHERN LOUISIANA...CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI...AND WESTERN ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... Tornadoes (some strong with at least EF2 damage possible), severe gusts and hail are expected today into tonight. The threat area will shift eastward from parts of north and central Texas early, across east Texas and the lower Mississippi Valley today, then over the Tennessee Valley, parts of Georgia, and the central Gulf Coast tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow will persist and shift eastward across the central CONUS through the period. The most important feature aloft will be an embedded shortwave trough, now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the southern High Plains, lowest Pecos Valley and northern Coahuila. This perturbation will move eastward across much of the remainder of TX today, reaching a position from eastern OK to east TX to the northwestern Gulf by 00Z. Overnight, this trough should pivot northeastward, reaching southern IL, western parts of KY/TN, and MS by 12Z tomorrow. The 11Z surface analysis showed a wavy, mostly warm to locally quasistationary frontal zone across the southeastern Hill Country of TX, eastward over central/east TX and central LA to western/central MS, then southeastward diffusely into outflow air over coastal areas near MOB/PNS, related to offshore activity. A low was drawn over northwest TX between SPS-ABI. The low is expected to migrate east-southeastward across north TX this morning, meet the returning warm sector, then pivot east-northeastward to the northern LA/ southern AR area by 00Z, when the attached cold front should extend southwestward over portions of east and south TX. By 12Z, the low should deepen considerably and reach western KY, with cold front across middle TN, northern AL, southeastern MS, southeastern LA, and the northwestern Gulf. Well-organized convective band(s) should precede the cold front from this afternoon through tonight. Prior to the low's arrival, the warm/marine front should advance northward into the Arklatex, and across parts of southern AR and northern MS. The warm front should move northeastward across AL and the FL Panhandle tonight, bounding the northeastern rim of a narrowing warm sector. ...Southern Plains to Southern Appalachians and central Gulf Coast... Convection is increasing in two main regimes either side of the warm/marine front: 1. Elevated convection to its north over north-central TX, predominantly of a hail concern, and forecast to move/expand into the Arklatex over the next few hours. See Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 and related mesoscale discussions for near-term details. 2. Warm-sector thunderstorms building gradually from east TX across parts of LA to southern MS. This activity will pose a threat for tornadoes, isolated hail, and occasional severe gusts. See SPC Mesoscale discussions 2294 and 2295, with watches likely over these areas today as well. Peak tornado and severe-gust potential should be from this afternoon into tonight, in and near the "Moderate" and "Enhanced" areas. Perhaps the greatest uncertainty at this time is coverage of supercells in the warm sector during peak instability this afternoon and into evening, following the morning episode, given 1) the need for recovery behind earlier activity and 2) subtle and gradual boundary-layer forcing/convergence would be the main factor contributing to their development. A broad area of favorable moisture, represented by mid-60s to near 70 F surface dewpoints, will contribute to peak MLCAPE in the 2000-2500 J/kg range from east TX to southwestern MS, and around 1000-1500 J/kg from central MS into central/southern AL where diurnal heating will be less a factor than theta-e advection for preconvective destabilization. Hodographs will favor supercells and tornado potential during the day -- especially near the marine/warm front -- but largest after 00Z east of the Mississippi River where a 45-60-kt LLJ will overlap at least marginally surface-based inflow parcels. SRH of 150-250 J/kg in the lowest 1/2 km, and 200-400 J/kg in the effective-inflow layer, should be attainable. Any sustained, discrete supercell in this environment will pose a threat for cyclic, strong tornado production. As the primary convective band organizes and moves into increasing moisture and LLJ-enlarged hodographs in low levels this evening, embedded LEWP/bowing features may produce both severe gusts and tornadoes. The cumulative tornado threat suggests maintaining "moderate" level probabilities with this outlook cycle, but enough uncertainty remains to preclude a greater unconditional risk area. As the event proceeds through the overnight hours, one or two dominant QLCSs should continue across AL and into portions of GA and the FL Panhandle, with a threat persisting for embedded severe gusts and at least a few tornadoes. ..Edwards/Grams.. 12/28/2024 Read more

SPC Dec 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0651 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF EAST TEXAS...CENTRAL/NORTHERN LOUISIANA...CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI...AND WESTERN ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... Tornadoes (some strong with at least EF2 damage possible), severe gusts and hail are expected today into tonight. The threat area will shift eastward from parts of north and central Texas early, across east Texas and the lower Mississippi Valley today, then over the Tennessee Valley, parts of Georgia, and the central Gulf Coast tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow will persist and shift eastward across the central CONUS through the period. The most important feature aloft will be an embedded shortwave trough, now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the southern High Plains, lowest Pecos Valley and northern Coahuila. This perturbation will move eastward across much of the remainder of TX today, reaching a position from eastern OK to east TX to the northwestern Gulf by 00Z. Overnight, this trough should pivot northeastward, reaching southern IL, western parts of KY/TN, and MS by 12Z tomorrow. The 11Z surface analysis showed a wavy, mostly warm to locally quasistationary frontal zone across the southeastern Hill Country of TX, eastward over central/east TX and central LA to western/central MS, then southeastward diffusely into outflow air over coastal areas near MOB/PNS, related to offshore activity. A low was drawn over northwest TX between SPS-ABI. The low is expected to migrate east-southeastward across north TX this morning, meet the returning warm sector, then pivot east-northeastward to the northern LA/ southern AR area by 00Z, when the attached cold front should extend southwestward over portions of east and south TX. By 12Z, the low should deepen considerably and reach western KY, with cold front across middle TN, northern AL, southeastern MS, southeastern LA, and the northwestern Gulf. Well-organized convective band(s) should precede the cold front from this afternoon through tonight. Prior to the low's arrival, the warm/marine front should advance northward into the Arklatex, and across parts of southern AR and northern MS. The warm front should move northeastward across AL and the FL Panhandle tonight, bounding the northeastern rim of a narrowing warm sector. ...Southern Plains to Southern Appalachians and central Gulf Coast... Convection is increasing in two main regimes either side of the warm/marine front: 1. Elevated convection to its north over north-central TX, predominantly of a hail concern, and forecast to move/expand into the Arklatex over the next few hours. See Severe Thunderstorm Watch 717 and related mesoscale discussions for near-term details. 2. Warm-sector thunderstorms building gradually from east TX across parts of LA to southern MS. This activity will pose a threat for tornadoes, isolated hail, and occasional severe gusts. See SPC Mesoscale discussions 2294 and 2295, with watches likely over these areas today as well. Peak tornado and severe-gust potential should be from this afternoon into tonight, in and near the "Moderate" and "Enhanced" areas. Perhaps the greatest uncertainty at this time is coverage of supercells in the warm sector during peak instability this afternoon and into evening, following the morning episode, given 1) the need for recovery behind earlier activity and 2) subtle and gradual boundary-layer forcing/convergence would be the main factor contributing to their development. A broad area of favorable moisture, represented by mid-60s to near 70 F surface dewpoints, will contribute to peak MLCAPE in the 2000-2500 J/kg range from east TX to southwestern MS, and around 1000-1500 J/kg from central MS into central/southern AL where diurnal heating will be less a factor than theta-e advection for preconvective destabilization. Hodographs will favor supercells and tornado potential during the day -- especially near the marine/warm front -- but largest after 00Z east of the Mississippi River where a 45-60-kt LLJ will overlap at least marginally surface-based inflow parcels. SRH of 150-250 J/kg in the lowest 1/2 km, and 200-400 J/kg in the effective-inflow layer, should be attainable. Any sustained, discrete supercell in this environment will pose a threat for cyclic, strong tornado production. As the primary convective band organizes and moves into increasing moisture and LLJ-enlarged hodographs in low levels this evening, embedded LEWP/bowing features may produce both severe gusts and tornadoes. The cumulative tornado threat suggests maintaining "moderate" level probabilities with this outlook cycle, but enough uncertainty remains to preclude a greater unconditional risk area. As the event proceeds through the overnight hours, one or two dominant QLCSs should continue across AL and into portions of GA and the FL Panhandle, with a threat persisting for embedded severe gusts and at least a few tornadoes. ..Edwards/Grams.. 12/28/2024 Read more