SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281700Z - 291200Z ...17z Update... No major changes have been assessed to the outlook. The Elevated area was expanded slightly south and east across parts of the TX Big Bend. Here, southerly surface winds of 15-20 mph will briefly overlap with RH below 20%. Brief elevated fire-weather conditions are possible given recent drying of fuels. ..Lyons.. 03/28/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0135 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024/ ...Synopsis... Surface lee troughing will intensify over the southern High Plains today in tandem with an increase in mid-level flow/upper-level support. Dry downslope flow is expected across the southern High Plains during the afternoon. Across eastern New Mexico into western Texas, 15-25 mph sustained southwesterly surface winds and 10-20 percent RH atop modestly receptive fuels will support some wildfire spread potential, necessitating the maintenance of Elevated highlights. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1128 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281700Z - 291200Z ...17z Update... No major changes have been assessed to the outlook. The Elevated area was expanded slightly south and east across parts of the TX Big Bend. Here, southerly surface winds of 15-20 mph will briefly overlap with RH below 20%. Brief elevated fire-weather conditions are possible given recent drying of fuels. ..Lyons.. 03/28/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0135 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024/ ...Synopsis... Surface lee troughing will intensify over the southern High Plains today in tandem with an increase in mid-level flow/upper-level support. Dry downslope flow is expected across the southern High Plains during the afternoon. Across eastern New Mexico into western Texas, 15-25 mph sustained southwesterly surface winds and 10-20 percent RH atop modestly receptive fuels will support some wildfire spread potential, necessitating the maintenance of Elevated highlights. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1118 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281630Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. Relatively dry and stable conditions are expected today over most of the CONUS, with only a few areas of thunderstorm activity. A cold front will depart the Carolinas and FL region this afternoon, with associated showers and thunderstorms moving offshore by mid-afternoon. Other scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms may occur over parts of the northwestern US where cold mid-level temperatures and marginal afternoon instability will be present. No severe storms are anticipated in either region. ..Hart/Thornton.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1118 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281630Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. Relatively dry and stable conditions are expected today over most of the CONUS, with only a few areas of thunderstorm activity. A cold front will depart the Carolinas and FL region this afternoon, with associated showers and thunderstorms moving offshore by mid-afternoon. Other scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms may occur over parts of the northwestern US where cold mid-level temperatures and marginal afternoon instability will be present. No severe storms are anticipated in either region. ..Hart/Thornton.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1118 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281630Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. Relatively dry and stable conditions are expected today over most of the CONUS, with only a few areas of thunderstorm activity. A cold front will depart the Carolinas and FL region this afternoon, with associated showers and thunderstorms moving offshore by mid-afternoon. Other scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms may occur over parts of the northwestern US where cold mid-level temperatures and marginal afternoon instability will be present. No severe storms are anticipated in either region. ..Hart/Thornton.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1118 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281630Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. Relatively dry and stable conditions are expected today over most of the CONUS, with only a few areas of thunderstorm activity. A cold front will depart the Carolinas and FL region this afternoon, with associated showers and thunderstorms moving offshore by mid-afternoon. Other scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms may occur over parts of the northwestern US where cold mid-level temperatures and marginal afternoon instability will be present. No severe storms are anticipated in either region. ..Hart/Thornton.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1118 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281630Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. Relatively dry and stable conditions are expected today over most of the CONUS, with only a few areas of thunderstorm activity. A cold front will depart the Carolinas and FL region this afternoon, with associated showers and thunderstorms moving offshore by mid-afternoon. Other scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms may occur over parts of the northwestern US where cold mid-level temperatures and marginal afternoon instability will be present. No severe storms are anticipated in either region. ..Hart/Thornton.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1118 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281630Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. Relatively dry and stable conditions are expected today over most of the CONUS, with only a few areas of thunderstorm activity. A cold front will depart the Carolinas and FL region this afternoon, with associated showers and thunderstorms moving offshore by mid-afternoon. Other scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms may occur over parts of the northwestern US where cold mid-level temperatures and marginal afternoon instability will be present. No severe storms are anticipated in either region. ..Hart/Thornton.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0747 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. ...Synopsis/Discussion... The mid/upper-level pattern will remain progressive, but deamplify temporarily, through the end of the period. This will occur as a strong synoptic-scale trough -- initially extending from northern ON across the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys to the central Gulf -- pivots preferentially faster eastward in its southern parts. By 12Z tomorrow, the synoptic trough will become negatively tilted from a low over James bay across the NYC area, then to a basal shortwave trough offshore from the Atlantic Coast farther south. That shortwave -- now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the central Gulf Coast -- will follow a cold front offshore. Before that, however, a few more hours of general thunder potential are possible over coastal NC, including the sounds and Outer Banks. Isolated thunderstorms also are possible over much of the FL Peninsula amid favorable moisture along/ahead of the front, but with coverage limited by modest lift. Mid/upper-level winds and deep shear remain strong across the region, and a few cells moving through a diurnally destabilizing thermodynamic profile inland may produce strong gusts or small hail. Elsewhere, a large mid/upper-level cyclone was centered about 300 nm west of HQM, with synoptic trough extending south-southeastward offshore from the West Coast. As a strengthening shortwave trough south of the Gulf of Alaska digs southeastward to west of north- central CA through the period, the cyclone will weaken, but the larger-scale trough will be maintained. Several variably sized/ shaped shortwave perturbations were noted in downstream southwest flow over the Pacific Coast States and Intermountain West. Related large-scale ascent and steep midlevel lapse rates, with patches of weak but adequate low/middle-level moisture, will combine to support isolated general-thunder potential over parts of the West. This includes the Northwest Coast, where the cool but moist Pacific marine layer will underlie coldest air aloft. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0747 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. ...Synopsis/Discussion... The mid/upper-level pattern will remain progressive, but deamplify temporarily, through the end of the period. This will occur as a strong synoptic-scale trough -- initially extending from northern ON across the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys to the central Gulf -- pivots preferentially faster eastward in its southern parts. By 12Z tomorrow, the synoptic trough will become negatively tilted from a low over James bay across the NYC area, then to a basal shortwave trough offshore from the Atlantic Coast farther south. That shortwave -- now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the central Gulf Coast -- will follow a cold front offshore. Before that, however, a few more hours of general thunder potential are possible over coastal NC, including the sounds and Outer Banks. Isolated thunderstorms also are possible over much of the FL Peninsula amid favorable moisture along/ahead of the front, but with coverage limited by modest lift. Mid/upper-level winds and deep shear remain strong across the region, and a few cells moving through a diurnally destabilizing thermodynamic profile inland may produce strong gusts or small hail. Elsewhere, a large mid/upper-level cyclone was centered about 300 nm west of HQM, with synoptic trough extending south-southeastward offshore from the West Coast. As a strengthening shortwave trough south of the Gulf of Alaska digs southeastward to west of north- central CA through the period, the cyclone will weaken, but the larger-scale trough will be maintained. Several variably sized/ shaped shortwave perturbations were noted in downstream southwest flow over the Pacific Coast States and Intermountain West. Related large-scale ascent and steep midlevel lapse rates, with patches of weak but adequate low/middle-level moisture, will combine to support isolated general-thunder potential over parts of the West. This includes the Northwest Coast, where the cool but moist Pacific marine layer will underlie coldest air aloft. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0747 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. ...Synopsis/Discussion... The mid/upper-level pattern will remain progressive, but deamplify temporarily, through the end of the period. This will occur as a strong synoptic-scale trough -- initially extending from northern ON across the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys to the central Gulf -- pivots preferentially faster eastward in its southern parts. By 12Z tomorrow, the synoptic trough will become negatively tilted from a low over James bay across the NYC area, then to a basal shortwave trough offshore from the Atlantic Coast farther south. That shortwave -- now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the central Gulf Coast -- will follow a cold front offshore. Before that, however, a few more hours of general thunder potential are possible over coastal NC, including the sounds and Outer Banks. Isolated thunderstorms also are possible over much of the FL Peninsula amid favorable moisture along/ahead of the front, but with coverage limited by modest lift. Mid/upper-level winds and deep shear remain strong across the region, and a few cells moving through a diurnally destabilizing thermodynamic profile inland may produce strong gusts or small hail. Elsewhere, a large mid/upper-level cyclone was centered about 300 nm west of HQM, with synoptic trough extending south-southeastward offshore from the West Coast. As a strengthening shortwave trough south of the Gulf of Alaska digs southeastward to west of north- central CA through the period, the cyclone will weaken, but the larger-scale trough will be maintained. Several variably sized/ shaped shortwave perturbations were noted in downstream southwest flow over the Pacific Coast States and Intermountain West. Related large-scale ascent and steep midlevel lapse rates, with patches of weak but adequate low/middle-level moisture, will combine to support isolated general-thunder potential over parts of the West. This includes the Northwest Coast, where the cool but moist Pacific marine layer will underlie coldest air aloft. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0747 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. ...Synopsis/Discussion... The mid/upper-level pattern will remain progressive, but deamplify temporarily, through the end of the period. This will occur as a strong synoptic-scale trough -- initially extending from northern ON across the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys to the central Gulf -- pivots preferentially faster eastward in its southern parts. By 12Z tomorrow, the synoptic trough will become negatively tilted from a low over James bay across the NYC area, then to a basal shortwave trough offshore from the Atlantic Coast farther south. That shortwave -- now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the central Gulf Coast -- will follow a cold front offshore. Before that, however, a few more hours of general thunder potential are possible over coastal NC, including the sounds and Outer Banks. Isolated thunderstorms also are possible over much of the FL Peninsula amid favorable moisture along/ahead of the front, but with coverage limited by modest lift. Mid/upper-level winds and deep shear remain strong across the region, and a few cells moving through a diurnally destabilizing thermodynamic profile inland may produce strong gusts or small hail. Elsewhere, a large mid/upper-level cyclone was centered about 300 nm west of HQM, with synoptic trough extending south-southeastward offshore from the West Coast. As a strengthening shortwave trough south of the Gulf of Alaska digs southeastward to west of north- central CA through the period, the cyclone will weaken, but the larger-scale trough will be maintained. Several variably sized/ shaped shortwave perturbations were noted in downstream southwest flow over the Pacific Coast States and Intermountain West. Related large-scale ascent and steep midlevel lapse rates, with patches of weak but adequate low/middle-level moisture, will combine to support isolated general-thunder potential over parts of the West. This includes the Northwest Coast, where the cool but moist Pacific marine layer will underlie coldest air aloft. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0747 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 281300Z - 291200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are not expected. ...Synopsis/Discussion... The mid/upper-level pattern will remain progressive, but deamplify temporarily, through the end of the period. This will occur as a strong synoptic-scale trough -- initially extending from northern ON across the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys to the central Gulf -- pivots preferentially faster eastward in its southern parts. By 12Z tomorrow, the synoptic trough will become negatively tilted from a low over James bay across the NYC area, then to a basal shortwave trough offshore from the Atlantic Coast farther south. That shortwave -- now apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the central Gulf Coast -- will follow a cold front offshore. Before that, however, a few more hours of general thunder potential are possible over coastal NC, including the sounds and Outer Banks. Isolated thunderstorms also are possible over much of the FL Peninsula amid favorable moisture along/ahead of the front, but with coverage limited by modest lift. Mid/upper-level winds and deep shear remain strong across the region, and a few cells moving through a diurnally destabilizing thermodynamic profile inland may produce strong gusts or small hail. Elsewhere, a large mid/upper-level cyclone was centered about 300 nm west of HQM, with synoptic trough extending south-southeastward offshore from the West Coast. As a strengthening shortwave trough south of the Gulf of Alaska digs southeastward to west of north- central CA through the period, the cyclone will weaken, but the larger-scale trough will be maintained. Several variably sized/ shaped shortwave perturbations were noted in downstream southwest flow over the Pacific Coast States and Intermountain West. Related large-scale ascent and steep midlevel lapse rates, with patches of weak but adequate low/middle-level moisture, will combine to support isolated general-thunder potential over parts of the West. This includes the Northwest Coast, where the cool but moist Pacific marine layer will underlie coldest air aloft. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 03/28/2024 Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0400 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 311200Z - 051200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sunday: Mid Mississippi Valley into the Central/Southern Plains... The upper trough/low over the western states should slowly advance eastward towards the Southwest and southern/central High Plains on Sunday. Upper ridging is forecast to remain over the central/ southern Plains through Sunday night, which in tandem with a low-level temperature inversion should tend to suppress most convection. One possible exception may be along a sharpening warm front across MO/IL, where some guidance suggests elevated convection may form either Sunday morning, and/or Sunday night with strong low-level warm advection/lift occurring. Steepening mid-level lapse rates are forecast to overspread the mid MS Valley from the southwest through the period. These lapse rates, along with increasing moisture/instability in the presence of strong deep-layer shear, may support a risk for isolated supercells with associated threat for large hail. Regardless, confidence remains too low in this mainly elevated convection occurring, given upper ridging persisting, to add a 15% severe area for Sunday along/near the warm front in MO/IL at this time. ...Day 5/Monday: Southern/Central Plains into the Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys... Even though some differences remain in medium-range guidance regarding the ejection of an upper trough over the central CONUS on Monday, confidence has increased in the general location of relevant surface features, including the primary low, position of a southward-extending dryline, and northward extent of the warm front into the OH Valley. Even though the overall upper trough orientation may remain somewhat positively tilted, most deterministic guidance shows that a mid-level speed max and associated shortwave trough will eject northeastward over the southern/central Plains through Monday evening. Low-level mass response should encourage the eastward development of a surface low to the OK/KS vicinity in a similar time frame. Favorable low-level trajectories emanating from the Gulf will act to increase low-level moisture in tandem with steepening mid-level lapse rates and daytime heating across a broad warm sector extending from the southern/central Plains into the lower/mid MS Valley and OH Valley. A favorable thermodynamic and kinematic environment for organized severe convection will exist across much of these regions, with supercells capable of producing large hail and tornadoes possible initially. With time Monday evening/night, some upscale growth seems probable across the mid MS and OH Valleys, as mid-level flow should become increasingly parallel to a surface cold front. Therefore, a 15% severe area has been introduced for Monday where confidence is greatest that robust convection will develop in a parameter space characterized by weak/moderate instability and strong deep-layer shear. A nocturnal minimum in severe convective potential may be realized Monday night into early Tuesday morning across parts of the lower MS Valley into Mid-South, given the positively tilted nature of the upper trough. ...Day 6/Tuesday: Ohio/Tennessee Valleys into the Appalachians... Some severe threat should continue Tuesday over parts of the OH/TN Valleys into the Appalachians as the upper trough continues eastward. Even though there is still some uncertainty with the exact placement of the primary surface low and evolution of the upper trough, enough confidence exists in a fairly narrow corridor across these regions to add a 15% severe area for Tuesday. Rich low-level moisture should be in place ahead of an eastward-moving cold front. Redevelopment and/or re-intensification of convection seems probable by Tuesday afternoon. Strong deep-layer shear and weak instability should be sufficient for organized severe convection posing some threat for damaging winds, and perhaps tornadoes given the forecast strength of a low-level jet focused over parts of the OH/TN Valleys. The northward extent of the severe risk across OH and vicinity remains uncertain, as the placement of the warm front varies in model guidance. Similarly, convection should eventually encounter a less unstable airmass across the Appalachians. But, an isolated severe risk may continue Tuesday evening into early Wednesday morning across the southern/central Appalachians into portions of the Southeast. ...Day 7/Wednesday and Day 8/Thursday... Predictability remains too low to include a 15% severe delineation for Wednesday across the Mid-Atlantic/Southeast along/ahead of a cold front. By this extended time frame, there are significant differences in model guidance regarding the evolution of the upper trough, including its possible interaction/merging with a northern-stream trough, and placement of relevant surface features. Still, at least an isolated severe risk may persist Wednesday along/ahead of the eastward-sweeping cold front. Once this front clears the East Coast, severe potential appears minimal across the CONUS next Thursday. Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0400 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 311200Z - 051200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sunday: Mid Mississippi Valley into the Central/Southern Plains... The upper trough/low over the western states should slowly advance eastward towards the Southwest and southern/central High Plains on Sunday. Upper ridging is forecast to remain over the central/ southern Plains through Sunday night, which in tandem with a low-level temperature inversion should tend to suppress most convection. One possible exception may be along a sharpening warm front across MO/IL, where some guidance suggests elevated convection may form either Sunday morning, and/or Sunday night with strong low-level warm advection/lift occurring. Steepening mid-level lapse rates are forecast to overspread the mid MS Valley from the southwest through the period. These lapse rates, along with increasing moisture/instability in the presence of strong deep-layer shear, may support a risk for isolated supercells with associated threat for large hail. Regardless, confidence remains too low in this mainly elevated convection occurring, given upper ridging persisting, to add a 15% severe area for Sunday along/near the warm front in MO/IL at this time. ...Day 5/Monday: Southern/Central Plains into the Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys... Even though some differences remain in medium-range guidance regarding the ejection of an upper trough over the central CONUS on Monday, confidence has increased in the general location of relevant surface features, including the primary low, position of a southward-extending dryline, and northward extent of the warm front into the OH Valley. Even though the overall upper trough orientation may remain somewhat positively tilted, most deterministic guidance shows that a mid-level speed max and associated shortwave trough will eject northeastward over the southern/central Plains through Monday evening. Low-level mass response should encourage the eastward development of a surface low to the OK/KS vicinity in a similar time frame. Favorable low-level trajectories emanating from the Gulf will act to increase low-level moisture in tandem with steepening mid-level lapse rates and daytime heating across a broad warm sector extending from the southern/central Plains into the lower/mid MS Valley and OH Valley. A favorable thermodynamic and kinematic environment for organized severe convection will exist across much of these regions, with supercells capable of producing large hail and tornadoes possible initially. With time Monday evening/night, some upscale growth seems probable across the mid MS and OH Valleys, as mid-level flow should become increasingly parallel to a surface cold front. Therefore, a 15% severe area has been introduced for Monday where confidence is greatest that robust convection will develop in a parameter space characterized by weak/moderate instability and strong deep-layer shear. A nocturnal minimum in severe convective potential may be realized Monday night into early Tuesday morning across parts of the lower MS Valley into Mid-South, given the positively tilted nature of the upper trough. ...Day 6/Tuesday: Ohio/Tennessee Valleys into the Appalachians... Some severe threat should continue Tuesday over parts of the OH/TN Valleys into the Appalachians as the upper trough continues eastward. Even though there is still some uncertainty with the exact placement of the primary surface low and evolution of the upper trough, enough confidence exists in a fairly narrow corridor across these regions to add a 15% severe area for Tuesday. Rich low-level moisture should be in place ahead of an eastward-moving cold front. Redevelopment and/or re-intensification of convection seems probable by Tuesday afternoon. Strong deep-layer shear and weak instability should be sufficient for organized severe convection posing some threat for damaging winds, and perhaps tornadoes given the forecast strength of a low-level jet focused over parts of the OH/TN Valleys. The northward extent of the severe risk across OH and vicinity remains uncertain, as the placement of the warm front varies in model guidance. Similarly, convection should eventually encounter a less unstable airmass across the Appalachians. But, an isolated severe risk may continue Tuesday evening into early Wednesday morning across the southern/central Appalachians into portions of the Southeast. ...Day 7/Wednesday and Day 8/Thursday... Predictability remains too low to include a 15% severe delineation for Wednesday across the Mid-Atlantic/Southeast along/ahead of a cold front. By this extended time frame, there are significant differences in model guidance regarding the evolution of the upper trough, including its possible interaction/merging with a northern-stream trough, and placement of relevant surface features. Still, at least an isolated severe risk may persist Wednesday along/ahead of the eastward-sweeping cold front. Once this front clears the East Coast, severe potential appears minimal across the CONUS next Thursday. Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0400 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 311200Z - 051200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sunday: Mid Mississippi Valley into the Central/Southern Plains... The upper trough/low over the western states should slowly advance eastward towards the Southwest and southern/central High Plains on Sunday. Upper ridging is forecast to remain over the central/ southern Plains through Sunday night, which in tandem with a low-level temperature inversion should tend to suppress most convection. One possible exception may be along a sharpening warm front across MO/IL, where some guidance suggests elevated convection may form either Sunday morning, and/or Sunday night with strong low-level warm advection/lift occurring. Steepening mid-level lapse rates are forecast to overspread the mid MS Valley from the southwest through the period. These lapse rates, along with increasing moisture/instability in the presence of strong deep-layer shear, may support a risk for isolated supercells with associated threat for large hail. Regardless, confidence remains too low in this mainly elevated convection occurring, given upper ridging persisting, to add a 15% severe area for Sunday along/near the warm front in MO/IL at this time. ...Day 5/Monday: Southern/Central Plains into the Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys... Even though some differences remain in medium-range guidance regarding the ejection of an upper trough over the central CONUS on Monday, confidence has increased in the general location of relevant surface features, including the primary low, position of a southward-extending dryline, and northward extent of the warm front into the OH Valley. Even though the overall upper trough orientation may remain somewhat positively tilted, most deterministic guidance shows that a mid-level speed max and associated shortwave trough will eject northeastward over the southern/central Plains through Monday evening. Low-level mass response should encourage the eastward development of a surface low to the OK/KS vicinity in a similar time frame. Favorable low-level trajectories emanating from the Gulf will act to increase low-level moisture in tandem with steepening mid-level lapse rates and daytime heating across a broad warm sector extending from the southern/central Plains into the lower/mid MS Valley and OH Valley. A favorable thermodynamic and kinematic environment for organized severe convection will exist across much of these regions, with supercells capable of producing large hail and tornadoes possible initially. With time Monday evening/night, some upscale growth seems probable across the mid MS and OH Valleys, as mid-level flow should become increasingly parallel to a surface cold front. Therefore, a 15% severe area has been introduced for Monday where confidence is greatest that robust convection will develop in a parameter space characterized by weak/moderate instability and strong deep-layer shear. A nocturnal minimum in severe convective potential may be realized Monday night into early Tuesday morning across parts of the lower MS Valley into Mid-South, given the positively tilted nature of the upper trough. ...Day 6/Tuesday: Ohio/Tennessee Valleys into the Appalachians... Some severe threat should continue Tuesday over parts of the OH/TN Valleys into the Appalachians as the upper trough continues eastward. Even though there is still some uncertainty with the exact placement of the primary surface low and evolution of the upper trough, enough confidence exists in a fairly narrow corridor across these regions to add a 15% severe area for Tuesday. Rich low-level moisture should be in place ahead of an eastward-moving cold front. Redevelopment and/or re-intensification of convection seems probable by Tuesday afternoon. Strong deep-layer shear and weak instability should be sufficient for organized severe convection posing some threat for damaging winds, and perhaps tornadoes given the forecast strength of a low-level jet focused over parts of the OH/TN Valleys. The northward extent of the severe risk across OH and vicinity remains uncertain, as the placement of the warm front varies in model guidance. Similarly, convection should eventually encounter a less unstable airmass across the Appalachians. But, an isolated severe risk may continue Tuesday evening into early Wednesday morning across the southern/central Appalachians into portions of the Southeast. ...Day 7/Wednesday and Day 8/Thursday... Predictability remains too low to include a 15% severe delineation for Wednesday across the Mid-Atlantic/Southeast along/ahead of a cold front. By this extended time frame, there are significant differences in model guidance regarding the evolution of the upper trough, including its possible interaction/merging with a northern-stream trough, and placement of relevant surface features. Still, at least an isolated severe risk may persist Wednesday along/ahead of the eastward-sweeping cold front. Once this front clears the East Coast, severe potential appears minimal across the CONUS next Thursday. Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0400 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 311200Z - 051200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sunday: Mid Mississippi Valley into the Central/Southern Plains... The upper trough/low over the western states should slowly advance eastward towards the Southwest and southern/central High Plains on Sunday. Upper ridging is forecast to remain over the central/ southern Plains through Sunday night, which in tandem with a low-level temperature inversion should tend to suppress most convection. One possible exception may be along a sharpening warm front across MO/IL, where some guidance suggests elevated convection may form either Sunday morning, and/or Sunday night with strong low-level warm advection/lift occurring. Steepening mid-level lapse rates are forecast to overspread the mid MS Valley from the southwest through the period. These lapse rates, along with increasing moisture/instability in the presence of strong deep-layer shear, may support a risk for isolated supercells with associated threat for large hail. Regardless, confidence remains too low in this mainly elevated convection occurring, given upper ridging persisting, to add a 15% severe area for Sunday along/near the warm front in MO/IL at this time. ...Day 5/Monday: Southern/Central Plains into the Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys... Even though some differences remain in medium-range guidance regarding the ejection of an upper trough over the central CONUS on Monday, confidence has increased in the general location of relevant surface features, including the primary low, position of a southward-extending dryline, and northward extent of the warm front into the OH Valley. Even though the overall upper trough orientation may remain somewhat positively tilted, most deterministic guidance shows that a mid-level speed max and associated shortwave trough will eject northeastward over the southern/central Plains through Monday evening. Low-level mass response should encourage the eastward development of a surface low to the OK/KS vicinity in a similar time frame. Favorable low-level trajectories emanating from the Gulf will act to increase low-level moisture in tandem with steepening mid-level lapse rates and daytime heating across a broad warm sector extending from the southern/central Plains into the lower/mid MS Valley and OH Valley. A favorable thermodynamic and kinematic environment for organized severe convection will exist across much of these regions, with supercells capable of producing large hail and tornadoes possible initially. With time Monday evening/night, some upscale growth seems probable across the mid MS and OH Valleys, as mid-level flow should become increasingly parallel to a surface cold front. Therefore, a 15% severe area has been introduced for Monday where confidence is greatest that robust convection will develop in a parameter space characterized by weak/moderate instability and strong deep-layer shear. A nocturnal minimum in severe convective potential may be realized Monday night into early Tuesday morning across parts of the lower MS Valley into Mid-South, given the positively tilted nature of the upper trough. ...Day 6/Tuesday: Ohio/Tennessee Valleys into the Appalachians... Some severe threat should continue Tuesday over parts of the OH/TN Valleys into the Appalachians as the upper trough continues eastward. Even though there is still some uncertainty with the exact placement of the primary surface low and evolution of the upper trough, enough confidence exists in a fairly narrow corridor across these regions to add a 15% severe area for Tuesday. Rich low-level moisture should be in place ahead of an eastward-moving cold front. Redevelopment and/or re-intensification of convection seems probable by Tuesday afternoon. Strong deep-layer shear and weak instability should be sufficient for organized severe convection posing some threat for damaging winds, and perhaps tornadoes given the forecast strength of a low-level jet focused over parts of the OH/TN Valleys. The northward extent of the severe risk across OH and vicinity remains uncertain, as the placement of the warm front varies in model guidance. Similarly, convection should eventually encounter a less unstable airmass across the Appalachians. But, an isolated severe risk may continue Tuesday evening into early Wednesday morning across the southern/central Appalachians into portions of the Southeast. ...Day 7/Wednesday and Day 8/Thursday... Predictability remains too low to include a 15% severe delineation for Wednesday across the Mid-Atlantic/Southeast along/ahead of a cold front. By this extended time frame, there are significant differences in model guidance regarding the evolution of the upper trough, including its possible interaction/merging with a northern-stream trough, and placement of relevant surface features. Still, at least an isolated severe risk may persist Wednesday along/ahead of the eastward-sweeping cold front. Once this front clears the East Coast, severe potential appears minimal across the CONUS next Thursday. Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0400 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 311200Z - 051200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sunday: Mid Mississippi Valley into the Central/Southern Plains... The upper trough/low over the western states should slowly advance eastward towards the Southwest and southern/central High Plains on Sunday. Upper ridging is forecast to remain over the central/ southern Plains through Sunday night, which in tandem with a low-level temperature inversion should tend to suppress most convection. One possible exception may be along a sharpening warm front across MO/IL, where some guidance suggests elevated convection may form either Sunday morning, and/or Sunday night with strong low-level warm advection/lift occurring. Steepening mid-level lapse rates are forecast to overspread the mid MS Valley from the southwest through the period. These lapse rates, along with increasing moisture/instability in the presence of strong deep-layer shear, may support a risk for isolated supercells with associated threat for large hail. Regardless, confidence remains too low in this mainly elevated convection occurring, given upper ridging persisting, to add a 15% severe area for Sunday along/near the warm front in MO/IL at this time. ...Day 5/Monday: Southern/Central Plains into the Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys... Even though some differences remain in medium-range guidance regarding the ejection of an upper trough over the central CONUS on Monday, confidence has increased in the general location of relevant surface features, including the primary low, position of a southward-extending dryline, and northward extent of the warm front into the OH Valley. Even though the overall upper trough orientation may remain somewhat positively tilted, most deterministic guidance shows that a mid-level speed max and associated shortwave trough will eject northeastward over the southern/central Plains through Monday evening. Low-level mass response should encourage the eastward development of a surface low to the OK/KS vicinity in a similar time frame. Favorable low-level trajectories emanating from the Gulf will act to increase low-level moisture in tandem with steepening mid-level lapse rates and daytime heating across a broad warm sector extending from the southern/central Plains into the lower/mid MS Valley and OH Valley. A favorable thermodynamic and kinematic environment for organized severe convection will exist across much of these regions, with supercells capable of producing large hail and tornadoes possible initially. With time Monday evening/night, some upscale growth seems probable across the mid MS and OH Valleys, as mid-level flow should become increasingly parallel to a surface cold front. Therefore, a 15% severe area has been introduced for Monday where confidence is greatest that robust convection will develop in a parameter space characterized by weak/moderate instability and strong deep-layer shear. A nocturnal minimum in severe convective potential may be realized Monday night into early Tuesday morning across parts of the lower MS Valley into Mid-South, given the positively tilted nature of the upper trough. ...Day 6/Tuesday: Ohio/Tennessee Valleys into the Appalachians... Some severe threat should continue Tuesday over parts of the OH/TN Valleys into the Appalachians as the upper trough continues eastward. Even though there is still some uncertainty with the exact placement of the primary surface low and evolution of the upper trough, enough confidence exists in a fairly narrow corridor across these regions to add a 15% severe area for Tuesday. Rich low-level moisture should be in place ahead of an eastward-moving cold front. Redevelopment and/or re-intensification of convection seems probable by Tuesday afternoon. Strong deep-layer shear and weak instability should be sufficient for organized severe convection posing some threat for damaging winds, and perhaps tornadoes given the forecast strength of a low-level jet focused over parts of the OH/TN Valleys. The northward extent of the severe risk across OH and vicinity remains uncertain, as the placement of the warm front varies in model guidance. Similarly, convection should eventually encounter a less unstable airmass across the Appalachians. But, an isolated severe risk may continue Tuesday evening into early Wednesday morning across the southern/central Appalachians into portions of the Southeast. ...Day 7/Wednesday and Day 8/Thursday... Predictability remains too low to include a 15% severe delineation for Wednesday across the Mid-Atlantic/Southeast along/ahead of a cold front. By this extended time frame, there are significant differences in model guidance regarding the evolution of the upper trough, including its possible interaction/merging with a northern-stream trough, and placement of relevant surface features. Still, at least an isolated severe risk may persist Wednesday along/ahead of the eastward-sweeping cold front. Once this front clears the East Coast, severe potential appears minimal across the CONUS next Thursday. Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0400 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 311200Z - 051200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sunday: Mid Mississippi Valley into the Central/Southern Plains... The upper trough/low over the western states should slowly advance eastward towards the Southwest and southern/central High Plains on Sunday. Upper ridging is forecast to remain over the central/ southern Plains through Sunday night, which in tandem with a low-level temperature inversion should tend to suppress most convection. One possible exception may be along a sharpening warm front across MO/IL, where some guidance suggests elevated convection may form either Sunday morning, and/or Sunday night with strong low-level warm advection/lift occurring. Steepening mid-level lapse rates are forecast to overspread the mid MS Valley from the southwest through the period. These lapse rates, along with increasing moisture/instability in the presence of strong deep-layer shear, may support a risk for isolated supercells with associated threat for large hail. Regardless, confidence remains too low in this mainly elevated convection occurring, given upper ridging persisting, to add a 15% severe area for Sunday along/near the warm front in MO/IL at this time. ...Day 5/Monday: Southern/Central Plains into the Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys... Even though some differences remain in medium-range guidance regarding the ejection of an upper trough over the central CONUS on Monday, confidence has increased in the general location of relevant surface features, including the primary low, position of a southward-extending dryline, and northward extent of the warm front into the OH Valley. Even though the overall upper trough orientation may remain somewhat positively tilted, most deterministic guidance shows that a mid-level speed max and associated shortwave trough will eject northeastward over the southern/central Plains through Monday evening. Low-level mass response should encourage the eastward development of a surface low to the OK/KS vicinity in a similar time frame. Favorable low-level trajectories emanating from the Gulf will act to increase low-level moisture in tandem with steepening mid-level lapse rates and daytime heating across a broad warm sector extending from the southern/central Plains into the lower/mid MS Valley and OH Valley. A favorable thermodynamic and kinematic environment for organized severe convection will exist across much of these regions, with supercells capable of producing large hail and tornadoes possible initially. With time Monday evening/night, some upscale growth seems probable across the mid MS and OH Valleys, as mid-level flow should become increasingly parallel to a surface cold front. Therefore, a 15% severe area has been introduced for Monday where confidence is greatest that robust convection will develop in a parameter space characterized by weak/moderate instability and strong deep-layer shear. A nocturnal minimum in severe convective potential may be realized Monday night into early Tuesday morning across parts of the lower MS Valley into Mid-South, given the positively tilted nature of the upper trough. ...Day 6/Tuesday: Ohio/Tennessee Valleys into the Appalachians... Some severe threat should continue Tuesday over parts of the OH/TN Valleys into the Appalachians as the upper trough continues eastward. Even though there is still some uncertainty with the exact placement of the primary surface low and evolution of the upper trough, enough confidence exists in a fairly narrow corridor across these regions to add a 15% severe area for Tuesday. Rich low-level moisture should be in place ahead of an eastward-moving cold front. Redevelopment and/or re-intensification of convection seems probable by Tuesday afternoon. Strong deep-layer shear and weak instability should be sufficient for organized severe convection posing some threat for damaging winds, and perhaps tornadoes given the forecast strength of a low-level jet focused over parts of the OH/TN Valleys. The northward extent of the severe risk across OH and vicinity remains uncertain, as the placement of the warm front varies in model guidance. Similarly, convection should eventually encounter a less unstable airmass across the Appalachians. But, an isolated severe risk may continue Tuesday evening into early Wednesday morning across the southern/central Appalachians into portions of the Southeast. ...Day 7/Wednesday and Day 8/Thursday... Predictability remains too low to include a 15% severe delineation for Wednesday across the Mid-Atlantic/Southeast along/ahead of a cold front. By this extended time frame, there are significant differences in model guidance regarding the evolution of the upper trough, including its possible interaction/merging with a northern-stream trough, and placement of relevant surface features. Still, at least an isolated severe risk may persist Wednesday along/ahead of the eastward-sweeping cold front. Once this front clears the East Coast, severe potential appears minimal across the CONUS next Thursday. Read more

SPC Mar 28, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0400 AM CDT Thu Mar 28 2024 Valid 311200Z - 051200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sunday: Mid Mississippi Valley into the Central/Southern Plains... The upper trough/low over the western states should slowly advance eastward towards the Southwest and southern/central High Plains on Sunday. Upper ridging is forecast to remain over the central/ southern Plains through Sunday night, which in tandem with a low-level temperature inversion should tend to suppress most convection. One possible exception may be along a sharpening warm front across MO/IL, where some guidance suggests elevated convection may form either Sunday morning, and/or Sunday night with strong low-level warm advection/lift occurring. Steepening mid-level lapse rates are forecast to overspread the mid MS Valley from the southwest through the period. These lapse rates, along with increasing moisture/instability in the presence of strong deep-layer shear, may support a risk for isolated supercells with associated threat for large hail. Regardless, confidence remains too low in this mainly elevated convection occurring, given upper ridging persisting, to add a 15% severe area for Sunday along/near the warm front in MO/IL at this time. ...Day 5/Monday: Southern/Central Plains into the Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys... Even though some differences remain in medium-range guidance regarding the ejection of an upper trough over the central CONUS on Monday, confidence has increased in the general location of relevant surface features, including the primary low, position of a southward-extending dryline, and northward extent of the warm front into the OH Valley. Even though the overall upper trough orientation may remain somewhat positively tilted, most deterministic guidance shows that a mid-level speed max and associated shortwave trough will eject northeastward over the southern/central Plains through Monday evening. Low-level mass response should encourage the eastward development of a surface low to the OK/KS vicinity in a similar time frame. Favorable low-level trajectories emanating from the Gulf will act to increase low-level moisture in tandem with steepening mid-level lapse rates and daytime heating across a broad warm sector extending from the southern/central Plains into the lower/mid MS Valley and OH Valley. A favorable thermodynamic and kinematic environment for organized severe convection will exist across much of these regions, with supercells capable of producing large hail and tornadoes possible initially. With time Monday evening/night, some upscale growth seems probable across the mid MS and OH Valleys, as mid-level flow should become increasingly parallel to a surface cold front. Therefore, a 15% severe area has been introduced for Monday where confidence is greatest that robust convection will develop in a parameter space characterized by weak/moderate instability and strong deep-layer shear. A nocturnal minimum in severe convective potential may be realized Monday night into early Tuesday morning across parts of the lower MS Valley into Mid-South, given the positively tilted nature of the upper trough. ...Day 6/Tuesday: Ohio/Tennessee Valleys into the Appalachians... Some severe threat should continue Tuesday over parts of the OH/TN Valleys into the Appalachians as the upper trough continues eastward. Even though there is still some uncertainty with the exact placement of the primary surface low and evolution of the upper trough, enough confidence exists in a fairly narrow corridor across these regions to add a 15% severe area for Tuesday. Rich low-level moisture should be in place ahead of an eastward-moving cold front. Redevelopment and/or re-intensification of convection seems probable by Tuesday afternoon. Strong deep-layer shear and weak instability should be sufficient for organized severe convection posing some threat for damaging winds, and perhaps tornadoes given the forecast strength of a low-level jet focused over parts of the OH/TN Valleys. The northward extent of the severe risk across OH and vicinity remains uncertain, as the placement of the warm front varies in model guidance. Similarly, convection should eventually encounter a less unstable airmass across the Appalachians. But, an isolated severe risk may continue Tuesday evening into early Wednesday morning across the southern/central Appalachians into portions of the Southeast. ...Day 7/Wednesday and Day 8/Thursday... Predictability remains too low to include a 15% severe delineation for Wednesday across the Mid-Atlantic/Southeast along/ahead of a cold front. By this extended time frame, there are significant differences in model guidance regarding the evolution of the upper trough, including its possible interaction/merging with a northern-stream trough, and placement of relevant surface features. Still, at least an isolated severe risk may persist Wednesday along/ahead of the eastward-sweeping cold front. Once this front clears the East Coast, severe potential appears minimal across the CONUS next Thursday. Read more