SPC Nov 19, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1027 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191630Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER CENTRAL AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Central/northern Oklahoma... Multiple, mostly low amplitude, mid-level perturbations were observed rotating around a large upper trough over the western/central U.S. as of 16z. A broad, meridionally elongated, area of surface low pressure extending from western KS southward into the TX Panhandle late this morning will gradually consolidate over southwest OK vicinity through tonight. Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms will continue today across portions of KS, OK and northern TX within a zone of low-level warm advection and aided by ascent with lead impulses. With time, cooling mid-level temperatures as the upper trough approaches and continued low-level warm/moist advection will support MUCAPE of 500-locally 1000 J/kg over OK this evening and tonight. Effective shear values of 30-40 kts will lead to sufficient updraft organization for a few stronger elevated storms to be capable of marginally severe hail. ..Bunting/Kerr.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1027 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191630Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER CENTRAL AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Central/northern Oklahoma... Multiple, mostly low amplitude, mid-level perturbations were observed rotating around a large upper trough over the western/central U.S. as of 16z. A broad, meridionally elongated, area of surface low pressure extending from western KS southward into the TX Panhandle late this morning will gradually consolidate over southwest OK vicinity through tonight. Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms will continue today across portions of KS, OK and northern TX within a zone of low-level warm advection and aided by ascent with lead impulses. With time, cooling mid-level temperatures as the upper trough approaches and continued low-level warm/moist advection will support MUCAPE of 500-locally 1000 J/kg over OK this evening and tonight. Effective shear values of 30-40 kts will lead to sufficient updraft organization for a few stronger elevated storms to be capable of marginally severe hail. ..Bunting/Kerr.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1027 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191630Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER CENTRAL AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Central/northern Oklahoma... Multiple, mostly low amplitude, mid-level perturbations were observed rotating around a large upper trough over the western/central U.S. as of 16z. A broad, meridionally elongated, area of surface low pressure extending from western KS southward into the TX Panhandle late this morning will gradually consolidate over southwest OK vicinity through tonight. Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms will continue today across portions of KS, OK and northern TX within a zone of low-level warm advection and aided by ascent with lead impulses. With time, cooling mid-level temperatures as the upper trough approaches and continued low-level warm/moist advection will support MUCAPE of 500-locally 1000 J/kg over OK this evening and tonight. Effective shear values of 30-40 kts will lead to sufficient updraft organization for a few stronger elevated storms to be capable of marginally severe hail. ..Bunting/Kerr.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1027 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191630Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER CENTRAL AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Central/northern Oklahoma... Multiple, mostly low amplitude, mid-level perturbations were observed rotating around a large upper trough over the western/central U.S. as of 16z. A broad, meridionally elongated, area of surface low pressure extending from western KS southward into the TX Panhandle late this morning will gradually consolidate over southwest OK vicinity through tonight. Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms will continue today across portions of KS, OK and northern TX within a zone of low-level warm advection and aided by ascent with lead impulses. With time, cooling mid-level temperatures as the upper trough approaches and continued low-level warm/moist advection will support MUCAPE of 500-locally 1000 J/kg over OK this evening and tonight. Effective shear values of 30-40 kts will lead to sufficient updraft organization for a few stronger elevated storms to be capable of marginally severe hail. ..Bunting/Kerr.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1027 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191630Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER CENTRAL AND NORTHERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Central/northern Oklahoma... Multiple, mostly low amplitude, mid-level perturbations were observed rotating around a large upper trough over the western/central U.S. as of 16z. A broad, meridionally elongated, area of surface low pressure extending from western KS southward into the TX Panhandle late this morning will gradually consolidate over southwest OK vicinity through tonight. Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms will continue today across portions of KS, OK and northern TX within a zone of low-level warm advection and aided by ascent with lead impulses. With time, cooling mid-level temperatures as the upper trough approaches and continued low-level warm/moist advection will support MUCAPE of 500-locally 1000 J/kg over OK this evening and tonight. Effective shear values of 30-40 kts will lead to sufficient updraft organization for a few stronger elevated storms to be capable of marginally severe hail. ..Bunting/Kerr.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0638 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191300Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF CENTRAL/EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a broad area of cyclonic flow, with multiple shortwaves and vorticity lobes of varying intensity, is apparent in moisture-channel imagery over much of the western/central CONUS. Those perturbations will consolidate into a large, complex cyclone by 12Z tomorrow, extending from the central Plains to the southern High Plains. The strongest of the shortwave troughs is located in the rear side of this configuration, from offshore of Vancouver Island southeastward to parts of NV. The southern part of this perturbation is expected to dig southeastward across the Four Corners region around 00Z, reaching the TX Panhandle and eastern/ southern NM by 12Z. In response, an elongated area of surface low pressure -- analyzed at 11Z near the CO/KS border -- should consolidate and move/ redevelop erratically southward toward west-central/southwestern OK by 06Z, pivoting over central OK by the end of the period. As the cyclogenesis proceeds in a residual continental/polar (cP) airmass, surface frontal features (especially warm frontal) will be nebulous this period. Still, a strengthening cold front should extend from the low across parts of northwest/west-central TX by 12Z, overtaking a developing dryline from north to south. ...OK... Multiple rounds of thunderstorms are possible today and tonight over the southern Plains, from southern KS across central/eastern OK to north-central/northeast TX. Activity will be supported by a fetch of elevated low-level warm advection and strong moisture transport -- above a relatively stable boundary layer. Return flow will be relatively immature -- even above the surface -- as upstream trajectories of cP air that followed the last frontal passage continue to modify. Buoyancy should diminish northward into more precip-laden air, with less-modified inflow parcels. Deep combined lift (from low-level warm advection, divergence-related jet dynamics aloft, and shots of midlevel DCVA preceding the main trough), will weaken southward. The most favorable overlap between those processes, in support of sustained/organized thunderstorms, still appears to be in or very near the outlook area, especially this evening and tonight. That is when low-level/inflow-layer theta-e and cooling aloft each will be greatest, and LFC lowest (but still elevated atop a stable boundary layer). As lapse rates above the boundary layer steepen rapidly tonight, MUCAPE should strengthen into the 500-1000 J/kg range -- rooted near 850 mb and distributed well through the hail-growth zone -- with effective-shear magnitudes peaking in the 30-40-kt range. This will support isolated severe-hail potential with the best-organized cells. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0638 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191300Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF CENTRAL/EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a broad area of cyclonic flow, with multiple shortwaves and vorticity lobes of varying intensity, is apparent in moisture-channel imagery over much of the western/central CONUS. Those perturbations will consolidate into a large, complex cyclone by 12Z tomorrow, extending from the central Plains to the southern High Plains. The strongest of the shortwave troughs is located in the rear side of this configuration, from offshore of Vancouver Island southeastward to parts of NV. The southern part of this perturbation is expected to dig southeastward across the Four Corners region around 00Z, reaching the TX Panhandle and eastern/ southern NM by 12Z. In response, an elongated area of surface low pressure -- analyzed at 11Z near the CO/KS border -- should consolidate and move/ redevelop erratically southward toward west-central/southwestern OK by 06Z, pivoting over central OK by the end of the period. As the cyclogenesis proceeds in a residual continental/polar (cP) airmass, surface frontal features (especially warm frontal) will be nebulous this period. Still, a strengthening cold front should extend from the low across parts of northwest/west-central TX by 12Z, overtaking a developing dryline from north to south. ...OK... Multiple rounds of thunderstorms are possible today and tonight over the southern Plains, from southern KS across central/eastern OK to north-central/northeast TX. Activity will be supported by a fetch of elevated low-level warm advection and strong moisture transport -- above a relatively stable boundary layer. Return flow will be relatively immature -- even above the surface -- as upstream trajectories of cP air that followed the last frontal passage continue to modify. Buoyancy should diminish northward into more precip-laden air, with less-modified inflow parcels. Deep combined lift (from low-level warm advection, divergence-related jet dynamics aloft, and shots of midlevel DCVA preceding the main trough), will weaken southward. The most favorable overlap between those processes, in support of sustained/organized thunderstorms, still appears to be in or very near the outlook area, especially this evening and tonight. That is when low-level/inflow-layer theta-e and cooling aloft each will be greatest, and LFC lowest (but still elevated atop a stable boundary layer). As lapse rates above the boundary layer steepen rapidly tonight, MUCAPE should strengthen into the 500-1000 J/kg range -- rooted near 850 mb and distributed well through the hail-growth zone -- with effective-shear magnitudes peaking in the 30-40-kt range. This will support isolated severe-hail potential with the best-organized cells. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0638 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191300Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF CENTRAL/EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a broad area of cyclonic flow, with multiple shortwaves and vorticity lobes of varying intensity, is apparent in moisture-channel imagery over much of the western/central CONUS. Those perturbations will consolidate into a large, complex cyclone by 12Z tomorrow, extending from the central Plains to the southern High Plains. The strongest of the shortwave troughs is located in the rear side of this configuration, from offshore of Vancouver Island southeastward to parts of NV. The southern part of this perturbation is expected to dig southeastward across the Four Corners region around 00Z, reaching the TX Panhandle and eastern/ southern NM by 12Z. In response, an elongated area of surface low pressure -- analyzed at 11Z near the CO/KS border -- should consolidate and move/ redevelop erratically southward toward west-central/southwestern OK by 06Z, pivoting over central OK by the end of the period. As the cyclogenesis proceeds in a residual continental/polar (cP) airmass, surface frontal features (especially warm frontal) will be nebulous this period. Still, a strengthening cold front should extend from the low across parts of northwest/west-central TX by 12Z, overtaking a developing dryline from north to south. ...OK... Multiple rounds of thunderstorms are possible today and tonight over the southern Plains, from southern KS across central/eastern OK to north-central/northeast TX. Activity will be supported by a fetch of elevated low-level warm advection and strong moisture transport -- above a relatively stable boundary layer. Return flow will be relatively immature -- even above the surface -- as upstream trajectories of cP air that followed the last frontal passage continue to modify. Buoyancy should diminish northward into more precip-laden air, with less-modified inflow parcels. Deep combined lift (from low-level warm advection, divergence-related jet dynamics aloft, and shots of midlevel DCVA preceding the main trough), will weaken southward. The most favorable overlap between those processes, in support of sustained/organized thunderstorms, still appears to be in or very near the outlook area, especially this evening and tonight. That is when low-level/inflow-layer theta-e and cooling aloft each will be greatest, and LFC lowest (but still elevated atop a stable boundary layer). As lapse rates above the boundary layer steepen rapidly tonight, MUCAPE should strengthen into the 500-1000 J/kg range -- rooted near 850 mb and distributed well through the hail-growth zone -- with effective-shear magnitudes peaking in the 30-40-kt range. This will support isolated severe-hail potential with the best-organized cells. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0638 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191300Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF CENTRAL/EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a broad area of cyclonic flow, with multiple shortwaves and vorticity lobes of varying intensity, is apparent in moisture-channel imagery over much of the western/central CONUS. Those perturbations will consolidate into a large, complex cyclone by 12Z tomorrow, extending from the central Plains to the southern High Plains. The strongest of the shortwave troughs is located in the rear side of this configuration, from offshore of Vancouver Island southeastward to parts of NV. The southern part of this perturbation is expected to dig southeastward across the Four Corners region around 00Z, reaching the TX Panhandle and eastern/ southern NM by 12Z. In response, an elongated area of surface low pressure -- analyzed at 11Z near the CO/KS border -- should consolidate and move/ redevelop erratically southward toward west-central/southwestern OK by 06Z, pivoting over central OK by the end of the period. As the cyclogenesis proceeds in a residual continental/polar (cP) airmass, surface frontal features (especially warm frontal) will be nebulous this period. Still, a strengthening cold front should extend from the low across parts of northwest/west-central TX by 12Z, overtaking a developing dryline from north to south. ...OK... Multiple rounds of thunderstorms are possible today and tonight over the southern Plains, from southern KS across central/eastern OK to north-central/northeast TX. Activity will be supported by a fetch of elevated low-level warm advection and strong moisture transport -- above a relatively stable boundary layer. Return flow will be relatively immature -- even above the surface -- as upstream trajectories of cP air that followed the last frontal passage continue to modify. Buoyancy should diminish northward into more precip-laden air, with less-modified inflow parcels. Deep combined lift (from low-level warm advection, divergence-related jet dynamics aloft, and shots of midlevel DCVA preceding the main trough), will weaken southward. The most favorable overlap between those processes, in support of sustained/organized thunderstorms, still appears to be in or very near the outlook area, especially this evening and tonight. That is when low-level/inflow-layer theta-e and cooling aloft each will be greatest, and LFC lowest (but still elevated atop a stable boundary layer). As lapse rates above the boundary layer steepen rapidly tonight, MUCAPE should strengthen into the 500-1000 J/kg range -- rooted near 850 mb and distributed well through the hail-growth zone -- with effective-shear magnitudes peaking in the 30-40-kt range. This will support isolated severe-hail potential with the best-organized cells. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0638 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191300Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF CENTRAL/EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a broad area of cyclonic flow, with multiple shortwaves and vorticity lobes of varying intensity, is apparent in moisture-channel imagery over much of the western/central CONUS. Those perturbations will consolidate into a large, complex cyclone by 12Z tomorrow, extending from the central Plains to the southern High Plains. The strongest of the shortwave troughs is located in the rear side of this configuration, from offshore of Vancouver Island southeastward to parts of NV. The southern part of this perturbation is expected to dig southeastward across the Four Corners region around 00Z, reaching the TX Panhandle and eastern/ southern NM by 12Z. In response, an elongated area of surface low pressure -- analyzed at 11Z near the CO/KS border -- should consolidate and move/ redevelop erratically southward toward west-central/southwestern OK by 06Z, pivoting over central OK by the end of the period. As the cyclogenesis proceeds in a residual continental/polar (cP) airmass, surface frontal features (especially warm frontal) will be nebulous this period. Still, a strengthening cold front should extend from the low across parts of northwest/west-central TX by 12Z, overtaking a developing dryline from north to south. ...OK... Multiple rounds of thunderstorms are possible today and tonight over the southern Plains, from southern KS across central/eastern OK to north-central/northeast TX. Activity will be supported by a fetch of elevated low-level warm advection and strong moisture transport -- above a relatively stable boundary layer. Return flow will be relatively immature -- even above the surface -- as upstream trajectories of cP air that followed the last frontal passage continue to modify. Buoyancy should diminish northward into more precip-laden air, with less-modified inflow parcels. Deep combined lift (from low-level warm advection, divergence-related jet dynamics aloft, and shots of midlevel DCVA preceding the main trough), will weaken southward. The most favorable overlap between those processes, in support of sustained/organized thunderstorms, still appears to be in or very near the outlook area, especially this evening and tonight. That is when low-level/inflow-layer theta-e and cooling aloft each will be greatest, and LFC lowest (but still elevated atop a stable boundary layer). As lapse rates above the boundary layer steepen rapidly tonight, MUCAPE should strengthen into the 500-1000 J/kg range -- rooted near 850 mb and distributed well through the hail-growth zone -- with effective-shear magnitudes peaking in the 30-40-kt range. This will support isolated severe-hail potential with the best-organized cells. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0638 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 191300Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF CENTRAL/EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Marginally severe hail may occur with evening/overnight thunderstorms in parts of Oklahoma. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a broad area of cyclonic flow, with multiple shortwaves and vorticity lobes of varying intensity, is apparent in moisture-channel imagery over much of the western/central CONUS. Those perturbations will consolidate into a large, complex cyclone by 12Z tomorrow, extending from the central Plains to the southern High Plains. The strongest of the shortwave troughs is located in the rear side of this configuration, from offshore of Vancouver Island southeastward to parts of NV. The southern part of this perturbation is expected to dig southeastward across the Four Corners region around 00Z, reaching the TX Panhandle and eastern/ southern NM by 12Z. In response, an elongated area of surface low pressure -- analyzed at 11Z near the CO/KS border -- should consolidate and move/ redevelop erratically southward toward west-central/southwestern OK by 06Z, pivoting over central OK by the end of the period. As the cyclogenesis proceeds in a residual continental/polar (cP) airmass, surface frontal features (especially warm frontal) will be nebulous this period. Still, a strengthening cold front should extend from the low across parts of northwest/west-central TX by 12Z, overtaking a developing dryline from north to south. ...OK... Multiple rounds of thunderstorms are possible today and tonight over the southern Plains, from southern KS across central/eastern OK to north-central/northeast TX. Activity will be supported by a fetch of elevated low-level warm advection and strong moisture transport -- above a relatively stable boundary layer. Return flow will be relatively immature -- even above the surface -- as upstream trajectories of cP air that followed the last frontal passage continue to modify. Buoyancy should diminish northward into more precip-laden air, with less-modified inflow parcels. Deep combined lift (from low-level warm advection, divergence-related jet dynamics aloft, and shots of midlevel DCVA preceding the main trough), will weaken southward. The most favorable overlap between those processes, in support of sustained/organized thunderstorms, still appears to be in or very near the outlook area, especially this evening and tonight. That is when low-level/inflow-layer theta-e and cooling aloft each will be greatest, and LFC lowest (but still elevated atop a stable boundary layer). As lapse rates above the boundary layer steepen rapidly tonight, MUCAPE should strengthen into the 500-1000 J/kg range -- rooted near 850 mb and distributed well through the hail-growth zone -- with effective-shear magnitudes peaking in the 30-40-kt range. This will support isolated severe-hail potential with the best-organized cells. ..Edwards/Leitman.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0340 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 221200Z - 271200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...D4/Wednesday - Parts of the Carolinas... Substantial model spread noted in the D3/Tuesday period continues into D4/Wednesday across the Carolinas. While most guidance suggests the cold front will be near the coast or offshore by Wednesday morning, the GFS and some GEFS members depict a notably stronger mid/upper-level cyclone approaching the region Wednesday morning. Should this occur, a surface wave may develop and result in a later frontal passage, with some threat for organized convection potentially developing near the coast. Predictability is much too low to include probabilities for this scenario at this time. ...D6/Friday and D7/Saturday - Parts of the Gulf Coast/Florida... Some extended-range guidance (most notably the deterministic 19/00Z ECMWF) depicts frontal wave development across the Gulf of Mexico late this week, as a cutoff mid/upper-level cyclone finally ejects east-northeastward. This scenario could pose some severe-thunderstorm potential near the Gulf Coast and Florida into next weekend, but predictability is very low at this forecast range, and substantial destabilization in the wake of the earlier frontal passage across the region still appears rather unlikely. Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0340 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 221200Z - 271200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...D4/Wednesday - Parts of the Carolinas... Substantial model spread noted in the D3/Tuesday period continues into D4/Wednesday across the Carolinas. While most guidance suggests the cold front will be near the coast or offshore by Wednesday morning, the GFS and some GEFS members depict a notably stronger mid/upper-level cyclone approaching the region Wednesday morning. Should this occur, a surface wave may develop and result in a later frontal passage, with some threat for organized convection potentially developing near the coast. Predictability is much too low to include probabilities for this scenario at this time. ...D6/Friday and D7/Saturday - Parts of the Gulf Coast/Florida... Some extended-range guidance (most notably the deterministic 19/00Z ECMWF) depicts frontal wave development across the Gulf of Mexico late this week, as a cutoff mid/upper-level cyclone finally ejects east-northeastward. This scenario could pose some severe-thunderstorm potential near the Gulf Coast and Florida into next weekend, but predictability is very low at this forecast range, and substantial destabilization in the wake of the earlier frontal passage across the region still appears rather unlikely. Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0340 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 221200Z - 271200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...D4/Wednesday - Parts of the Carolinas... Substantial model spread noted in the D3/Tuesday period continues into D4/Wednesday across the Carolinas. While most guidance suggests the cold front will be near the coast or offshore by Wednesday morning, the GFS and some GEFS members depict a notably stronger mid/upper-level cyclone approaching the region Wednesday morning. Should this occur, a surface wave may develop and result in a later frontal passage, with some threat for organized convection potentially developing near the coast. Predictability is much too low to include probabilities for this scenario at this time. ...D6/Friday and D7/Saturday - Parts of the Gulf Coast/Florida... Some extended-range guidance (most notably the deterministic 19/00Z ECMWF) depicts frontal wave development across the Gulf of Mexico late this week, as a cutoff mid/upper-level cyclone finally ejects east-northeastward. This scenario could pose some severe-thunderstorm potential near the Gulf Coast and Florida into next weekend, but predictability is very low at this forecast range, and substantial destabilization in the wake of the earlier frontal passage across the region still appears rather unlikely. Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0340 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 221200Z - 271200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...D4/Wednesday - Parts of the Carolinas... Substantial model spread noted in the D3/Tuesday period continues into D4/Wednesday across the Carolinas. While most guidance suggests the cold front will be near the coast or offshore by Wednesday morning, the GFS and some GEFS members depict a notably stronger mid/upper-level cyclone approaching the region Wednesday morning. Should this occur, a surface wave may develop and result in a later frontal passage, with some threat for organized convection potentially developing near the coast. Predictability is much too low to include probabilities for this scenario at this time. ...D6/Friday and D7/Saturday - Parts of the Gulf Coast/Florida... Some extended-range guidance (most notably the deterministic 19/00Z ECMWF) depicts frontal wave development across the Gulf of Mexico late this week, as a cutoff mid/upper-level cyclone finally ejects east-northeastward. This scenario could pose some severe-thunderstorm potential near the Gulf Coast and Florida into next weekend, but predictability is very low at this forecast range, and substantial destabilization in the wake of the earlier frontal passage across the region still appears rather unlikely. Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0340 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 221200Z - 271200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...D4/Wednesday - Parts of the Carolinas... Substantial model spread noted in the D3/Tuesday period continues into D4/Wednesday across the Carolinas. While most guidance suggests the cold front will be near the coast or offshore by Wednesday morning, the GFS and some GEFS members depict a notably stronger mid/upper-level cyclone approaching the region Wednesday morning. Should this occur, a surface wave may develop and result in a later frontal passage, with some threat for organized convection potentially developing near the coast. Predictability is much too low to include probabilities for this scenario at this time. ...D6/Friday and D7/Saturday - Parts of the Gulf Coast/Florida... Some extended-range guidance (most notably the deterministic 19/00Z ECMWF) depicts frontal wave development across the Gulf of Mexico late this week, as a cutoff mid/upper-level cyclone finally ejects east-northeastward. This scenario could pose some severe-thunderstorm potential near the Gulf Coast and Florida into next weekend, but predictability is very low at this forecast range, and substantial destabilization in the wake of the earlier frontal passage across the region still appears rather unlikely. Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0340 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 221200Z - 271200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...D4/Wednesday - Parts of the Carolinas... Substantial model spread noted in the D3/Tuesday period continues into D4/Wednesday across the Carolinas. While most guidance suggests the cold front will be near the coast or offshore by Wednesday morning, the GFS and some GEFS members depict a notably stronger mid/upper-level cyclone approaching the region Wednesday morning. Should this occur, a surface wave may develop and result in a later frontal passage, with some threat for organized convection potentially developing near the coast. Predictability is much too low to include probabilities for this scenario at this time. ...D6/Friday and D7/Saturday - Parts of the Gulf Coast/Florida... Some extended-range guidance (most notably the deterministic 19/00Z ECMWF) depicts frontal wave development across the Gulf of Mexico late this week, as a cutoff mid/upper-level cyclone finally ejects east-northeastward. This scenario could pose some severe-thunderstorm potential near the Gulf Coast and Florida into next weekend, but predictability is very low at this forecast range, and substantial destabilization in the wake of the earlier frontal passage across the region still appears rather unlikely. Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 0830 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 0830Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0228 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHEAST... ...SUMMARY... Thunderstorms capable of isolated damaging wind and possibly a tornado will be possible across parts of Alabama and the Florida Panhandle on Tuesday, mainly early in the day. ...Synopsis... A deep mid/upper-level trough is expected to move across parts of the MS/OH Valleys and Southeast on Tuesday, though considerable spread remains regarding the synoptic-scale details. The primary surface cyclone is forecast to move toward the lower Great Lakes, with secondary cyclogenesis possible across parts of the Carolinas/Mid Atlantic late in the period. A cold front will continue to move through portions of the Southeast. ...Parts of AL and the FL Panhandle into southwest GA... At the start of the period Tuesday morning, rather strong low-level and deep-layer shear will likely overlap a moist and weakly unstable environment across parts of south AL and the FL Panhandle, in advance of the cold front. Storms may persist along/ahead of the front through the morning, as a continuation of widespread convection from late in the D2/Monday period. Storm intensity and coverage may tend to wane with time, as stronger large-scale ascent becomes increasingly displaced from the warm sector, and instability weakens with eastward extent. However, some threat for isolated damaging wind and a brief tornado or two may persist during the day across southeast MS, south AL, the FL Panhandle, and possibly into parts of southwest GA. ...Carolinas and southern Mid Atlantic... Substantial spread persists among model guidance with regard to the synoptic pattern late on D3/Tuesday across parts of the Carolinas and Mid Atlantic. The deterministic GFS and some GEFS members develop a mid/upper-level cyclone near the lower MS Valley, while most other guidance is notably less amplified, with a broad, positively tilted trough approaching the region. With rather strong low-level and deep-layer shear generally forecast to overspread an increasingly moist but only weakly unstable environment, the strength of large-scale forcing will be crucial for determining the potential for organized deep convection. Given the unusually large uncertainty at this forecast range, and the likelihood for instability to remain quite weak even in the stronger scenarios, no probabilities have been included with this outlook. However, if guidance trends towards a more strongly forced scenario across this region, then severe probabilities may eventually be needed for Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. ..Dean.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 0830 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 0830Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0228 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHEAST... ...SUMMARY... Thunderstorms capable of isolated damaging wind and possibly a tornado will be possible across parts of Alabama and the Florida Panhandle on Tuesday, mainly early in the day. ...Synopsis... A deep mid/upper-level trough is expected to move across parts of the MS/OH Valleys and Southeast on Tuesday, though considerable spread remains regarding the synoptic-scale details. The primary surface cyclone is forecast to move toward the lower Great Lakes, with secondary cyclogenesis possible across parts of the Carolinas/Mid Atlantic late in the period. A cold front will continue to move through portions of the Southeast. ...Parts of AL and the FL Panhandle into southwest GA... At the start of the period Tuesday morning, rather strong low-level and deep-layer shear will likely overlap a moist and weakly unstable environment across parts of south AL and the FL Panhandle, in advance of the cold front. Storms may persist along/ahead of the front through the morning, as a continuation of widespread convection from late in the D2/Monday period. Storm intensity and coverage may tend to wane with time, as stronger large-scale ascent becomes increasingly displaced from the warm sector, and instability weakens with eastward extent. However, some threat for isolated damaging wind and a brief tornado or two may persist during the day across southeast MS, south AL, the FL Panhandle, and possibly into parts of southwest GA. ...Carolinas and southern Mid Atlantic... Substantial spread persists among model guidance with regard to the synoptic pattern late on D3/Tuesday across parts of the Carolinas and Mid Atlantic. The deterministic GFS and some GEFS members develop a mid/upper-level cyclone near the lower MS Valley, while most other guidance is notably less amplified, with a broad, positively tilted trough approaching the region. With rather strong low-level and deep-layer shear generally forecast to overspread an increasingly moist but only weakly unstable environment, the strength of large-scale forcing will be crucial for determining the potential for organized deep convection. Given the unusually large uncertainty at this forecast range, and the likelihood for instability to remain quite weak even in the stronger scenarios, no probabilities have been included with this outlook. However, if guidance trends towards a more strongly forced scenario across this region, then severe probabilities may eventually be needed for Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. ..Dean.. 11/19/2023 Read more

SPC Nov 19, 2023 0830 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 0830Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0228 AM CST Sun Nov 19 2023 Valid 211200Z - 221200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHEAST... ...SUMMARY... Thunderstorms capable of isolated damaging wind and possibly a tornado will be possible across parts of Alabama and the Florida Panhandle on Tuesday, mainly early in the day. ...Synopsis... A deep mid/upper-level trough is expected to move across parts of the MS/OH Valleys and Southeast on Tuesday, though considerable spread remains regarding the synoptic-scale details. The primary surface cyclone is forecast to move toward the lower Great Lakes, with secondary cyclogenesis possible across parts of the Carolinas/Mid Atlantic late in the period. A cold front will continue to move through portions of the Southeast. ...Parts of AL and the FL Panhandle into southwest GA... At the start of the period Tuesday morning, rather strong low-level and deep-layer shear will likely overlap a moist and weakly unstable environment across parts of south AL and the FL Panhandle, in advance of the cold front. Storms may persist along/ahead of the front through the morning, as a continuation of widespread convection from late in the D2/Monday period. Storm intensity and coverage may tend to wane with time, as stronger large-scale ascent becomes increasingly displaced from the warm sector, and instability weakens with eastward extent. However, some threat for isolated damaging wind and a brief tornado or two may persist during the day across southeast MS, south AL, the FL Panhandle, and possibly into parts of southwest GA. ...Carolinas and southern Mid Atlantic... Substantial spread persists among model guidance with regard to the synoptic pattern late on D3/Tuesday across parts of the Carolinas and Mid Atlantic. The deterministic GFS and some GEFS members develop a mid/upper-level cyclone near the lower MS Valley, while most other guidance is notably less amplified, with a broad, positively tilted trough approaching the region. With rather strong low-level and deep-layer shear generally forecast to overspread an increasingly moist but only weakly unstable environment, the strength of large-scale forcing will be crucial for determining the potential for organized deep convection. Given the unusually large uncertainty at this forecast range, and the likelihood for instability to remain quite weak even in the stronger scenarios, no probabilities have been included with this outlook. However, if guidance trends towards a more strongly forced scenario across this region, then severe probabilities may eventually be needed for Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. ..Dean.. 11/19/2023 Read more