SPC May 23, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1119 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS EVENING AND TONIGHT OVER PORTIONS OF NEBRASKA AND WESTERN IOWA... ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE PLAINS STATES...MAINE...AND THE TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible today across parts of the Plains, Tennessee Valley, and Maine. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Northern Plains... Visible satellite imagery shows strong daytime heating occurring across much of the central and northern Plains, with southerly low-level winds drawing moisture northward into the region. Dewpoints will only be in the 50s across ND/SD/NE/KS this afternoon as initial thunderstorms develop ahead of a potent upper trough and associated mid-level speed max. These initial storms will be relatively high-based supercells capable of very large hail and damaging winds. A tornado or two is also possible. As the evening progresses, model guidance is in strong agreement that storms will grow upscale into a fast-moving QLCS with an enhanced risk of damaging winds across much of central/eastern NE into western IA. ...Southern Plains... Multiple rounds of thunderstorms over TX during the past 24 hours have resulted in a complex surface pattern, with pockets of low-clouds and more stable air. This tends to limit the confidence in where robust thunderstorms will form later today. Two areas of concern are 1) western OK/northwest TX along the dryline, and 2) central/north TX in vicinity of remnant outflow boundaries. In both areas, very large CAPE values and favorable vertical profiles will favor supercell storms capable of very large hail, damaging winds, and a tornado or two. Considered adding an small ENH to western OK, but there wasn't sufficient confidence on where to place it. ...Maine... Thunderstorms are beginning to develop along a cold front extending from NH into Quebec. Strong heating is occurring ahead of the front across ME, where a few severe storms are possible later today. See MCD #909 for further details. ...TN Valley... Strong heating is ongoing across parts of middle/east TN and central KY. Dewpoints near 70F will likely lead to a cluster of thunderstorms this afternoon. Forecast soundings show sufficient westerly flow aloft and steep low-level lapse rates to pose a risk of damaging wind gusts and hail in the strongest cells. ..Hart/Wendt.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1119 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS EVENING AND TONIGHT OVER PORTIONS OF NEBRASKA AND WESTERN IOWA... ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE PLAINS STATES...MAINE...AND THE TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible today across parts of the Plains, Tennessee Valley, and Maine. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Northern Plains... Visible satellite imagery shows strong daytime heating occurring across much of the central and northern Plains, with southerly low-level winds drawing moisture northward into the region. Dewpoints will only be in the 50s across ND/SD/NE/KS this afternoon as initial thunderstorms develop ahead of a potent upper trough and associated mid-level speed max. These initial storms will be relatively high-based supercells capable of very large hail and damaging winds. A tornado or two is also possible. As the evening progresses, model guidance is in strong agreement that storms will grow upscale into a fast-moving QLCS with an enhanced risk of damaging winds across much of central/eastern NE into western IA. ...Southern Plains... Multiple rounds of thunderstorms over TX during the past 24 hours have resulted in a complex surface pattern, with pockets of low-clouds and more stable air. This tends to limit the confidence in where robust thunderstorms will form later today. Two areas of concern are 1) western OK/northwest TX along the dryline, and 2) central/north TX in vicinity of remnant outflow boundaries. In both areas, very large CAPE values and favorable vertical profiles will favor supercell storms capable of very large hail, damaging winds, and a tornado or two. Considered adding an small ENH to western OK, but there wasn't sufficient confidence on where to place it. ...Maine... Thunderstorms are beginning to develop along a cold front extending from NH into Quebec. Strong heating is occurring ahead of the front across ME, where a few severe storms are possible later today. See MCD #909 for further details. ...TN Valley... Strong heating is ongoing across parts of middle/east TN and central KY. Dewpoints near 70F will likely lead to a cluster of thunderstorms this afternoon. Forecast soundings show sufficient westerly flow aloft and steep low-level lapse rates to pose a risk of damaging wind gusts and hail in the strongest cells. ..Hart/Wendt.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC MD 908

1 year 2 months ago
MD 0908 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND
Mesoscale Discussion 0908 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0911 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Areas affected...Southern New England Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely Valid 231411Z - 231615Z Probability of Watch Issuance...20 percent SUMMARY...Storms associated with an MCV will be capable of wind damage. A watch is not currently expected, but convective trends will be monitored. DISCUSSION...Convection associated with an MCV has produced occasional wind damage in eastern Pennsylvania into far southeastern New York and parts of the NYC metro. Large hail was also reported with a stronger cell in Westchester County. VAD data from local radars/profilers do not suggest a strong rear-inflow jet with the primary linear segment moving across Long Island. Temperatures and dewpoints ahead of this activity are cooler/drier than in northern New Jersey/NYC metro. However, forcing from the MCV may allow convection to continue roughly along the southern New England coast this morning. Weak lapse rates and buoyancy should keep the threat marginal, but occasional strong wind gusts capable of wind damage are possible. A watch is not expected, but trends will continue to be monitored this morning. ..Wendt/Hart.. 05/23/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...BOX...OKX...PHI... LAT...LON 41067426 41667248 42027082 42047002 41596977 40877113 40207321 39707424 41067426 Read more

SPC MD 907

1 year 2 months ago
MD 0907 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN ARKANSAS
Mesoscale Discussion 0907 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0804 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Areas affected...central and southern Arkansas Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely Valid 231304Z - 231500Z Probability of Watch Issuance...20 percent SUMMARY...A strong gust or two -- or marginal hailstone -- will remain possible across central/southern Arkansas over the next couple of hours. Marginal/isolated nature of the risk should preclude WW issuance. DISCUSSION...Latest radar loop shows storms over southwestern Arkansas evolving a bit upscale linearly, with some bowing evident -- suggesting an at least somewhat-organized cold pool. Flow through the lower troposphere remains moderate/southwesterly, and thus not overly supporting well-organized storms. Additionally the morning LZK RAOB reveals an anticipated/nocturnally induced weakly stable surface-based layer. These factors should act to limit overall wind risk, but with a stronger gust or two possible. Marginal hail near severe levels may occur with a stronger updraft or two. Overall however, given limited local risk apparent at this time, WW issuance is not expected at this time. ..Goss/Edwards.. 05/23/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...JAN...LZK...SHV... LAT...LON 33809426 34009366 34439339 34809272 35199193 34979133 34209118 33479147 33179213 33409400 33809426 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0757 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible across a broad swath of the Great Plains this afternoon into tonight, with a few tornadoes and isolated very large hail. A concentration of severe winds -- some 75 mph or more -- is expected across a portion of the central Plains this evening into tonight. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a progressive flow belt will cover much of the CONUS, to the southeast through southwest of a persistent, somewhat flattened, quasistationary cyclone over the Canadian Prairie Provinces. This cyclone is loosely attached to another that is located over northern ON, and forecast to devolve into an open-wave trough as it moves into western/southern QC by 12Z tomorrow. The southern part of a preceding vorticity lobe will brush the St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England through 00Z. Meanwhile, another mid/upper low -- now over the northern Rockies -- should become part of a strong, open-wave trough by 00Z from eastern MT to eastern UT. This trough should pivot eastward to the Dakotas and NE by 12Z. To its south, a series of low-amplitude perturbations and vorticity lobes (some convectively generated/ enhanced) occupied the extensive west-southwest flow field from the Desert Southwest to the Appalachians. One of these -- now over southern OK and north TX -- is influencing ongoing convection from southeastern OK across AR -- and will move across the Mid-South and Tennessee Valley regions into tonight. Behind it, similar perturbations are apparent in moisture-channel imagery over Chihuahua, and over southeastern AZ/southwestern NM. These should reach central and northwest TX by 00Z. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over east-central/ southeastern WY near TOR, with synoptic warm front over northern SD and southern MN. As the shortwave trough approaches, the low should deepen sharply and move to near PIR by 00Z, with cold front over western NE and northeastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach eastern ND, with the cold front to northwestern IA, southeastern NE, south-central KS, and the TX South Plains. A warm to quasistationary front was drawn across the Red River region of TX/ OK, to the lower/middle Ohio Valley, becoming a cold front over parts of PA/upstate NY. This boundary will move eastward through the northern Appalachians, New England and much of the Mid-Atlantic through the period, while diffusely shifting northward amid areas of convection over the Mid-South and southern Plains. A dryline -- initially analyzed from the Big Bend region of TX across extreme eastern NM -- will develop northward over western parts of KS/NE today while the airmass to the east moistens. This boundary also will shift eastward into the eastern TX Panhandle near the OK border, as well as northwest/west-central TX through the afternoon. ...Central/northern Plains... Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening along parts of the warm and cold front near the surface low, with supercells possible in the first 2-3 hours. Damaging gusts, large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible. With relatively strong deep-layer and frontal forcing superimposed ahead of the progressive Rockies shortwave trough, an organized band of strong-severe thunderstorms should evolve along/ahead of the cold front and move southeastward across parts of the Dakotas and NE, eventually backbuilding into northern KS tonight as the cold front overtakes the dryline. This will cause the severe threat to transition more toward wind, with a swath of significant wind (65+ kt) potentially accompanying the QLCS. A few tornadoes also are possible with embedded mesocirculations near its edge. Though not optimally moist for the time of year, a corridor of 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints should become common this afternoon between the warm and cold fronts, combining with diurnal heating and steep midlevel lapse rates to support 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE. 45-55 kt effective-shear magnitudes should be common, with larger values possible near the warm front and low (but also, weaker instability). This will support both early supercells and persistence of the upscale MCS into parts of the central Plains and lower Missouri Valley regions. The southern end of well-organized, severe-wind potential over KS may be limited by residual outflow air advecting into the area from the south, while the eastern/northern ends are more uncertain. Although no change was made to the area of greatest wind probabilities this cycle, some reshaping of the "enhanced" area may be needed through the day as informed by 12Z and later guidance, as well as mesoscale analytic trends. However, with longer persistence of the MCS possible across IA/MO tonight, parts of the "slight" and "marginal" equivalent probabilities have been expanded eastward. ...Southern Plains... The width of the convectively undisturbed warm sector ahead of the southern Plains dryline is still uncertain, as considerable variability exists in progs for upscale growth of convection now manifest as a small but growing cluster over the Edwards Plateau/Hill Country/Concho Valley regions. This activity may produce sporadic large hail and damaging wind as well, through the remainder of the morning, as it proceeds across portions of central TX, with wind potential conditionally increasing where aggregation of cold pools can drive strongest forward propagation. Outflow and related theta-e deficits from any resulting complex will be advected northward into north TX and OK, with ambient theta-e decreasing northward into KS. Still, a corridor of favorable moisture should advect around the west (back) side of any such cold pool today and support isolated to widely scattered dryline development from northwest TX into parts of western OK/KS. Any sustained convection arising from that process may become supercellular, with all severe modes possible, and very large/ damaging hail a strong possibility. The least-modified air by earlier activity will have surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F beneath EML-related steep lapse rates, fostering 3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Long low-level hodographs will favor splitting storms, especially in the first couple hours after initiation, with some LLJ-aided enlargement possible in the 00-03Z time frame before parcels begin to stabilize unfavorably near the surface. ...Mid-South to Mid-Atlantic and New England... Isolated to scattered thunderstorms -- sometimes in small bands or clusters -- will persist through this afternoon along/ahead of the front from the Northeast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Areas of relative concentration within this belt will depend strongly on mesoscale boundary interactions ahead of the front (outflow and differential heating, as well as a prefrontal surface trough in the Northeast). Midlevel lapse rates, intensity of diurnal heating, and boundary-layer moisture each should generally decrease with northeastward extent. This should contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg range around the lower/middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys to 500-1500 J/kg over parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Somewhat favorable deep shear amidst nearly unidirectional wind profiles will support potential for occasional damaging to isolated severe gusts throughout the Atlantic Coast States part of the corridor. A patchy distribution of marginal severe (hail and wind), with some mesobeta-scale concentrations possible, is expected across the remainder of the "marginal risk" swath. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/23/2024 Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0357 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 261200Z - 311200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sun - Ozarks, Mid-MS/Lower OH/TN Valleys... A regional severe weather episode is expected on Day 4/Sunday. Significant severe thunderstorms capable of all hazards will be possible. An upper trough will overspread the region, resulting in a corridor of strong southwesterly mid/upper flow overlapping a very moist and strongly unstable airmass. Forecast guidance depicts a 700 mb southwesterly jet around 45-60 kt over the Mid-MS/Lower OH Valley vicinity. Meanwhile, a surface low near northeast KS/northwest MO at the beginning of the period will deepen as it lifts northeast toward Lake Michigan through the evening. A cold front will develop east across the region from late afternoon into the overnight hours. Ahead of the front, mid/upper 60s F dewpoints are expected. Steep midlevel lapse rates atop this moist boundary layer will support strong destabilization. Convection will likely be ongoing Sunday morning across parts of the Mid-MS/Lower MO Valley. The evolution of this activity is a bit uncertain, but may continue to develop east along a warm front draped across northern IL/IN. Additional convection is expected across the warm sector from southeast MO/northwest AR eastward into TN/KY. While storm mode/evolution remains a bit uncertain at this time (may be a mix of supercells and more linear convection), supercell wind profiles coupled with favorable thermodynamics will support all-hazards severe potential across a broad area during the day and into the nighttime hours. ...Day 5/Mon - Mid-Atlantic to the Southeast... Spread among forecast guidance increases considerably on Monday and various models evolve the central U.S. upper trough quite a bit differently. If a more progressive system prevails, favorable vertical shear and large-scale ascent will overspread parts of the Mid-Atlantic vicinity (decreasing with southward extent into the Southeast). Severe-storm potential may develop ahead of an east/southeastward-advancing cold front if this scenario unfolds. However, uncertainty precludes introduction of 15 percent severe probabilities at this time. ...Days 6-8/Tue-Thu... Forecast spread increases further late in the period. Overall severe potential appears to wane for much of the CONUS during this time, but predictability is low. Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0357 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 261200Z - 311200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sun - Ozarks, Mid-MS/Lower OH/TN Valleys... A regional severe weather episode is expected on Day 4/Sunday. Significant severe thunderstorms capable of all hazards will be possible. An upper trough will overspread the region, resulting in a corridor of strong southwesterly mid/upper flow overlapping a very moist and strongly unstable airmass. Forecast guidance depicts a 700 mb southwesterly jet around 45-60 kt over the Mid-MS/Lower OH Valley vicinity. Meanwhile, a surface low near northeast KS/northwest MO at the beginning of the period will deepen as it lifts northeast toward Lake Michigan through the evening. A cold front will develop east across the region from late afternoon into the overnight hours. Ahead of the front, mid/upper 60s F dewpoints are expected. Steep midlevel lapse rates atop this moist boundary layer will support strong destabilization. Convection will likely be ongoing Sunday morning across parts of the Mid-MS/Lower MO Valley. The evolution of this activity is a bit uncertain, but may continue to develop east along a warm front draped across northern IL/IN. Additional convection is expected across the warm sector from southeast MO/northwest AR eastward into TN/KY. While storm mode/evolution remains a bit uncertain at this time (may be a mix of supercells and more linear convection), supercell wind profiles coupled with favorable thermodynamics will support all-hazards severe potential across a broad area during the day and into the nighttime hours. ...Day 5/Mon - Mid-Atlantic to the Southeast... Spread among forecast guidance increases considerably on Monday and various models evolve the central U.S. upper trough quite a bit differently. If a more progressive system prevails, favorable vertical shear and large-scale ascent will overspread parts of the Mid-Atlantic vicinity (decreasing with southward extent into the Southeast). Severe-storm potential may develop ahead of an east/southeastward-advancing cold front if this scenario unfolds. However, uncertainty precludes introduction of 15 percent severe probabilities at this time. ...Days 6-8/Tue-Thu... Forecast spread increases further late in the period. Overall severe potential appears to wane for much of the CONUS during this time, but predictability is low. Read more

SPC May 23, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0357 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024 Valid 261200Z - 311200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sun - Ozarks, Mid-MS/Lower OH/TN Valleys... A regional severe weather episode is expected on Day 4/Sunday. Significant severe thunderstorms capable of all hazards will be possible. An upper trough will overspread the region, resulting in a corridor of strong southwesterly mid/upper flow overlapping a very moist and strongly unstable airmass. Forecast guidance depicts a 700 mb southwesterly jet around 45-60 kt over the Mid-MS/Lower OH Valley vicinity. Meanwhile, a surface low near northeast KS/northwest MO at the beginning of the period will deepen as it lifts northeast toward Lake Michigan through the evening. A cold front will develop east across the region from late afternoon into the overnight hours. Ahead of the front, mid/upper 60s F dewpoints are expected. Steep midlevel lapse rates atop this moist boundary layer will support strong destabilization. Convection will likely be ongoing Sunday morning across parts of the Mid-MS/Lower MO Valley. The evolution of this activity is a bit uncertain, but may continue to develop east along a warm front draped across northern IL/IN. Additional convection is expected across the warm sector from southeast MO/northwest AR eastward into TN/KY. While storm mode/evolution remains a bit uncertain at this time (may be a mix of supercells and more linear convection), supercell wind profiles coupled with favorable thermodynamics will support all-hazards severe potential across a broad area during the day and into the nighttime hours. ...Day 5/Mon - Mid-Atlantic to the Southeast... Spread among forecast guidance increases considerably on Monday and various models evolve the central U.S. upper trough quite a bit differently. If a more progressive system prevails, favorable vertical shear and large-scale ascent will overspread parts of the Mid-Atlantic vicinity (decreasing with southward extent into the Southeast). Severe-storm potential may develop ahead of an east/southeastward-advancing cold front if this scenario unfolds. However, uncertainty precludes introduction of 15 percent severe probabilities at this time. ...Days 6-8/Tue-Thu... Forecast spread increases further late in the period. Overall severe potential appears to wane for much of the CONUS during this time, but predictability is low. Read more