Tropical Depression Nine-E Public Advisory Number 1

1 year ago
Issued at 800 AM MST Thu Sep 12 2024 000 WTPZ34 KNHC 121458 TCPEP4 BULLETIN Tropical Depression Nine-E Advisory Number 1 NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL EP092024 800 AM MST Thu Sep 12 2024 ...TROPICAL STORM WARNINGS ISSUED FOR PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN BAJA CALIFORNIA PENINSULA OF MEXICO... SUMMARY OF 800 AM MST...1500 UTC...INFORMATION ---------------------------------------------- LOCATION...19.2N 107.6W ABOUT 295 MI...475 KM SSE OF CABO SAN LUCAS MEXICO MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...35 MPH...55 KM/H PRESENT MOVEMENT...NW OR 325 DEGREES AT 7 MPH...11 KM/H MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...1002 MB...29.59 INCHES WATCHES AND WARNINGS -------------------- CHANGES WITH THIS ADVISORY: The government of Mexico has issued a Tropical Storm Warning for the southern portion of Baja California Sur from Santa Fe southward on the west coast and La Paz southward on the east coast. The government of Mexico has issued a Tropical Storm Watch along the east coast of Baja California Sur north of La Paz to San Evaristo. SUMMARY OF WATCHES AND WARNINGS IN EFFECT: A Tropical Storm Warning is in effect for... * West coast of Baja California Sur Mexico from Santa Fe southward * East coast of Baja California Sur Mexico from La Paz southward A Tropical Storm Watch is in effect for... * Baja California Sur Mexico north of La Paz to San Evaristo A Tropical Storm Warning means that tropical storm conditions are expected somewhere within the warning area within 36 hours. A Tropical Storm Watch means that tropical storm conditions are possible within the watch area, generally within 48 hours. Interests elsewhere in the Mexican states of Baja California Sur, Sinaloa, and Sonora should closely monitor the progress of Tropical Depression Nine-E. For storm information specific to your area, please monitor products issued by your national meteorological service. DISCUSSION AND OUTLOOK ---------------------- At 800 AM MST (1500 UTC), the center of Tropical Depression Nine-E was located near latitude 19.2 North, longitude 107.6 West. The depression is moving toward the northwest near 7 mph (11 km/h) and this motion is expected to continue through early Friday, followed by a turn toward the north and a slight decrease in forward speed. On the forecast track, the center of the cyclone should pass near or over Baja California Sur Friday or Friday night before emerging over the southern Gulf of California late Friday night. Maximum sustained winds are near 35 mph (55 km/h) with higher gusts. Some strengthening is forecast during the next 24 to 36 hours, and the depression is forecast to strengthen to a tropical storm later today, with some slight additional strengthening possible before the system reaches the southern Baja California peninsula. The estimated minimum central pressure is 1002 mb (29.59 inches). HAZARDS AFFECTING LAND ---------------------- Key messages for the depression can be found in the Tropical Cyclone Discussion under AWIPS header MIATCDEP4 and WMO header WTPZ44 KNHC. RAINFALL: Tropical Depression Nine-E is expected to produce 4-6 inches of rain with localized higher amounts up to 8 inches across the coastal areas of Michoacan, Colima, and Jalisco through early Friday. From Friday through Sunday, the system is forecast to produce 4-6 inches of rain, with localized higher amounts up to 8 inches, across southern Baja California. For northwest coastal Sinaloa, the system may produce between 6-8 inches of rain with localized higher amounts up to 12 inches. This heavy rainfall will bring a risk of flash flooding and mudslides to portions of the area. WIND: Tropical storm conditions are expected to first reach the coast of the southern Baja California Peninsula within the warning area by early Friday, making outside preparations difficult or dangerous. Tropical storm conditions are possible within the watch area by late Friday night or early Saturday. SURF: Swells generated by Tropical Depression Nine-E will affect portions of the coast of west-central Mexico during the next day or so, and will spread northward along the coasts of the southern Baja California Peninsula and mainland Mexico beginning tonight. These swells are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions. Please consult products from your local weather office. NEXT ADVISORY ------------- Next intermediate advisory at 1100 AM MST. Next complete advisory at 200 PM MST. $$ Forecaster Hagen
NHC Webmaster

Tropical Depression Nine-E Forecast Advisory Number 1

1 year ago
Issued at 1500 UTC THU SEP 12 2024 ZCZC MIATCMEP4 ALL TTAA00 KNHC DDHHMM TROPICAL DEPRESSION NINE-E FORECAST/ADVISORY NUMBER 1 NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL EP092024 1500 UTC THU SEP 12 2024 TROPICAL DEPRESSION CENTER LOCATED NEAR 19.2N 107.6W AT 12/1500Z POSITION ACCURATE WITHIN 40 NM PRESENT MOVEMENT TOWARD THE NORTHWEST OR 325 DEGREES AT 6 KT ESTIMATED MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE 1002 MB MAX SUSTAINED WINDS 30 KT WITH GUSTS TO 40 KT. WINDS AND SEAS VARY GREATLY IN EACH QUADRANT. RADII IN NAUTICAL MILES ARE THE LARGEST RADII EXPECTED ANYWHERE IN THAT QUADRANT. REPEAT...CENTER LOCATED NEAR 19.2N 107.6W AT 12/1500Z AT 12/1200Z CENTER WAS LOCATED NEAR 18.8N 107.4W FORECAST VALID 13/0000Z 20.4N 108.4W MAX WIND 35 KT...GUSTS 45 KT. 34 KT... 50NE 30SE 0SW 30NW. FORECAST VALID 13/1200Z 22.0N 109.5W MAX WIND 40 KT...GUSTS 50 KT. 34 KT... 60NE 40SE 30SW 30NW. FORECAST VALID 14/0000Z 23.5N 110.2W MAX WIND 45 KT...GUSTS 55 KT. 34 KT... 60NE 30SE 30SW 40NW. FORECAST VALID 14/1200Z 25.0N 110.1W MAX WIND 45 KT...GUSTS 55 KT. 34 KT... 60NE 30SE 30SW 40NW. FORECAST VALID 15/0000Z 26.1N 110.0W MAX WIND 45 KT...GUSTS 55 KT. 34 KT... 50NE 20SE 0SW 30NW. FORECAST VALID 15/1200Z 27.0N 110.2W MAX WIND 35 KT...GUSTS 45 KT. 34 KT... 30NE 0SE 0SW 20NW. EXTENDED OUTLOOK. NOTE...ERRORS FOR TRACK HAVE AVERAGED NEAR 100 NM ON DAY 4 AND 125 NM ON DAY 5...AND FOR INTENSITY NEAR 15 KT EACH DAY OUTLOOK VALID 16/1200Z 28.6N 111.2W...POST-TROP/INLAND MAX WIND 25 KT...GUSTS 35 KT. OUTLOOK VALID 17/1200Z...DISSIPATED REQUEST FOR 3 HOURLY SHIP REPORTS WITHIN 300 MILES OF 19.2N 107.6W INTERMEDIATE PUBLIC ADVISORY...WTNT34 KNHC/MIATCPEP4...AT 12/1800Z NEXT ADVISORY AT 12/2100Z $$ FORECASTER HAGEN NNNN
NHC Webmaster

Small pumpkins, stunted ears of corn in Madison County, Ohio

1 year ago
A pumpkin grower in Madison County put in a lot of extra work irrigating to get a crop of small pumpkins. The corn field has turned brown like it would normally look in November and will be harvested early. The ears were stunted and had fewer kernels than usual. The soybeans will likely yield tiny beans. WCMH-TV NBC 4 (Columbus, Ohio), Sept 12, 2024

SPC Tornado Watch 669 Status Reports

1 year ago
WW 0669 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 669 THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA. ..DEAN..09/12/24 ATTN...WFO...MOB...TAE... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 669 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ALC013-031-035-039-041-045-053-061-067-069-099-131-121440- AL . ALABAMA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BUTLER COFFEE CONECUH COVINGTON CRENSHAW DALE ESCAMBIA GENEVA HENRY HOUSTON MONROE WILCOX FLC005-013-033-037-045-059-063-077-091-113-129-131-133-121440- FL . FLORIDA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BAY CALHOUN ESCAMBIA FRANKLIN GULF HOLMES JACKSON LIBERTY OKALOOSA SANTA ROSA WAKULLA WALTON WASHINGTON GMZ633-634-635-636-655-730-750-752-755-121440- CW Read more

SPC Sep 12, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024 Valid 121300Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO NORTH-CENTRAL ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes are possible today, mainly in the morning and afternoon from the Florida Panhandle to north-central Alabama. Scattered large hail and severe gusts (some significant) are expected across the eastern Montana vicinity during the afternoon to early evening. ...Synopsis... Over the CONUS, in mid/upper levels, a highly amplified initial pattern will become more blocky through the period. A strong northern-stream trough with an intermittently closed cyclone is apparent in moisture-channel imagery from the Canadian Rockies southward over ID to the central Great Basin. The 500-mb low is forecast to move northeastward across western and northern MT to near the southwestern corner of SK by the end of the period. By then, the attached trough will deamplify slightly and become more positively tilted, extending from the low to central UT. A baroclinic leaf with strongly difluent flow aloft precedes the trough in satellite imagery over southeastern ID, western WY and central MT, with an eastward shift and some reinforcement expected today as small vorticity maxima pivot northeastward out of the trough. Meanwhile, an initially separate, weak 500-mb low now over the Red River near PRX, and the remnants of Tropical Storm Francine aloft, are progged to merge over the upper Delta/Mid-South region today into tonight. The result after 06Z should be a slow-moving mid/upper-level low over AR, nearly stacked above the weakening low-level vortex just to the east around MEM. [See NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity guidance on Francine.] An anticyclone aloft should form later today and expand tonight northeast of that low, over the Upper Great Lakes region. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a warm front across northernmost FL to the coastal FL Panhandle, then slightly inland over the western Panhandle, southwestern AL and southeastern MS. This boundary will move slowly northward/inland today, demarcating the north rim of mid-70s F surface dewpoints. Meanwhile, a surface low was drawn over eastern MT west of GDV, with slow-moving cold front south-southwestward across northeastern/central WY. The low and front will continue slow/intermittent eastward progress today, then move into the western Dakotas around 22-00Z, then eastward to the central Dakotas late overnight. ...Northern Great Plains... Strong-severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into evening, along and behind the front, with the most probable severe potential arising from activity moving north-northeastward from northern WY. High-based supercells and multicells are possible, offering large hail and severe gusts. Some of the activity may aggregate upscale into one or two bowing clusters, racing northward accompanied by a swath of better-organized, potentially significant (65+ kt) gust potential. Thunderstorms may develop along the front in early-mid afternoon, as well as in and near the Bighorns, where diurnal heating of elevated terrain preferentially removes MLCINH earliest. A corridor of favorable surface moisture will remain near and behind the front and ahead of this convection. Meanwhile, midlevel temperatures will cool and steepen low/middle-level lapse rates, as large-scale ascent spreads over the area, both ahead of the ejecting mid/upper trough and in the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved 300-mb jet segment. This will occur atop a deep and well-mixed boundary layer containing nearly dry-adiabatic lapse rates. A northerly flow component west of the front will enhance storm-relative winds in the inflow layer, as well as low-level and deep-layer shear, strengthening lift and helping to maintain and further organize the convection. MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg and 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes will support the severe potential. Convection forming later and farther east near the front over the western Dakotas, from late afternoon into evening, also may pose a strong to locally severe gust threat for a few hours, and the marginal outlook area has been expanded eastward somewhat to give more room for that process. Flow aloft will bear a substantial component parallel to the convective axis, indicating a largely training or linear configuration is possible, along the western rim of a 50-60-kt LLJ fostering warm advection and moisture transport above the surface. However, the near-surface airmass over the central Dakotas should stabilize with time and eastward extent tonight, limiting duration and eastward shift of the threat. ...Southeastern CONUS... Tropical Storm Francine is forecast to continue moving northward over MS, and to lose definition as it interacts more closely with the mid/upper-level low. Accordingly, associated deep-layer winds will continue to weaken, but low-level shear will remain favorable through most of the day well east-southeast to southeast of center. A destabilizing airmass along and south of the warm/marine front will support a continued, slow inland shift of supercell potential amid enlarged hodographs. The favorable environment will be bounded on the west by a dry slot and veering low-level flow, on the northeast by unsuitably stable air in heavy precip and north of the front, and on the south by a gradual weakening of low-level winds and shear as the cyclone center pulls away and fills. In the favorable corridor, where inflow parcels are surface-based, expect effective SRH in the 200-500 J/kg range, very rich moisture, low LCL, and weak MLCINH. The threat should diminish overnight as the airmass slowly stabilizes inland, and the system continues to weaken overall. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/12/2024 Read more

SPC Sep 12, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024 Valid 121300Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO NORTH-CENTRAL ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes are possible today, mainly in the morning and afternoon from the Florida Panhandle to north-central Alabama. Scattered large hail and severe gusts (some significant) are expected across the eastern Montana vicinity during the afternoon to early evening. ...Synopsis... Over the CONUS, in mid/upper levels, a highly amplified initial pattern will become more blocky through the period. A strong northern-stream trough with an intermittently closed cyclone is apparent in moisture-channel imagery from the Canadian Rockies southward over ID to the central Great Basin. The 500-mb low is forecast to move northeastward across western and northern MT to near the southwestern corner of SK by the end of the period. By then, the attached trough will deamplify slightly and become more positively tilted, extending from the low to central UT. A baroclinic leaf with strongly difluent flow aloft precedes the trough in satellite imagery over southeastern ID, western WY and central MT, with an eastward shift and some reinforcement expected today as small vorticity maxima pivot northeastward out of the trough. Meanwhile, an initially separate, weak 500-mb low now over the Red River near PRX, and the remnants of Tropical Storm Francine aloft, are progged to merge over the upper Delta/Mid-South region today into tonight. The result after 06Z should be a slow-moving mid/upper-level low over AR, nearly stacked above the weakening low-level vortex just to the east around MEM. [See NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity guidance on Francine.] An anticyclone aloft should form later today and expand tonight northeast of that low, over the Upper Great Lakes region. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a warm front across northernmost FL to the coastal FL Panhandle, then slightly inland over the western Panhandle, southwestern AL and southeastern MS. This boundary will move slowly northward/inland today, demarcating the north rim of mid-70s F surface dewpoints. Meanwhile, a surface low was drawn over eastern MT west of GDV, with slow-moving cold front south-southwestward across northeastern/central WY. The low and front will continue slow/intermittent eastward progress today, then move into the western Dakotas around 22-00Z, then eastward to the central Dakotas late overnight. ...Northern Great Plains... Strong-severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into evening, along and behind the front, with the most probable severe potential arising from activity moving north-northeastward from northern WY. High-based supercells and multicells are possible, offering large hail and severe gusts. Some of the activity may aggregate upscale into one or two bowing clusters, racing northward accompanied by a swath of better-organized, potentially significant (65+ kt) gust potential. Thunderstorms may develop along the front in early-mid afternoon, as well as in and near the Bighorns, where diurnal heating of elevated terrain preferentially removes MLCINH earliest. A corridor of favorable surface moisture will remain near and behind the front and ahead of this convection. Meanwhile, midlevel temperatures will cool and steepen low/middle-level lapse rates, as large-scale ascent spreads over the area, both ahead of the ejecting mid/upper trough and in the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved 300-mb jet segment. This will occur atop a deep and well-mixed boundary layer containing nearly dry-adiabatic lapse rates. A northerly flow component west of the front will enhance storm-relative winds in the inflow layer, as well as low-level and deep-layer shear, strengthening lift and helping to maintain and further organize the convection. MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg and 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes will support the severe potential. Convection forming later and farther east near the front over the western Dakotas, from late afternoon into evening, also may pose a strong to locally severe gust threat for a few hours, and the marginal outlook area has been expanded eastward somewhat to give more room for that process. Flow aloft will bear a substantial component parallel to the convective axis, indicating a largely training or linear configuration is possible, along the western rim of a 50-60-kt LLJ fostering warm advection and moisture transport above the surface. However, the near-surface airmass over the central Dakotas should stabilize with time and eastward extent tonight, limiting duration and eastward shift of the threat. ...Southeastern CONUS... Tropical Storm Francine is forecast to continue moving northward over MS, and to lose definition as it interacts more closely with the mid/upper-level low. Accordingly, associated deep-layer winds will continue to weaken, but low-level shear will remain favorable through most of the day well east-southeast to southeast of center. A destabilizing airmass along and south of the warm/marine front will support a continued, slow inland shift of supercell potential amid enlarged hodographs. The favorable environment will be bounded on the west by a dry slot and veering low-level flow, on the northeast by unsuitably stable air in heavy precip and north of the front, and on the south by a gradual weakening of low-level winds and shear as the cyclone center pulls away and fills. In the favorable corridor, where inflow parcels are surface-based, expect effective SRH in the 200-500 J/kg range, very rich moisture, low LCL, and weak MLCINH. The threat should diminish overnight as the airmass slowly stabilizes inland, and the system continues to weaken overall. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/12/2024 Read more

SPC Sep 12, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024 Valid 121300Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO NORTH-CENTRAL ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes are possible today, mainly in the morning and afternoon from the Florida Panhandle to north-central Alabama. Scattered large hail and severe gusts (some significant) are expected across the eastern Montana vicinity during the afternoon to early evening. ...Synopsis... Over the CONUS, in mid/upper levels, a highly amplified initial pattern will become more blocky through the period. A strong northern-stream trough with an intermittently closed cyclone is apparent in moisture-channel imagery from the Canadian Rockies southward over ID to the central Great Basin. The 500-mb low is forecast to move northeastward across western and northern MT to near the southwestern corner of SK by the end of the period. By then, the attached trough will deamplify slightly and become more positively tilted, extending from the low to central UT. A baroclinic leaf with strongly difluent flow aloft precedes the trough in satellite imagery over southeastern ID, western WY and central MT, with an eastward shift and some reinforcement expected today as small vorticity maxima pivot northeastward out of the trough. Meanwhile, an initially separate, weak 500-mb low now over the Red River near PRX, and the remnants of Tropical Storm Francine aloft, are progged to merge over the upper Delta/Mid-South region today into tonight. The result after 06Z should be a slow-moving mid/upper-level low over AR, nearly stacked above the weakening low-level vortex just to the east around MEM. [See NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity guidance on Francine.] An anticyclone aloft should form later today and expand tonight northeast of that low, over the Upper Great Lakes region. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a warm front across northernmost FL to the coastal FL Panhandle, then slightly inland over the western Panhandle, southwestern AL and southeastern MS. This boundary will move slowly northward/inland today, demarcating the north rim of mid-70s F surface dewpoints. Meanwhile, a surface low was drawn over eastern MT west of GDV, with slow-moving cold front south-southwestward across northeastern/central WY. The low and front will continue slow/intermittent eastward progress today, then move into the western Dakotas around 22-00Z, then eastward to the central Dakotas late overnight. ...Northern Great Plains... Strong-severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into evening, along and behind the front, with the most probable severe potential arising from activity moving north-northeastward from northern WY. High-based supercells and multicells are possible, offering large hail and severe gusts. Some of the activity may aggregate upscale into one or two bowing clusters, racing northward accompanied by a swath of better-organized, potentially significant (65+ kt) gust potential. Thunderstorms may develop along the front in early-mid afternoon, as well as in and near the Bighorns, where diurnal heating of elevated terrain preferentially removes MLCINH earliest. A corridor of favorable surface moisture will remain near and behind the front and ahead of this convection. Meanwhile, midlevel temperatures will cool and steepen low/middle-level lapse rates, as large-scale ascent spreads over the area, both ahead of the ejecting mid/upper trough and in the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved 300-mb jet segment. This will occur atop a deep and well-mixed boundary layer containing nearly dry-adiabatic lapse rates. A northerly flow component west of the front will enhance storm-relative winds in the inflow layer, as well as low-level and deep-layer shear, strengthening lift and helping to maintain and further organize the convection. MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg and 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes will support the severe potential. Convection forming later and farther east near the front over the western Dakotas, from late afternoon into evening, also may pose a strong to locally severe gust threat for a few hours, and the marginal outlook area has been expanded eastward somewhat to give more room for that process. Flow aloft will bear a substantial component parallel to the convective axis, indicating a largely training or linear configuration is possible, along the western rim of a 50-60-kt LLJ fostering warm advection and moisture transport above the surface. However, the near-surface airmass over the central Dakotas should stabilize with time and eastward extent tonight, limiting duration and eastward shift of the threat. ...Southeastern CONUS... Tropical Storm Francine is forecast to continue moving northward over MS, and to lose definition as it interacts more closely with the mid/upper-level low. Accordingly, associated deep-layer winds will continue to weaken, but low-level shear will remain favorable through most of the day well east-southeast to southeast of center. A destabilizing airmass along and south of the warm/marine front will support a continued, slow inland shift of supercell potential amid enlarged hodographs. The favorable environment will be bounded on the west by a dry slot and veering low-level flow, on the northeast by unsuitably stable air in heavy precip and north of the front, and on the south by a gradual weakening of low-level winds and shear as the cyclone center pulls away and fills. In the favorable corridor, where inflow parcels are surface-based, expect effective SRH in the 200-500 J/kg range, very rich moisture, low LCL, and weak MLCINH. The threat should diminish overnight as the airmass slowly stabilizes inland, and the system continues to weaken overall. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/12/2024 Read more

SPC Sep 12, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024 Valid 121300Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO NORTH-CENTRAL ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes are possible today, mainly in the morning and afternoon from the Florida Panhandle to north-central Alabama. Scattered large hail and severe gusts (some significant) are expected across the eastern Montana vicinity during the afternoon to early evening. ...Synopsis... Over the CONUS, in mid/upper levels, a highly amplified initial pattern will become more blocky through the period. A strong northern-stream trough with an intermittently closed cyclone is apparent in moisture-channel imagery from the Canadian Rockies southward over ID to the central Great Basin. The 500-mb low is forecast to move northeastward across western and northern MT to near the southwestern corner of SK by the end of the period. By then, the attached trough will deamplify slightly and become more positively tilted, extending from the low to central UT. A baroclinic leaf with strongly difluent flow aloft precedes the trough in satellite imagery over southeastern ID, western WY and central MT, with an eastward shift and some reinforcement expected today as small vorticity maxima pivot northeastward out of the trough. Meanwhile, an initially separate, weak 500-mb low now over the Red River near PRX, and the remnants of Tropical Storm Francine aloft, are progged to merge over the upper Delta/Mid-South region today into tonight. The result after 06Z should be a slow-moving mid/upper-level low over AR, nearly stacked above the weakening low-level vortex just to the east around MEM. [See NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity guidance on Francine.] An anticyclone aloft should form later today and expand tonight northeast of that low, over the Upper Great Lakes region. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a warm front across northernmost FL to the coastal FL Panhandle, then slightly inland over the western Panhandle, southwestern AL and southeastern MS. This boundary will move slowly northward/inland today, demarcating the north rim of mid-70s F surface dewpoints. Meanwhile, a surface low was drawn over eastern MT west of GDV, with slow-moving cold front south-southwestward across northeastern/central WY. The low and front will continue slow/intermittent eastward progress today, then move into the western Dakotas around 22-00Z, then eastward to the central Dakotas late overnight. ...Northern Great Plains... Strong-severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into evening, along and behind the front, with the most probable severe potential arising from activity moving north-northeastward from northern WY. High-based supercells and multicells are possible, offering large hail and severe gusts. Some of the activity may aggregate upscale into one or two bowing clusters, racing northward accompanied by a swath of better-organized, potentially significant (65+ kt) gust potential. Thunderstorms may develop along the front in early-mid afternoon, as well as in and near the Bighorns, where diurnal heating of elevated terrain preferentially removes MLCINH earliest. A corridor of favorable surface moisture will remain near and behind the front and ahead of this convection. Meanwhile, midlevel temperatures will cool and steepen low/middle-level lapse rates, as large-scale ascent spreads over the area, both ahead of the ejecting mid/upper trough and in the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved 300-mb jet segment. This will occur atop a deep and well-mixed boundary layer containing nearly dry-adiabatic lapse rates. A northerly flow component west of the front will enhance storm-relative winds in the inflow layer, as well as low-level and deep-layer shear, strengthening lift and helping to maintain and further organize the convection. MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg and 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes will support the severe potential. Convection forming later and farther east near the front over the western Dakotas, from late afternoon into evening, also may pose a strong to locally severe gust threat for a few hours, and the marginal outlook area has been expanded eastward somewhat to give more room for that process. Flow aloft will bear a substantial component parallel to the convective axis, indicating a largely training or linear configuration is possible, along the western rim of a 50-60-kt LLJ fostering warm advection and moisture transport above the surface. However, the near-surface airmass over the central Dakotas should stabilize with time and eastward extent tonight, limiting duration and eastward shift of the threat. ...Southeastern CONUS... Tropical Storm Francine is forecast to continue moving northward over MS, and to lose definition as it interacts more closely with the mid/upper-level low. Accordingly, associated deep-layer winds will continue to weaken, but low-level shear will remain favorable through most of the day well east-southeast to southeast of center. A destabilizing airmass along and south of the warm/marine front will support a continued, slow inland shift of supercell potential amid enlarged hodographs. The favorable environment will be bounded on the west by a dry slot and veering low-level flow, on the northeast by unsuitably stable air in heavy precip and north of the front, and on the south by a gradual weakening of low-level winds and shear as the cyclone center pulls away and fills. In the favorable corridor, where inflow parcels are surface-based, expect effective SRH in the 200-500 J/kg range, very rich moisture, low LCL, and weak MLCINH. The threat should diminish overnight as the airmass slowly stabilizes inland, and the system continues to weaken overall. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/12/2024 Read more

SPC Sep 12, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024 Valid 121300Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO NORTH-CENTRAL ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes are possible today, mainly in the morning and afternoon from the Florida Panhandle to north-central Alabama. Scattered large hail and severe gusts (some significant) are expected across the eastern Montana vicinity during the afternoon to early evening. ...Synopsis... Over the CONUS, in mid/upper levels, a highly amplified initial pattern will become more blocky through the period. A strong northern-stream trough with an intermittently closed cyclone is apparent in moisture-channel imagery from the Canadian Rockies southward over ID to the central Great Basin. The 500-mb low is forecast to move northeastward across western and northern MT to near the southwestern corner of SK by the end of the period. By then, the attached trough will deamplify slightly and become more positively tilted, extending from the low to central UT. A baroclinic leaf with strongly difluent flow aloft precedes the trough in satellite imagery over southeastern ID, western WY and central MT, with an eastward shift and some reinforcement expected today as small vorticity maxima pivot northeastward out of the trough. Meanwhile, an initially separate, weak 500-mb low now over the Red River near PRX, and the remnants of Tropical Storm Francine aloft, are progged to merge over the upper Delta/Mid-South region today into tonight. The result after 06Z should be a slow-moving mid/upper-level low over AR, nearly stacked above the weakening low-level vortex just to the east around MEM. [See NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity guidance on Francine.] An anticyclone aloft should form later today and expand tonight northeast of that low, over the Upper Great Lakes region. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a warm front across northernmost FL to the coastal FL Panhandle, then slightly inland over the western Panhandle, southwestern AL and southeastern MS. This boundary will move slowly northward/inland today, demarcating the north rim of mid-70s F surface dewpoints. Meanwhile, a surface low was drawn over eastern MT west of GDV, with slow-moving cold front south-southwestward across northeastern/central WY. The low and front will continue slow/intermittent eastward progress today, then move into the western Dakotas around 22-00Z, then eastward to the central Dakotas late overnight. ...Northern Great Plains... Strong-severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into evening, along and behind the front, with the most probable severe potential arising from activity moving north-northeastward from northern WY. High-based supercells and multicells are possible, offering large hail and severe gusts. Some of the activity may aggregate upscale into one or two bowing clusters, racing northward accompanied by a swath of better-organized, potentially significant (65+ kt) gust potential. Thunderstorms may develop along the front in early-mid afternoon, as well as in and near the Bighorns, where diurnal heating of elevated terrain preferentially removes MLCINH earliest. A corridor of favorable surface moisture will remain near and behind the front and ahead of this convection. Meanwhile, midlevel temperatures will cool and steepen low/middle-level lapse rates, as large-scale ascent spreads over the area, both ahead of the ejecting mid/upper trough and in the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved 300-mb jet segment. This will occur atop a deep and well-mixed boundary layer containing nearly dry-adiabatic lapse rates. A northerly flow component west of the front will enhance storm-relative winds in the inflow layer, as well as low-level and deep-layer shear, strengthening lift and helping to maintain and further organize the convection. MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg and 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes will support the severe potential. Convection forming later and farther east near the front over the western Dakotas, from late afternoon into evening, also may pose a strong to locally severe gust threat for a few hours, and the marginal outlook area has been expanded eastward somewhat to give more room for that process. Flow aloft will bear a substantial component parallel to the convective axis, indicating a largely training or linear configuration is possible, along the western rim of a 50-60-kt LLJ fostering warm advection and moisture transport above the surface. However, the near-surface airmass over the central Dakotas should stabilize with time and eastward extent tonight, limiting duration and eastward shift of the threat. ...Southeastern CONUS... Tropical Storm Francine is forecast to continue moving northward over MS, and to lose definition as it interacts more closely with the mid/upper-level low. Accordingly, associated deep-layer winds will continue to weaken, but low-level shear will remain favorable through most of the day well east-southeast to southeast of center. A destabilizing airmass along and south of the warm/marine front will support a continued, slow inland shift of supercell potential amid enlarged hodographs. The favorable environment will be bounded on the west by a dry slot and veering low-level flow, on the northeast by unsuitably stable air in heavy precip and north of the front, and on the south by a gradual weakening of low-level winds and shear as the cyclone center pulls away and fills. In the favorable corridor, where inflow parcels are surface-based, expect effective SRH in the 200-500 J/kg range, very rich moisture, low LCL, and weak MLCINH. The threat should diminish overnight as the airmass slowly stabilizes inland, and the system continues to weaken overall. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/12/2024 Read more

SPC Sep 12, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024 Valid 121300Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO NORTH-CENTRAL ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes are possible today, mainly in the morning and afternoon from the Florida Panhandle to north-central Alabama. Scattered large hail and severe gusts (some significant) are expected across the eastern Montana vicinity during the afternoon to early evening. ...Synopsis... Over the CONUS, in mid/upper levels, a highly amplified initial pattern will become more blocky through the period. A strong northern-stream trough with an intermittently closed cyclone is apparent in moisture-channel imagery from the Canadian Rockies southward over ID to the central Great Basin. The 500-mb low is forecast to move northeastward across western and northern MT to near the southwestern corner of SK by the end of the period. By then, the attached trough will deamplify slightly and become more positively tilted, extending from the low to central UT. A baroclinic leaf with strongly difluent flow aloft precedes the trough in satellite imagery over southeastern ID, western WY and central MT, with an eastward shift and some reinforcement expected today as small vorticity maxima pivot northeastward out of the trough. Meanwhile, an initially separate, weak 500-mb low now over the Red River near PRX, and the remnants of Tropical Storm Francine aloft, are progged to merge over the upper Delta/Mid-South region today into tonight. The result after 06Z should be a slow-moving mid/upper-level low over AR, nearly stacked above the weakening low-level vortex just to the east around MEM. [See NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity guidance on Francine.] An anticyclone aloft should form later today and expand tonight northeast of that low, over the Upper Great Lakes region. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a warm front across northernmost FL to the coastal FL Panhandle, then slightly inland over the western Panhandle, southwestern AL and southeastern MS. This boundary will move slowly northward/inland today, demarcating the north rim of mid-70s F surface dewpoints. Meanwhile, a surface low was drawn over eastern MT west of GDV, with slow-moving cold front south-southwestward across northeastern/central WY. The low and front will continue slow/intermittent eastward progress today, then move into the western Dakotas around 22-00Z, then eastward to the central Dakotas late overnight. ...Northern Great Plains... Strong-severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into evening, along and behind the front, with the most probable severe potential arising from activity moving north-northeastward from northern WY. High-based supercells and multicells are possible, offering large hail and severe gusts. Some of the activity may aggregate upscale into one or two bowing clusters, racing northward accompanied by a swath of better-organized, potentially significant (65+ kt) gust potential. Thunderstorms may develop along the front in early-mid afternoon, as well as in and near the Bighorns, where diurnal heating of elevated terrain preferentially removes MLCINH earliest. A corridor of favorable surface moisture will remain near and behind the front and ahead of this convection. Meanwhile, midlevel temperatures will cool and steepen low/middle-level lapse rates, as large-scale ascent spreads over the area, both ahead of the ejecting mid/upper trough and in the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved 300-mb jet segment. This will occur atop a deep and well-mixed boundary layer containing nearly dry-adiabatic lapse rates. A northerly flow component west of the front will enhance storm-relative winds in the inflow layer, as well as low-level and deep-layer shear, strengthening lift and helping to maintain and further organize the convection. MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg and 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes will support the severe potential. Convection forming later and farther east near the front over the western Dakotas, from late afternoon into evening, also may pose a strong to locally severe gust threat for a few hours, and the marginal outlook area has been expanded eastward somewhat to give more room for that process. Flow aloft will bear a substantial component parallel to the convective axis, indicating a largely training or linear configuration is possible, along the western rim of a 50-60-kt LLJ fostering warm advection and moisture transport above the surface. However, the near-surface airmass over the central Dakotas should stabilize with time and eastward extent tonight, limiting duration and eastward shift of the threat. ...Southeastern CONUS... Tropical Storm Francine is forecast to continue moving northward over MS, and to lose definition as it interacts more closely with the mid/upper-level low. Accordingly, associated deep-layer winds will continue to weaken, but low-level shear will remain favorable through most of the day well east-southeast to southeast of center. A destabilizing airmass along and south of the warm/marine front will support a continued, slow inland shift of supercell potential amid enlarged hodographs. The favorable environment will be bounded on the west by a dry slot and veering low-level flow, on the northeast by unsuitably stable air in heavy precip and north of the front, and on the south by a gradual weakening of low-level winds and shear as the cyclone center pulls away and fills. In the favorable corridor, where inflow parcels are surface-based, expect effective SRH in the 200-500 J/kg range, very rich moisture, low LCL, and weak MLCINH. The threat should diminish overnight as the airmass slowly stabilizes inland, and the system continues to weaken overall. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/12/2024 Read more

SPC Sep 12, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024 Valid 121300Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO NORTH-CENTRAL ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes are possible today, mainly in the morning and afternoon from the Florida Panhandle to north-central Alabama. Scattered large hail and severe gusts (some significant) are expected across the eastern Montana vicinity during the afternoon to early evening. ...Synopsis... Over the CONUS, in mid/upper levels, a highly amplified initial pattern will become more blocky through the period. A strong northern-stream trough with an intermittently closed cyclone is apparent in moisture-channel imagery from the Canadian Rockies southward over ID to the central Great Basin. The 500-mb low is forecast to move northeastward across western and northern MT to near the southwestern corner of SK by the end of the period. By then, the attached trough will deamplify slightly and become more positively tilted, extending from the low to central UT. A baroclinic leaf with strongly difluent flow aloft precedes the trough in satellite imagery over southeastern ID, western WY and central MT, with an eastward shift and some reinforcement expected today as small vorticity maxima pivot northeastward out of the trough. Meanwhile, an initially separate, weak 500-mb low now over the Red River near PRX, and the remnants of Tropical Storm Francine aloft, are progged to merge over the upper Delta/Mid-South region today into tonight. The result after 06Z should be a slow-moving mid/upper-level low over AR, nearly stacked above the weakening low-level vortex just to the east around MEM. [See NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity guidance on Francine.] An anticyclone aloft should form later today and expand tonight northeast of that low, over the Upper Great Lakes region. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a warm front across northernmost FL to the coastal FL Panhandle, then slightly inland over the western Panhandle, southwestern AL and southeastern MS. This boundary will move slowly northward/inland today, demarcating the north rim of mid-70s F surface dewpoints. Meanwhile, a surface low was drawn over eastern MT west of GDV, with slow-moving cold front south-southwestward across northeastern/central WY. The low and front will continue slow/intermittent eastward progress today, then move into the western Dakotas around 22-00Z, then eastward to the central Dakotas late overnight. ...Northern Great Plains... Strong-severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into evening, along and behind the front, with the most probable severe potential arising from activity moving north-northeastward from northern WY. High-based supercells and multicells are possible, offering large hail and severe gusts. Some of the activity may aggregate upscale into one or two bowing clusters, racing northward accompanied by a swath of better-organized, potentially significant (65+ kt) gust potential. Thunderstorms may develop along the front in early-mid afternoon, as well as in and near the Bighorns, where diurnal heating of elevated terrain preferentially removes MLCINH earliest. A corridor of favorable surface moisture will remain near and behind the front and ahead of this convection. Meanwhile, midlevel temperatures will cool and steepen low/middle-level lapse rates, as large-scale ascent spreads over the area, both ahead of the ejecting mid/upper trough and in the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved 300-mb jet segment. This will occur atop a deep and well-mixed boundary layer containing nearly dry-adiabatic lapse rates. A northerly flow component west of the front will enhance storm-relative winds in the inflow layer, as well as low-level and deep-layer shear, strengthening lift and helping to maintain and further organize the convection. MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg and 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes will support the severe potential. Convection forming later and farther east near the front over the western Dakotas, from late afternoon into evening, also may pose a strong to locally severe gust threat for a few hours, and the marginal outlook area has been expanded eastward somewhat to give more room for that process. Flow aloft will bear a substantial component parallel to the convective axis, indicating a largely training or linear configuration is possible, along the western rim of a 50-60-kt LLJ fostering warm advection and moisture transport above the surface. However, the near-surface airmass over the central Dakotas should stabilize with time and eastward extent tonight, limiting duration and eastward shift of the threat. ...Southeastern CONUS... Tropical Storm Francine is forecast to continue moving northward over MS, and to lose definition as it interacts more closely with the mid/upper-level low. Accordingly, associated deep-layer winds will continue to weaken, but low-level shear will remain favorable through most of the day well east-southeast to southeast of center. A destabilizing airmass along and south of the warm/marine front will support a continued, slow inland shift of supercell potential amid enlarged hodographs. The favorable environment will be bounded on the west by a dry slot and veering low-level flow, on the northeast by unsuitably stable air in heavy precip and north of the front, and on the south by a gradual weakening of low-level winds and shear as the cyclone center pulls away and fills. In the favorable corridor, where inflow parcels are surface-based, expect effective SRH in the 200-500 J/kg range, very rich moisture, low LCL, and weak MLCINH. The threat should diminish overnight as the airmass slowly stabilizes inland, and the system continues to weaken overall. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/12/2024 Read more

SPC Sep 12, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024 Valid 121300Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO NORTH-CENTRAL ALABAMA... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes are possible today, mainly in the morning and afternoon from the Florida Panhandle to north-central Alabama. Scattered large hail and severe gusts (some significant) are expected across the eastern Montana vicinity during the afternoon to early evening. ...Synopsis... Over the CONUS, in mid/upper levels, a highly amplified initial pattern will become more blocky through the period. A strong northern-stream trough with an intermittently closed cyclone is apparent in moisture-channel imagery from the Canadian Rockies southward over ID to the central Great Basin. The 500-mb low is forecast to move northeastward across western and northern MT to near the southwestern corner of SK by the end of the period. By then, the attached trough will deamplify slightly and become more positively tilted, extending from the low to central UT. A baroclinic leaf with strongly difluent flow aloft precedes the trough in satellite imagery over southeastern ID, western WY and central MT, with an eastward shift and some reinforcement expected today as small vorticity maxima pivot northeastward out of the trough. Meanwhile, an initially separate, weak 500-mb low now over the Red River near PRX, and the remnants of Tropical Storm Francine aloft, are progged to merge over the upper Delta/Mid-South region today into tonight. The result after 06Z should be a slow-moving mid/upper-level low over AR, nearly stacked above the weakening low-level vortex just to the east around MEM. [See NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity guidance on Francine.] An anticyclone aloft should form later today and expand tonight northeast of that low, over the Upper Great Lakes region. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a warm front across northernmost FL to the coastal FL Panhandle, then slightly inland over the western Panhandle, southwestern AL and southeastern MS. This boundary will move slowly northward/inland today, demarcating the north rim of mid-70s F surface dewpoints. Meanwhile, a surface low was drawn over eastern MT west of GDV, with slow-moving cold front south-southwestward across northeastern/central WY. The low and front will continue slow/intermittent eastward progress today, then move into the western Dakotas around 22-00Z, then eastward to the central Dakotas late overnight. ...Northern Great Plains... Strong-severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into evening, along and behind the front, with the most probable severe potential arising from activity moving north-northeastward from northern WY. High-based supercells and multicells are possible, offering large hail and severe gusts. Some of the activity may aggregate upscale into one or two bowing clusters, racing northward accompanied by a swath of better-organized, potentially significant (65+ kt) gust potential. Thunderstorms may develop along the front in early-mid afternoon, as well as in and near the Bighorns, where diurnal heating of elevated terrain preferentially removes MLCINH earliest. A corridor of favorable surface moisture will remain near and behind the front and ahead of this convection. Meanwhile, midlevel temperatures will cool and steepen low/middle-level lapse rates, as large-scale ascent spreads over the area, both ahead of the ejecting mid/upper trough and in the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved 300-mb jet segment. This will occur atop a deep and well-mixed boundary layer containing nearly dry-adiabatic lapse rates. A northerly flow component west of the front will enhance storm-relative winds in the inflow layer, as well as low-level and deep-layer shear, strengthening lift and helping to maintain and further organize the convection. MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg and 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes will support the severe potential. Convection forming later and farther east near the front over the western Dakotas, from late afternoon into evening, also may pose a strong to locally severe gust threat for a few hours, and the marginal outlook area has been expanded eastward somewhat to give more room for that process. Flow aloft will bear a substantial component parallel to the convective axis, indicating a largely training or linear configuration is possible, along the western rim of a 50-60-kt LLJ fostering warm advection and moisture transport above the surface. However, the near-surface airmass over the central Dakotas should stabilize with time and eastward extent tonight, limiting duration and eastward shift of the threat. ...Southeastern CONUS... Tropical Storm Francine is forecast to continue moving northward over MS, and to lose definition as it interacts more closely with the mid/upper-level low. Accordingly, associated deep-layer winds will continue to weaken, but low-level shear will remain favorable through most of the day well east-southeast to southeast of center. A destabilizing airmass along and south of the warm/marine front will support a continued, slow inland shift of supercell potential amid enlarged hodographs. The favorable environment will be bounded on the west by a dry slot and veering low-level flow, on the northeast by unsuitably stable air in heavy precip and north of the front, and on the south by a gradual weakening of low-level winds and shear as the cyclone center pulls away and fills. In the favorable corridor, where inflow parcels are surface-based, expect effective SRH in the 200-500 J/kg range, very rich moisture, low LCL, and weak MLCINH. The threat should diminish overnight as the airmass slowly stabilizes inland, and the system continues to weaken overall. ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/12/2024 Read more

SPC MD 2058

1 year ago
MD 2058 CONCERNING TORNADO WATCH 668... FOR SOUTHERN ALABAMA AND THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE
Mesoscale Discussion 2058 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0501 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024 Areas affected...southern Alabama and the Florida Panhandle Concerning...Tornado Watch 668... Valid 121001Z - 121300Z The severe weather threat for Tornado Watch 668 continues. SUMMARY...A risk for showers and thunderstorms with potential to produce tornadoes may linger near coastal areas of the western Florida Panhandle beyond daybreak. Farther inland this potential appears more limited, but could increase some across parts of southern into central Alabama toward 10-11 AM CDT. A new Tornado Watch will be issued prior to expiration of Tornado Watch 668. DISCUSSION...The surface low associated with Francine is now progressing into south central Mississippi, near/southeast to east of McComb. Based on the surface pressure fall/rise couplet evident in observational data, the center may gradually take on a more northerly to north-northwesterly track toward the Jackson vicinity into mid morning. As this occurs, strongest low-level wind fields are forecast to continue shifting inland to the north and northeast of the circulation, generally above a residually stable boundary-layer air mass. However, low-level hodographs continue to become enlarged and clockwise curved across and inland of the coastal western Florida Panhandle, and model forecast soundings suggest that these profiles, potentially conducive to convection with occasionally strengthening mesocyclones and a risk for tornadoes, may persist beyond daybreak. Complicating the tornadic potential, mid/upper 70s surface dew points have largely remained confined to the offshore waters, maintaining stable conditions inland of perhaps immediate coastal areas. This may not change much into the 13-14Z time frame. Farther inland, at least some surface warming may increasingly begin to destabilize the boundary-layer northward through portions of south central Alabama by 15-16Z. However, based on forecast soundings, it remains uncertain whether this will occur before low-level wind fields/hodographs become less conducive to tornadic potential, as Francine continues a northward track. ..Kerr.. 09/12/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...TAE...BMX...MOB... LAT...LON 29598527 30088608 30218694 30778733 31348780 31948787 32148708 31798609 31148504 30308497 29598527 Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 669 Status Reports

1 year ago
WW 0669 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 669 THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA. ..KERR..09/12/24 ATTN...WFO...MOB...TAE... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 669 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ALC013-031-035-039-041-045-053-061-067-069-099-131-121340- AL . ALABAMA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BUTLER COFFEE CONECUH COVINGTON CRENSHAW DALE ESCAMBIA GENEVA HENRY HOUSTON MONROE WILCOX FLC005-013-033-037-045-059-063-077-091-113-129-131-133-121340- FL . FLORIDA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BAY CALHOUN ESCAMBIA FRANKLIN GULF HOLMES JACKSON LIBERTY OKALOOSA SANTA ROSA WAKULLA WALTON WASHINGTON GMZ633-634-635-636-655-730-750-752-755-121340- CW Read more

Eastern North Pacific Tropical Weather Outlook

1 year ago

000
ABPZ20 KNHC 121120
TWOEP

Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
500 AM PDT Thu Sep 12 2024

For the eastern North Pacific...east of 140 degrees west longitude:

Offshore of Southwestern Mexico (EP93):
Showers and thunderstorms associated with an area of low pressure
located less than 200 miles southwest of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
continue to become better organized. Environmental conditions
appear conducive for additional development, and a tropical
depression or tropical storm is expected to form later today or
tonight. Interests in the Mexican states of Baja California Sur,
Sinaloa, and Sonora should closely monitor the progress of this
system. Tropical Storm Warnings and Watches will likely be required
for some of those locations later this morning. Regardless of
development heavy rainfall is likely across portions of those
locations.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...high...90 percent.
* Formation chance through 7 days...high...90 percent.

$$
Forecaster Hagen
NHC Webmaster

SPC Tornado Watch 668 Status Reports

1 year ago
WW 0668 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 668 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 60 SSW PNS TO 40 SW PNS TO 20 NNE MOB TO 50 N MOB. A NEW TORNADO WW WILL BE ISSUED PRIOR TO 12/11Z. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SEE MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 2058. ..KERR..09/12/24 ATTN...WFO...MOB...TAE...LIX...JAN... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 668 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ALC003-097-129-121100- AL . ALABAMA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BALDWIN MOBILE WASHINGTON FLC005-033-091-113-131-121100- FL . FLORIDA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BAY ESCAMBIA OKALOOSA SANTA ROSA WALTON GMZ630-631-633-634-635-636-650-655-675-750-770-121100- CW Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 668 Status Reports

1 year ago
WW 0668 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 668 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 60 SSW PNS TO 40 SW PNS TO 20 NNE MOB TO 50 N MOB. A NEW TORNADO WW WILL BE ISSUED PRIOR TO 12/11Z. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SEE MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 2058. ..KERR..09/12/24 ATTN...WFO...MOB...TAE...LIX...JAN... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 668 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ALC003-097-129-121100- AL . ALABAMA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BALDWIN MOBILE WASHINGTON FLC005-033-091-113-131-121100- FL . FLORIDA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BAY ESCAMBIA OKALOOSA SANTA ROSA WALTON GMZ630-631-633-634-635-636-650-655-675-750-770-121100- CW Read more