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1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0800 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 241300Z - 251200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE UPPER
MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected over parts of the Upper
Midwest this afternoon into tonight. Storms will be capable of large
hail, and a cluster potentially capable of destructive wind gusts
could develop over parts of Minnesota into Wisconsin.
...Upper Midwest...
A mid-level trough will continue to transition eastward and modestly
amplify over the Canadian Prairies, with southern-peripheral height
falls and strengthening westerlies from North Dakota/northern
Minnesota toward the Upper Great Lakes through tonight. In this same
corridor, a weak MCV may be evolving this morning over eastern North
Dakota/northwest Minnesota, while these scattered thunderstorms will
probably also influence and somewhat hinder the effective
north-northeastward of a warm front later today across Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
A very moist (low 70s F dewpoints) and unstable air mass will
otherwise develop northeastward regionally in tandem with the warm
front as surface cyclogenesis occurs across the Siouxland and
southern Minnesota through evening. Upwards of 3000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE
is expected within the warm sector, with very warm mid-level
temperatures associated with the elevated mixed-layer plume likely
limiting warm sector development away from (south of) the immediate
triple point and cold front/warm front vicinity.
Multiple convective scenarios are possible late this afternoon
through tonight. For one, as the air mass recovers from the early
day storms, widely scattered surface-based thunderstorms may develop
by late afternoon near the eastward-advancing cold front within the
relatively narrow warm sector from far eastern North Dakota into
northern/western Minnesota. Any storms that do develop will likely
organize into supercells given strong wind profiles and the large
buoyancy. Large to very large hail, damaging winds and perhaps a
tornado would be possible with any supercells, especially with
storms in proximity to the warm front.
Additionally, on the southern fringe of the early scattered early
day convection (and related cloud cover) from eastern North Dakota
into northern Minnesota, storms may form near an effective triple
point/differential heating reinforced warm front. Such initial
development could occur across south-central/southeast Minnesota,
with robust instability/seasonally strong shear potentially
supportive of an initial mode of intense supercells, with subsequent
upscale growth in an MCS with heightened damaging wind potential.
Additional mostly elevated storms could form tonight from eastern
Minnesota into northern/central Wisconsin, on the immediate cool
side of the surface baroclinic gradient as a nocturnally
increasingly low-level jet heightens isentropic ascent. These storms
may also pose a large hail and damaging wind risk through the
overnight.
An upgrade to Enhanced Risk (Level 3/5) may be warranted pending
morning observational/guidance trends, potentially including a
corridor across south-central/southern Minnesota and west/southwest
Wisconsin, where a semi-focused swath of potentially significant
damaging winds appears plausible.
...Central Plains and Black Hills...
Very warm surface temperatures are expected ahead of the weakening
cold front across central Nebraska and northern Kansas. At least
isolated high-based storms are expected to develop within a
hot/deeply mixed boundary layer environment. With generally weak
mid-level flow across the region, storms may quickly become outflow
dominant, but steep low/mid-tropospheric lapse rates will support
isolated severe wind gusts. The strongest updrafts may also be
capable of producing some hail.
Other potentially severe storms will also be possible over the Black
Hills/northeast Wyoming with weak low-level upslope flow in the
post-frontal environment. Modest low-level moisture and only
glancing upper-level support suggest storm coverage will remain
isolated, although severe hail/strong winds will be possible.
...Carolinas and far southeast Virginia...
At the base of departing east coast trough, subtle height falls atop
a warm and unstable air mass will support scattered afternoon
thunderstorms across much of the eastern Carolinas and far southeast
Virginia along a weak surface cold front. Enhanced flow aloft and
surface convergence near the front should be sufficient for
transient storm organization into multicell clusters or a weak
supercell. Steepening low-level lapse rates and the high PWAT air
mass will favor heavily water and hail-loaded downdrafts capable of
isolated damaging gusts. Storms should begin to move offshore by
early evening ending the severe risk.
..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/24/2024
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0800 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 241300Z - 251200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE UPPER
MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected over parts of the Upper
Midwest this afternoon into tonight. Storms will be capable of large
hail, and a cluster potentially capable of destructive wind gusts
could develop over parts of Minnesota into Wisconsin.
...Upper Midwest...
A mid-level trough will continue to transition eastward and modestly
amplify over the Canadian Prairies, with southern-peripheral height
falls and strengthening westerlies from North Dakota/northern
Minnesota toward the Upper Great Lakes through tonight. In this same
corridor, a weak MCV may be evolving this morning over eastern North
Dakota/northwest Minnesota, while these scattered thunderstorms will
probably also influence and somewhat hinder the effective
north-northeastward of a warm front later today across Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
A very moist (low 70s F dewpoints) and unstable air mass will
otherwise develop northeastward regionally in tandem with the warm
front as surface cyclogenesis occurs across the Siouxland and
southern Minnesota through evening. Upwards of 3000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE
is expected within the warm sector, with very warm mid-level
temperatures associated with the elevated mixed-layer plume likely
limiting warm sector development away from (south of) the immediate
triple point and cold front/warm front vicinity.
Multiple convective scenarios are possible late this afternoon
through tonight. For one, as the air mass recovers from the early
day storms, widely scattered surface-based thunderstorms may develop
by late afternoon near the eastward-advancing cold front within the
relatively narrow warm sector from far eastern North Dakota into
northern/western Minnesota. Any storms that do develop will likely
organize into supercells given strong wind profiles and the large
buoyancy. Large to very large hail, damaging winds and perhaps a
tornado would be possible with any supercells, especially with
storms in proximity to the warm front.
Additionally, on the southern fringe of the early scattered early
day convection (and related cloud cover) from eastern North Dakota
into northern Minnesota, storms may form near an effective triple
point/differential heating reinforced warm front. Such initial
development could occur across south-central/southeast Minnesota,
with robust instability/seasonally strong shear potentially
supportive of an initial mode of intense supercells, with subsequent
upscale growth in an MCS with heightened damaging wind potential.
Additional mostly elevated storms could form tonight from eastern
Minnesota into northern/central Wisconsin, on the immediate cool
side of the surface baroclinic gradient as a nocturnally
increasingly low-level jet heightens isentropic ascent. These storms
may also pose a large hail and damaging wind risk through the
overnight.
An upgrade to Enhanced Risk (Level 3/5) may be warranted pending
morning observational/guidance trends, potentially including a
corridor across south-central/southern Minnesota and west/southwest
Wisconsin, where a semi-focused swath of potentially significant
damaging winds appears plausible.
...Central Plains and Black Hills...
Very warm surface temperatures are expected ahead of the weakening
cold front across central Nebraska and northern Kansas. At least
isolated high-based storms are expected to develop within a
hot/deeply mixed boundary layer environment. With generally weak
mid-level flow across the region, storms may quickly become outflow
dominant, but steep low/mid-tropospheric lapse rates will support
isolated severe wind gusts. The strongest updrafts may also be
capable of producing some hail.
Other potentially severe storms will also be possible over the Black
Hills/northeast Wyoming with weak low-level upslope flow in the
post-frontal environment. Modest low-level moisture and only
glancing upper-level support suggest storm coverage will remain
isolated, although severe hail/strong winds will be possible.
...Carolinas and far southeast Virginia...
At the base of departing east coast trough, subtle height falls atop
a warm and unstable air mass will support scattered afternoon
thunderstorms across much of the eastern Carolinas and far southeast
Virginia along a weak surface cold front. Enhanced flow aloft and
surface convergence near the front should be sufficient for
transient storm organization into multicell clusters or a weak
supercell. Steepening low-level lapse rates and the high PWAT air
mass will favor heavily water and hail-loaded downdrafts capable of
isolated damaging gusts. Storms should begin to move offshore by
early evening ending the severe risk.
..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/24/2024
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0800 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 241300Z - 251200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE UPPER
MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected over parts of the Upper
Midwest this afternoon into tonight. Storms will be capable of large
hail, and a cluster potentially capable of destructive wind gusts
could develop over parts of Minnesota into Wisconsin.
...Upper Midwest...
A mid-level trough will continue to transition eastward and modestly
amplify over the Canadian Prairies, with southern-peripheral height
falls and strengthening westerlies from North Dakota/northern
Minnesota toward the Upper Great Lakes through tonight. In this same
corridor, a weak MCV may be evolving this morning over eastern North
Dakota/northwest Minnesota, while these scattered thunderstorms will
probably also influence and somewhat hinder the effective
north-northeastward of a warm front later today across Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
A very moist (low 70s F dewpoints) and unstable air mass will
otherwise develop northeastward regionally in tandem with the warm
front as surface cyclogenesis occurs across the Siouxland and
southern Minnesota through evening. Upwards of 3000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE
is expected within the warm sector, with very warm mid-level
temperatures associated with the elevated mixed-layer plume likely
limiting warm sector development away from (south of) the immediate
triple point and cold front/warm front vicinity.
Multiple convective scenarios are possible late this afternoon
through tonight. For one, as the air mass recovers from the early
day storms, widely scattered surface-based thunderstorms may develop
by late afternoon near the eastward-advancing cold front within the
relatively narrow warm sector from far eastern North Dakota into
northern/western Minnesota. Any storms that do develop will likely
organize into supercells given strong wind profiles and the large
buoyancy. Large to very large hail, damaging winds and perhaps a
tornado would be possible with any supercells, especially with
storms in proximity to the warm front.
Additionally, on the southern fringe of the early scattered early
day convection (and related cloud cover) from eastern North Dakota
into northern Minnesota, storms may form near an effective triple
point/differential heating reinforced warm front. Such initial
development could occur across south-central/southeast Minnesota,
with robust instability/seasonally strong shear potentially
supportive of an initial mode of intense supercells, with subsequent
upscale growth in an MCS with heightened damaging wind potential.
Additional mostly elevated storms could form tonight from eastern
Minnesota into northern/central Wisconsin, on the immediate cool
side of the surface baroclinic gradient as a nocturnally
increasingly low-level jet heightens isentropic ascent. These storms
may also pose a large hail and damaging wind risk through the
overnight.
An upgrade to Enhanced Risk (Level 3/5) may be warranted pending
morning observational/guidance trends, potentially including a
corridor across south-central/southern Minnesota and west/southwest
Wisconsin, where a semi-focused swath of potentially significant
damaging winds appears plausible.
...Central Plains and Black Hills...
Very warm surface temperatures are expected ahead of the weakening
cold front across central Nebraska and northern Kansas. At least
isolated high-based storms are expected to develop within a
hot/deeply mixed boundary layer environment. With generally weak
mid-level flow across the region, storms may quickly become outflow
dominant, but steep low/mid-tropospheric lapse rates will support
isolated severe wind gusts. The strongest updrafts may also be
capable of producing some hail.
Other potentially severe storms will also be possible over the Black
Hills/northeast Wyoming with weak low-level upslope flow in the
post-frontal environment. Modest low-level moisture and only
glancing upper-level support suggest storm coverage will remain
isolated, although severe hail/strong winds will be possible.
...Carolinas and far southeast Virginia...
At the base of departing east coast trough, subtle height falls atop
a warm and unstable air mass will support scattered afternoon
thunderstorms across much of the eastern Carolinas and far southeast
Virginia along a weak surface cold front. Enhanced flow aloft and
surface convergence near the front should be sufficient for
transient storm organization into multicell clusters or a weak
supercell. Steepening low-level lapse rates and the high PWAT air
mass will favor heavily water and hail-loaded downdrafts capable of
isolated damaging gusts. Storms should begin to move offshore by
early evening ending the severe risk.
..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/24/2024
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0800 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 241300Z - 251200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE UPPER
MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected over parts of the Upper
Midwest this afternoon into tonight. Storms will be capable of large
hail, and a cluster potentially capable of destructive wind gusts
could develop over parts of Minnesota into Wisconsin.
...Upper Midwest...
A mid-level trough will continue to transition eastward and modestly
amplify over the Canadian Prairies, with southern-peripheral height
falls and strengthening westerlies from North Dakota/northern
Minnesota toward the Upper Great Lakes through tonight. In this same
corridor, a weak MCV may be evolving this morning over eastern North
Dakota/northwest Minnesota, while these scattered thunderstorms will
probably also influence and somewhat hinder the effective
north-northeastward of a warm front later today across Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
A very moist (low 70s F dewpoints) and unstable air mass will
otherwise develop northeastward regionally in tandem with the warm
front as surface cyclogenesis occurs across the Siouxland and
southern Minnesota through evening. Upwards of 3000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE
is expected within the warm sector, with very warm mid-level
temperatures associated with the elevated mixed-layer plume likely
limiting warm sector development away from (south of) the immediate
triple point and cold front/warm front vicinity.
Multiple convective scenarios are possible late this afternoon
through tonight. For one, as the air mass recovers from the early
day storms, widely scattered surface-based thunderstorms may develop
by late afternoon near the eastward-advancing cold front within the
relatively narrow warm sector from far eastern North Dakota into
northern/western Minnesota. Any storms that do develop will likely
organize into supercells given strong wind profiles and the large
buoyancy. Large to very large hail, damaging winds and perhaps a
tornado would be possible with any supercells, especially with
storms in proximity to the warm front.
Additionally, on the southern fringe of the early scattered early
day convection (and related cloud cover) from eastern North Dakota
into northern Minnesota, storms may form near an effective triple
point/differential heating reinforced warm front. Such initial
development could occur across south-central/southeast Minnesota,
with robust instability/seasonally strong shear potentially
supportive of an initial mode of intense supercells, with subsequent
upscale growth in an MCS with heightened damaging wind potential.
Additional mostly elevated storms could form tonight from eastern
Minnesota into northern/central Wisconsin, on the immediate cool
side of the surface baroclinic gradient as a nocturnally
increasingly low-level jet heightens isentropic ascent. These storms
may also pose a large hail and damaging wind risk through the
overnight.
An upgrade to Enhanced Risk (Level 3/5) may be warranted pending
morning observational/guidance trends, potentially including a
corridor across south-central/southern Minnesota and west/southwest
Wisconsin, where a semi-focused swath of potentially significant
damaging winds appears plausible.
...Central Plains and Black Hills...
Very warm surface temperatures are expected ahead of the weakening
cold front across central Nebraska and northern Kansas. At least
isolated high-based storms are expected to develop within a
hot/deeply mixed boundary layer environment. With generally weak
mid-level flow across the region, storms may quickly become outflow
dominant, but steep low/mid-tropospheric lapse rates will support
isolated severe wind gusts. The strongest updrafts may also be
capable of producing some hail.
Other potentially severe storms will also be possible over the Black
Hills/northeast Wyoming with weak low-level upslope flow in the
post-frontal environment. Modest low-level moisture and only
glancing upper-level support suggest storm coverage will remain
isolated, although severe hail/strong winds will be possible.
...Carolinas and far southeast Virginia...
At the base of departing east coast trough, subtle height falls atop
a warm and unstable air mass will support scattered afternoon
thunderstorms across much of the eastern Carolinas and far southeast
Virginia along a weak surface cold front. Enhanced flow aloft and
surface convergence near the front should be sufficient for
transient storm organization into multicell clusters or a weak
supercell. Steepening low-level lapse rates and the high PWAT air
mass will favor heavily water and hail-loaded downdrafts capable of
isolated damaging gusts. Storms should begin to move offshore by
early evening ending the severe risk.
..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/24/2024
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0800 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 241300Z - 251200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE UPPER
MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected over parts of the Upper
Midwest this afternoon into tonight. Storms will be capable of large
hail, and a cluster potentially capable of destructive wind gusts
could develop over parts of Minnesota into Wisconsin.
...Upper Midwest...
A mid-level trough will continue to transition eastward and modestly
amplify over the Canadian Prairies, with southern-peripheral height
falls and strengthening westerlies from North Dakota/northern
Minnesota toward the Upper Great Lakes through tonight. In this same
corridor, a weak MCV may be evolving this morning over eastern North
Dakota/northwest Minnesota, while these scattered thunderstorms will
probably also influence and somewhat hinder the effective
north-northeastward of a warm front later today across Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
A very moist (low 70s F dewpoints) and unstable air mass will
otherwise develop northeastward regionally in tandem with the warm
front as surface cyclogenesis occurs across the Siouxland and
southern Minnesota through evening. Upwards of 3000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE
is expected within the warm sector, with very warm mid-level
temperatures associated with the elevated mixed-layer plume likely
limiting warm sector development away from (south of) the immediate
triple point and cold front/warm front vicinity.
Multiple convective scenarios are possible late this afternoon
through tonight. For one, as the air mass recovers from the early
day storms, widely scattered surface-based thunderstorms may develop
by late afternoon near the eastward-advancing cold front within the
relatively narrow warm sector from far eastern North Dakota into
northern/western Minnesota. Any storms that do develop will likely
organize into supercells given strong wind profiles and the large
buoyancy. Large to very large hail, damaging winds and perhaps a
tornado would be possible with any supercells, especially with
storms in proximity to the warm front.
Additionally, on the southern fringe of the early scattered early
day convection (and related cloud cover) from eastern North Dakota
into northern Minnesota, storms may form near an effective triple
point/differential heating reinforced warm front. Such initial
development could occur across south-central/southeast Minnesota,
with robust instability/seasonally strong shear potentially
supportive of an initial mode of intense supercells, with subsequent
upscale growth in an MCS with heightened damaging wind potential.
Additional mostly elevated storms could form tonight from eastern
Minnesota into northern/central Wisconsin, on the immediate cool
side of the surface baroclinic gradient as a nocturnally
increasingly low-level jet heightens isentropic ascent. These storms
may also pose a large hail and damaging wind risk through the
overnight.
An upgrade to Enhanced Risk (Level 3/5) may be warranted pending
morning observational/guidance trends, potentially including a
corridor across south-central/southern Minnesota and west/southwest
Wisconsin, where a semi-focused swath of potentially significant
damaging winds appears plausible.
...Central Plains and Black Hills...
Very warm surface temperatures are expected ahead of the weakening
cold front across central Nebraska and northern Kansas. At least
isolated high-based storms are expected to develop within a
hot/deeply mixed boundary layer environment. With generally weak
mid-level flow across the region, storms may quickly become outflow
dominant, but steep low/mid-tropospheric lapse rates will support
isolated severe wind gusts. The strongest updrafts may also be
capable of producing some hail.
Other potentially severe storms will also be possible over the Black
Hills/northeast Wyoming with weak low-level upslope flow in the
post-frontal environment. Modest low-level moisture and only
glancing upper-level support suggest storm coverage will remain
isolated, although severe hail/strong winds will be possible.
...Carolinas and far southeast Virginia...
At the base of departing east coast trough, subtle height falls atop
a warm and unstable air mass will support scattered afternoon
thunderstorms across much of the eastern Carolinas and far southeast
Virginia along a weak surface cold front. Enhanced flow aloft and
surface convergence near the front should be sufficient for
transient storm organization into multicell clusters or a weak
supercell. Steepening low-level lapse rates and the high PWAT air
mass will favor heavily water and hail-loaded downdrafts capable of
isolated damaging gusts. Storms should begin to move offshore by
early evening ending the severe risk.
..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/24/2024
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0800 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 241300Z - 251200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE UPPER
MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected over parts of the Upper
Midwest this afternoon into tonight. Storms will be capable of large
hail, and a cluster potentially capable of destructive wind gusts
could develop over parts of Minnesota into Wisconsin.
...Upper Midwest...
A mid-level trough will continue to transition eastward and modestly
amplify over the Canadian Prairies, with southern-peripheral height
falls and strengthening westerlies from North Dakota/northern
Minnesota toward the Upper Great Lakes through tonight. In this same
corridor, a weak MCV may be evolving this morning over eastern North
Dakota/northwest Minnesota, while these scattered thunderstorms will
probably also influence and somewhat hinder the effective
north-northeastward of a warm front later today across Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
A very moist (low 70s F dewpoints) and unstable air mass will
otherwise develop northeastward regionally in tandem with the warm
front as surface cyclogenesis occurs across the Siouxland and
southern Minnesota through evening. Upwards of 3000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE
is expected within the warm sector, with very warm mid-level
temperatures associated with the elevated mixed-layer plume likely
limiting warm sector development away from (south of) the immediate
triple point and cold front/warm front vicinity.
Multiple convective scenarios are possible late this afternoon
through tonight. For one, as the air mass recovers from the early
day storms, widely scattered surface-based thunderstorms may develop
by late afternoon near the eastward-advancing cold front within the
relatively narrow warm sector from far eastern North Dakota into
northern/western Minnesota. Any storms that do develop will likely
organize into supercells given strong wind profiles and the large
buoyancy. Large to very large hail, damaging winds and perhaps a
tornado would be possible with any supercells, especially with
storms in proximity to the warm front.
Additionally, on the southern fringe of the early scattered early
day convection (and related cloud cover) from eastern North Dakota
into northern Minnesota, storms may form near an effective triple
point/differential heating reinforced warm front. Such initial
development could occur across south-central/southeast Minnesota,
with robust instability/seasonally strong shear potentially
supportive of an initial mode of intense supercells, with subsequent
upscale growth in an MCS with heightened damaging wind potential.
Additional mostly elevated storms could form tonight from eastern
Minnesota into northern/central Wisconsin, on the immediate cool
side of the surface baroclinic gradient as a nocturnally
increasingly low-level jet heightens isentropic ascent. These storms
may also pose a large hail and damaging wind risk through the
overnight.
An upgrade to Enhanced Risk (Level 3/5) may be warranted pending
morning observational/guidance trends, potentially including a
corridor across south-central/southern Minnesota and west/southwest
Wisconsin, where a semi-focused swath of potentially significant
damaging winds appears plausible.
...Central Plains and Black Hills...
Very warm surface temperatures are expected ahead of the weakening
cold front across central Nebraska and northern Kansas. At least
isolated high-based storms are expected to develop within a
hot/deeply mixed boundary layer environment. With generally weak
mid-level flow across the region, storms may quickly become outflow
dominant, but steep low/mid-tropospheric lapse rates will support
isolated severe wind gusts. The strongest updrafts may also be
capable of producing some hail.
Other potentially severe storms will also be possible over the Black
Hills/northeast Wyoming with weak low-level upslope flow in the
post-frontal environment. Modest low-level moisture and only
glancing upper-level support suggest storm coverage will remain
isolated, although severe hail/strong winds will be possible.
...Carolinas and far southeast Virginia...
At the base of departing east coast trough, subtle height falls atop
a warm and unstable air mass will support scattered afternoon
thunderstorms across much of the eastern Carolinas and far southeast
Virginia along a weak surface cold front. Enhanced flow aloft and
surface convergence near the front should be sufficient for
transient storm organization into multicell clusters or a weak
supercell. Steepening low-level lapse rates and the high PWAT air
mass will favor heavily water and hail-loaded downdrafts capable of
isolated damaging gusts. Storms should begin to move offshore by
early evening ending the severe risk.
..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/24/2024
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0800 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 241300Z - 251200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE UPPER
MIDWEST...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected over parts of the Upper
Midwest this afternoon into tonight. Storms will be capable of large
hail, and a cluster potentially capable of destructive wind gusts
could develop over parts of Minnesota into Wisconsin.
...Upper Midwest...
A mid-level trough will continue to transition eastward and modestly
amplify over the Canadian Prairies, with southern-peripheral height
falls and strengthening westerlies from North Dakota/northern
Minnesota toward the Upper Great Lakes through tonight. In this same
corridor, a weak MCV may be evolving this morning over eastern North
Dakota/northwest Minnesota, while these scattered thunderstorms will
probably also influence and somewhat hinder the effective
north-northeastward of a warm front later today across Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
A very moist (low 70s F dewpoints) and unstable air mass will
otherwise develop northeastward regionally in tandem with the warm
front as surface cyclogenesis occurs across the Siouxland and
southern Minnesota through evening. Upwards of 3000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE
is expected within the warm sector, with very warm mid-level
temperatures associated with the elevated mixed-layer plume likely
limiting warm sector development away from (south of) the immediate
triple point and cold front/warm front vicinity.
Multiple convective scenarios are possible late this afternoon
through tonight. For one, as the air mass recovers from the early
day storms, widely scattered surface-based thunderstorms may develop
by late afternoon near the eastward-advancing cold front within the
relatively narrow warm sector from far eastern North Dakota into
northern/western Minnesota. Any storms that do develop will likely
organize into supercells given strong wind profiles and the large
buoyancy. Large to very large hail, damaging winds and perhaps a
tornado would be possible with any supercells, especially with
storms in proximity to the warm front.
Additionally, on the southern fringe of the early scattered early
day convection (and related cloud cover) from eastern North Dakota
into northern Minnesota, storms may form near an effective triple
point/differential heating reinforced warm front. Such initial
development could occur across south-central/southeast Minnesota,
with robust instability/seasonally strong shear potentially
supportive of an initial mode of intense supercells, with subsequent
upscale growth in an MCS with heightened damaging wind potential.
Additional mostly elevated storms could form tonight from eastern
Minnesota into northern/central Wisconsin, on the immediate cool
side of the surface baroclinic gradient as a nocturnally
increasingly low-level jet heightens isentropic ascent. These storms
may also pose a large hail and damaging wind risk through the
overnight.
An upgrade to Enhanced Risk (Level 3/5) may be warranted pending
morning observational/guidance trends, potentially including a
corridor across south-central/southern Minnesota and west/southwest
Wisconsin, where a semi-focused swath of potentially significant
damaging winds appears plausible.
...Central Plains and Black Hills...
Very warm surface temperatures are expected ahead of the weakening
cold front across central Nebraska and northern Kansas. At least
isolated high-based storms are expected to develop within a
hot/deeply mixed boundary layer environment. With generally weak
mid-level flow across the region, storms may quickly become outflow
dominant, but steep low/mid-tropospheric lapse rates will support
isolated severe wind gusts. The strongest updrafts may also be
capable of producing some hail.
Other potentially severe storms will also be possible over the Black
Hills/northeast Wyoming with weak low-level upslope flow in the
post-frontal environment. Modest low-level moisture and only
glancing upper-level support suggest storm coverage will remain
isolated, although severe hail/strong winds will be possible.
...Carolinas and far southeast Virginia...
At the base of departing east coast trough, subtle height falls atop
a warm and unstable air mass will support scattered afternoon
thunderstorms across much of the eastern Carolinas and far southeast
Virginia along a weak surface cold front. Enhanced flow aloft and
surface convergence near the front should be sufficient for
transient storm organization into multicell clusters or a weak
supercell. Steepening low-level lapse rates and the high PWAT air
mass will favor heavily water and hail-loaded downdrafts capable of
isolated damaging gusts. Storms should begin to move offshore by
early evening ending the severe risk.
..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/24/2024
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 271200Z - 021200Z
...DISCUSSION...
...D4/Thursday: Northern High Plains...
A rather amplified mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to
move from the Northwest toward the northern Rockies on Thursday,
reaching the northern High Plains later Thursday night. A surface
low is forecast to deepen across eastern MT during the day, and then
move eastward across the Dakotas Thursday night.
Some uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude and placement of
organized severe-thunderstorm potential, due to the relatively late
shortwave arrival and a tendency for stronger mid/upper-level flow
to be displaced from the warm sector. However, modest low-level
moisture return will support potential for moderate destabilization,
in conjunction with some increase in deep-layer flow/shear. Some
potential for strong to severe storms is evident from eastern MT
into the western and possibly central Dakotas, and probabilities
will likely be needed in subsequent outlooks.
...D5/Friday: Northern/central Plains into the upper Midwest...
The shortwave trough and related surface low that affect the
northern High Plains on Thursday will move eastward on Friday, as a
trailing cold front moves across parts of the central Plains. A warm
front will move northward in advance of the surface low across parts
of MN/WI. Details regarding the northward extent of stronger
destabilization remain uncertain, with some potential for rather
extensive early-day convection within a warm-advection regime.
However, an organized severe-thunderstorm threat could eventually
evolve in conjunction with the surface low and warm front across
MN/WI, and also potentially along the cold front into parts of Iowa
and the central Plains.
...D6/Saturday - D8/Monday...
Predictability begins to wane by D6/Saturday regarding evolution of
the upper pattern and surface features across the CONUS. The cold
front that moves across parts of the Great Plains and Midwest on
Friday is generally forecast to move across parts of the Great Lakes
and Northeast on Saturday. Guidance varies regarding the extent of
prefrontal destabilization and strength of deep-layer flow, but
strong to potentially severe storms could develop along the front by
Saturday afternoon/evening.
Another mid/upper-level trough may move from the Northwest across
the northern Rockies and High Plains Sunday into Monday, though
considerable uncertainty remains regarding the amplitude/timing of
this trough and any related severe potential into early next week.
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 271200Z - 021200Z
...DISCUSSION...
...D4/Thursday: Northern High Plains...
A rather amplified mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to
move from the Northwest toward the northern Rockies on Thursday,
reaching the northern High Plains later Thursday night. A surface
low is forecast to deepen across eastern MT during the day, and then
move eastward across the Dakotas Thursday night.
Some uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude and placement of
organized severe-thunderstorm potential, due to the relatively late
shortwave arrival and a tendency for stronger mid/upper-level flow
to be displaced from the warm sector. However, modest low-level
moisture return will support potential for moderate destabilization,
in conjunction with some increase in deep-layer flow/shear. Some
potential for strong to severe storms is evident from eastern MT
into the western and possibly central Dakotas, and probabilities
will likely be needed in subsequent outlooks.
...D5/Friday: Northern/central Plains into the upper Midwest...
The shortwave trough and related surface low that affect the
northern High Plains on Thursday will move eastward on Friday, as a
trailing cold front moves across parts of the central Plains. A warm
front will move northward in advance of the surface low across parts
of MN/WI. Details regarding the northward extent of stronger
destabilization remain uncertain, with some potential for rather
extensive early-day convection within a warm-advection regime.
However, an organized severe-thunderstorm threat could eventually
evolve in conjunction with the surface low and warm front across
MN/WI, and also potentially along the cold front into parts of Iowa
and the central Plains.
...D6/Saturday - D8/Monday...
Predictability begins to wane by D6/Saturday regarding evolution of
the upper pattern and surface features across the CONUS. The cold
front that moves across parts of the Great Plains and Midwest on
Friday is generally forecast to move across parts of the Great Lakes
and Northeast on Saturday. Guidance varies regarding the extent of
prefrontal destabilization and strength of deep-layer flow, but
strong to potentially severe storms could develop along the front by
Saturday afternoon/evening.
Another mid/upper-level trough may move from the Northwest across
the northern Rockies and High Plains Sunday into Monday, though
considerable uncertainty remains regarding the amplitude/timing of
this trough and any related severe potential into early next week.
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 271200Z - 021200Z
...DISCUSSION...
...D4/Thursday: Northern High Plains...
A rather amplified mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to
move from the Northwest toward the northern Rockies on Thursday,
reaching the northern High Plains later Thursday night. A surface
low is forecast to deepen across eastern MT during the day, and then
move eastward across the Dakotas Thursday night.
Some uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude and placement of
organized severe-thunderstorm potential, due to the relatively late
shortwave arrival and a tendency for stronger mid/upper-level flow
to be displaced from the warm sector. However, modest low-level
moisture return will support potential for moderate destabilization,
in conjunction with some increase in deep-layer flow/shear. Some
potential for strong to severe storms is evident from eastern MT
into the western and possibly central Dakotas, and probabilities
will likely be needed in subsequent outlooks.
...D5/Friday: Northern/central Plains into the upper Midwest...
The shortwave trough and related surface low that affect the
northern High Plains on Thursday will move eastward on Friday, as a
trailing cold front moves across parts of the central Plains. A warm
front will move northward in advance of the surface low across parts
of MN/WI. Details regarding the northward extent of stronger
destabilization remain uncertain, with some potential for rather
extensive early-day convection within a warm-advection regime.
However, an organized severe-thunderstorm threat could eventually
evolve in conjunction with the surface low and warm front across
MN/WI, and also potentially along the cold front into parts of Iowa
and the central Plains.
...D6/Saturday - D8/Monday...
Predictability begins to wane by D6/Saturday regarding evolution of
the upper pattern and surface features across the CONUS. The cold
front that moves across parts of the Great Plains and Midwest on
Friday is generally forecast to move across parts of the Great Lakes
and Northeast on Saturday. Guidance varies regarding the extent of
prefrontal destabilization and strength of deep-layer flow, but
strong to potentially severe storms could develop along the front by
Saturday afternoon/evening.
Another mid/upper-level trough may move from the Northwest across
the northern Rockies and High Plains Sunday into Monday, though
considerable uncertainty remains regarding the amplitude/timing of
this trough and any related severe potential into early next week.
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 271200Z - 021200Z
...DISCUSSION...
...D4/Thursday: Northern High Plains...
A rather amplified mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to
move from the Northwest toward the northern Rockies on Thursday,
reaching the northern High Plains later Thursday night. A surface
low is forecast to deepen across eastern MT during the day, and then
move eastward across the Dakotas Thursday night.
Some uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude and placement of
organized severe-thunderstorm potential, due to the relatively late
shortwave arrival and a tendency for stronger mid/upper-level flow
to be displaced from the warm sector. However, modest low-level
moisture return will support potential for moderate destabilization,
in conjunction with some increase in deep-layer flow/shear. Some
potential for strong to severe storms is evident from eastern MT
into the western and possibly central Dakotas, and probabilities
will likely be needed in subsequent outlooks.
...D5/Friday: Northern/central Plains into the upper Midwest...
The shortwave trough and related surface low that affect the
northern High Plains on Thursday will move eastward on Friday, as a
trailing cold front moves across parts of the central Plains. A warm
front will move northward in advance of the surface low across parts
of MN/WI. Details regarding the northward extent of stronger
destabilization remain uncertain, with some potential for rather
extensive early-day convection within a warm-advection regime.
However, an organized severe-thunderstorm threat could eventually
evolve in conjunction with the surface low and warm front across
MN/WI, and also potentially along the cold front into parts of Iowa
and the central Plains.
...D6/Saturday - D8/Monday...
Predictability begins to wane by D6/Saturday regarding evolution of
the upper pattern and surface features across the CONUS. The cold
front that moves across parts of the Great Plains and Midwest on
Friday is generally forecast to move across parts of the Great Lakes
and Northeast on Saturday. Guidance varies regarding the extent of
prefrontal destabilization and strength of deep-layer flow, but
strong to potentially severe storms could develop along the front by
Saturday afternoon/evening.
Another mid/upper-level trough may move from the Northwest across
the northern Rockies and High Plains Sunday into Monday, though
considerable uncertainty remains regarding the amplitude/timing of
this trough and any related severe potential into early next week.
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 271200Z - 021200Z
...DISCUSSION...
...D4/Thursday: Northern High Plains...
A rather amplified mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to
move from the Northwest toward the northern Rockies on Thursday,
reaching the northern High Plains later Thursday night. A surface
low is forecast to deepen across eastern MT during the day, and then
move eastward across the Dakotas Thursday night.
Some uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude and placement of
organized severe-thunderstorm potential, due to the relatively late
shortwave arrival and a tendency for stronger mid/upper-level flow
to be displaced from the warm sector. However, modest low-level
moisture return will support potential for moderate destabilization,
in conjunction with some increase in deep-layer flow/shear. Some
potential for strong to severe storms is evident from eastern MT
into the western and possibly central Dakotas, and probabilities
will likely be needed in subsequent outlooks.
...D5/Friday: Northern/central Plains into the upper Midwest...
The shortwave trough and related surface low that affect the
northern High Plains on Thursday will move eastward on Friday, as a
trailing cold front moves across parts of the central Plains. A warm
front will move northward in advance of the surface low across parts
of MN/WI. Details regarding the northward extent of stronger
destabilization remain uncertain, with some potential for rather
extensive early-day convection within a warm-advection regime.
However, an organized severe-thunderstorm threat could eventually
evolve in conjunction with the surface low and warm front across
MN/WI, and also potentially along the cold front into parts of Iowa
and the central Plains.
...D6/Saturday - D8/Monday...
Predictability begins to wane by D6/Saturday regarding evolution of
the upper pattern and surface features across the CONUS. The cold
front that moves across parts of the Great Plains and Midwest on
Friday is generally forecast to move across parts of the Great Lakes
and Northeast on Saturday. Guidance varies regarding the extent of
prefrontal destabilization and strength of deep-layer flow, but
strong to potentially severe storms could develop along the front by
Saturday afternoon/evening.
Another mid/upper-level trough may move from the Northwest across
the northern Rockies and High Plains Sunday into Monday, though
considerable uncertainty remains regarding the amplitude/timing of
this trough and any related severe potential into early next week.
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 271200Z - 021200Z
...DISCUSSION...
...D4/Thursday: Northern High Plains...
A rather amplified mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to
move from the Northwest toward the northern Rockies on Thursday,
reaching the northern High Plains later Thursday night. A surface
low is forecast to deepen across eastern MT during the day, and then
move eastward across the Dakotas Thursday night.
Some uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude and placement of
organized severe-thunderstorm potential, due to the relatively late
shortwave arrival and a tendency for stronger mid/upper-level flow
to be displaced from the warm sector. However, modest low-level
moisture return will support potential for moderate destabilization,
in conjunction with some increase in deep-layer flow/shear. Some
potential for strong to severe storms is evident from eastern MT
into the western and possibly central Dakotas, and probabilities
will likely be needed in subsequent outlooks.
...D5/Friday: Northern/central Plains into the upper Midwest...
The shortwave trough and related surface low that affect the
northern High Plains on Thursday will move eastward on Friday, as a
trailing cold front moves across parts of the central Plains. A warm
front will move northward in advance of the surface low across parts
of MN/WI. Details regarding the northward extent of stronger
destabilization remain uncertain, with some potential for rather
extensive early-day convection within a warm-advection regime.
However, an organized severe-thunderstorm threat could eventually
evolve in conjunction with the surface low and warm front across
MN/WI, and also potentially along the cold front into parts of Iowa
and the central Plains.
...D6/Saturday - D8/Monday...
Predictability begins to wane by D6/Saturday regarding evolution of
the upper pattern and surface features across the CONUS. The cold
front that moves across parts of the Great Plains and Midwest on
Friday is generally forecast to move across parts of the Great Lakes
and Northeast on Saturday. Guidance varies regarding the extent of
prefrontal destabilization and strength of deep-layer flow, but
strong to potentially severe storms could develop along the front by
Saturday afternoon/evening.
Another mid/upper-level trough may move from the Northwest across
the northern Rockies and High Plains Sunday into Monday, though
considerable uncertainty remains regarding the amplitude/timing of
this trough and any related severe potential into early next week.
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 271200Z - 021200Z
...DISCUSSION...
...D4/Thursday: Northern High Plains...
A rather amplified mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to
move from the Northwest toward the northern Rockies on Thursday,
reaching the northern High Plains later Thursday night. A surface
low is forecast to deepen across eastern MT during the day, and then
move eastward across the Dakotas Thursday night.
Some uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude and placement of
organized severe-thunderstorm potential, due to the relatively late
shortwave arrival and a tendency for stronger mid/upper-level flow
to be displaced from the warm sector. However, modest low-level
moisture return will support potential for moderate destabilization,
in conjunction with some increase in deep-layer flow/shear. Some
potential for strong to severe storms is evident from eastern MT
into the western and possibly central Dakotas, and probabilities
will likely be needed in subsequent outlooks.
...D5/Friday: Northern/central Plains into the upper Midwest...
The shortwave trough and related surface low that affect the
northern High Plains on Thursday will move eastward on Friday, as a
trailing cold front moves across parts of the central Plains. A warm
front will move northward in advance of the surface low across parts
of MN/WI. Details regarding the northward extent of stronger
destabilization remain uncertain, with some potential for rather
extensive early-day convection within a warm-advection regime.
However, an organized severe-thunderstorm threat could eventually
evolve in conjunction with the surface low and warm front across
MN/WI, and also potentially along the cold front into parts of Iowa
and the central Plains.
...D6/Saturday - D8/Monday...
Predictability begins to wane by D6/Saturday regarding evolution of
the upper pattern and surface features across the CONUS. The cold
front that moves across parts of the Great Plains and Midwest on
Friday is generally forecast to move across parts of the Great Lakes
and Northeast on Saturday. Guidance varies regarding the extent of
prefrontal destabilization and strength of deep-layer flow, but
strong to potentially severe storms could develop along the front by
Saturday afternoon/evening.
Another mid/upper-level trough may move from the Northwest across
the northern Rockies and High Plains Sunday into Monday, though
considerable uncertainty remains regarding the amplitude/timing of
this trough and any related severe potential into early next week.
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 271200Z - 021200Z
...DISCUSSION...
...D4/Thursday: Northern High Plains...
A rather amplified mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to
move from the Northwest toward the northern Rockies on Thursday,
reaching the northern High Plains later Thursday night. A surface
low is forecast to deepen across eastern MT during the day, and then
move eastward across the Dakotas Thursday night.
Some uncertainty remains regarding the magnitude and placement of
organized severe-thunderstorm potential, due to the relatively late
shortwave arrival and a tendency for stronger mid/upper-level flow
to be displaced from the warm sector. However, modest low-level
moisture return will support potential for moderate destabilization,
in conjunction with some increase in deep-layer flow/shear. Some
potential for strong to severe storms is evident from eastern MT
into the western and possibly central Dakotas, and probabilities
will likely be needed in subsequent outlooks.
...D5/Friday: Northern/central Plains into the upper Midwest...
The shortwave trough and related surface low that affect the
northern High Plains on Thursday will move eastward on Friday, as a
trailing cold front moves across parts of the central Plains. A warm
front will move northward in advance of the surface low across parts
of MN/WI. Details regarding the northward extent of stronger
destabilization remain uncertain, with some potential for rather
extensive early-day convection within a warm-advection regime.
However, an organized severe-thunderstorm threat could eventually
evolve in conjunction with the surface low and warm front across
MN/WI, and also potentially along the cold front into parts of Iowa
and the central Plains.
...D6/Saturday - D8/Monday...
Predictability begins to wane by D6/Saturday regarding evolution of
the upper pattern and surface features across the CONUS. The cold
front that moves across parts of the Great Plains and Midwest on
Friday is generally forecast to move across parts of the Great Lakes
and Northeast on Saturday. Guidance varies regarding the extent of
prefrontal destabilization and strength of deep-layer flow, but
strong to potentially severe storms could develop along the front by
Saturday afternoon/evening.
Another mid/upper-level trough may move from the Northwest across
the northern Rockies and High Plains Sunday into Monday, though
considerable uncertainty remains regarding the amplitude/timing of
this trough and any related severe potential into early next week.
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
MD 1392 CONCERNING SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH 450... FOR NORTH-CENTRAL NORTH DAKOTA
Mesoscale Discussion 1392
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0313 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Areas affected...North-Central North Dakota
Concerning...Severe Thunderstorm Watch 450...
Valid 240813Z - 240945Z
The severe weather threat for Severe Thunderstorm Watch 450
continues.
SUMMARY...Large hail remains possible with the pair of supercells
moving southeastward across north-central North Dakota.
DISCUSSION...Elevated supercells continue to progress gradually
southeastward across north-central North Dakota. Current storm
motion with the storm over Bottineau County is around 35 kt. The
storm farther west just crossing the international border is moving
a bit slower, with its motion estimated at closer to 30 kt. Both of
these supercells remain organized and intense, with recent MESH
indicating severe hail (particularly with the westernmost cell).
The lead/easternmost cell may begin weakening soon as it moves into
a less buoyant airmass, although the organized character of this
cell may allow it to persist farther east into greater stability
than would usually be expected. The westernmost cell should be able
to maintain it intensity for at least the next hour or so before it
too begins to weaken. Large hail will remain possible with these
storms, particularly the westernmost cell, for the next hour or two.
Given the forecast weakening of these storms with eastern extent, a
downstream watch is not currently anticipated, but convective trends
will still be monitored closely.
..Mosier.. 06/24/2024
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...FGF...BIS...
LAT...LON 49320220 49049952 48319896 47849977 47980102 48540242
49320220
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
MD 1391 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR EASTERN MT...WESTERN NORTH DAKOTA
Mesoscale Discussion 1391
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0140 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Areas affected...Eastern MT...Western North Dakota
Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely
Valid 240640Z - 240845Z
Probability of Watch Issuance...20 percent
SUMMARY...A few instances of large hail are possible across eastern
Montana and western North Dakota over the next few hours.
DISCUSSION...Warm-air advection across a frontal zone across eastern
MT has contributed to an increase in elevated thunderstorm activity
over the past hour or so. Significant buoyancy exists downstream
across far eastern MT and into western ND, supported primarily by
steep mid-level lapse rates (i.e. 8.5 to 9 deg C per km) and modest
mid-level moisture. Based on recent mesoanalysis, 0-6 km bulk shear
is around 40 to 50 kt, with the resulting combination of vertical
shear and buoyancy supportive of organized updrafts and a few
elevated supercells. Given the buoyancy downstream, this activity
may persist for the next few hours into far eastern MT and western
ND, although the overall coverage may begin to decrease as storms
become displaced east of the more favorable warm-air advection.
Large hail is possible within the more organized storms, but the
overall severe risk should remain isolated, likely precluding the
need for a watch.
..Mosier/Guyer.. 06/24/2024
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...BIS...BYZ...GGW...
LAT...LON 46010390 46130558 46630703 47350750 48330655 48700544
48760452 48530346 48040242 46870156 46090162 46010390
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 261200Z - 271200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF PA
INTO NORTHERN NJ AND SOUTHEAST NY...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered damaging winds are possible over parts of the Northeast
and northern Mid Atlantic on Wednesday.
...Upper Ohio Valley into the Northeast/Mid Atlantic...
A mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to move from the
upper Midwest toward the lower Great Lakes and Northeast on
Wednesday. Rather moist low-level westerly flow will support
potential for moderate diurnal destabilization from OH into parts of
the Northeast and northern Mid Atlantic. Scattered thunderstorm
development will be possible Wednesday afternoon along/ahead of a
cold front across parts of OH/PA and southern NY, which will spread
eastward into the evening.
Strengthening flow in the 700-500 mb layer will support sufficient
effective shear for storm organization, with potential for a few
organized clusters and perhaps a couple of supercells. Damaging wind
and perhaps isolated hail will be possible, along with some
potential for a brief tornado if a supercell can be sustained. A
Slight Risk has been added for parts of PA into southeast NY and
northern NJ, where the most favorable overlap of instability, storm
coverage, and strengthening low/midlevel flow is currently
anticipated.
Diurnal storm coverage becomes increasingly uncertain with southward
extent, but at least an isolated severe threat could extend into
parts of the Mid Atlantic during the late afternoon and evening.
...Lower Ohio Valley into the Ozarks vicinity...
Uncertainty regarding storm potential and evolution is quite high
from the lower Ohio Valley vicinity into the Ozarks. There is some
potential for an MCS (or its remnant) to be ongoing at the start of
the period. An outflow-influenced front will be draped somewhere
across the region through the day, to the south of a reinforcing
cold front that will move southward from the upper Midwest.
Northwesterly mid/upper-level flow will be in place across the
region, though the strength of the flow and any embedded shortwave
troughs may also be influenced by antecedent convection and
potential development of any MCVs.
Some redevelopment of storms will be possible near the front and any
remaining outflow boundaries. The northwesterly flow regime may
provide sufficient effective shear for some storm organization, with
one or more clusters possible with a threat of damaging wind and
perhaps some hail.
...Southeast WY/northeast CO into central High Plains...
Moist low-level southeasterly flow is expected on Wednesday from
eastern CO/WY into the NE Panhandle, in the wake of a cold frontal
passage. Moderate destabilization will be possible during the
afternoon within this regime. While the region will initially be
under the influence of an upper-level ridge over the southern
Rockies, guidance suggests potential for a low-amplitude shortwave
trough to crest the ridge from WY into western NY. This will support
potential for at least isolated thunderstorm development.
Midlevel flow may remain rather modest, but sufficient veering with
height will support sufficient effective shear for storm
organization, including some supercell potential with a threat of
large hail and localized severe gusts. A strengthening nocturnal
low-level jet could support some upscale growth, which could spread
at least isolated severe-gust potential into parts of southwest NE
and western KS.
..Dean.. 06/24/2024
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 261200Z - 271200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF PA
INTO NORTHERN NJ AND SOUTHEAST NY...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered damaging winds are possible over parts of the Northeast
and northern Mid Atlantic on Wednesday.
...Upper Ohio Valley into the Northeast/Mid Atlantic...
A mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to move from the
upper Midwest toward the lower Great Lakes and Northeast on
Wednesday. Rather moist low-level westerly flow will support
potential for moderate diurnal destabilization from OH into parts of
the Northeast and northern Mid Atlantic. Scattered thunderstorm
development will be possible Wednesday afternoon along/ahead of a
cold front across parts of OH/PA and southern NY, which will spread
eastward into the evening.
Strengthening flow in the 700-500 mb layer will support sufficient
effective shear for storm organization, with potential for a few
organized clusters and perhaps a couple of supercells. Damaging wind
and perhaps isolated hail will be possible, along with some
potential for a brief tornado if a supercell can be sustained. A
Slight Risk has been added for parts of PA into southeast NY and
northern NJ, where the most favorable overlap of instability, storm
coverage, and strengthening low/midlevel flow is currently
anticipated.
Diurnal storm coverage becomes increasingly uncertain with southward
extent, but at least an isolated severe threat could extend into
parts of the Mid Atlantic during the late afternoon and evening.
...Lower Ohio Valley into the Ozarks vicinity...
Uncertainty regarding storm potential and evolution is quite high
from the lower Ohio Valley vicinity into the Ozarks. There is some
potential for an MCS (or its remnant) to be ongoing at the start of
the period. An outflow-influenced front will be draped somewhere
across the region through the day, to the south of a reinforcing
cold front that will move southward from the upper Midwest.
Northwesterly mid/upper-level flow will be in place across the
region, though the strength of the flow and any embedded shortwave
troughs may also be influenced by antecedent convection and
potential development of any MCVs.
Some redevelopment of storms will be possible near the front and any
remaining outflow boundaries. The northwesterly flow regime may
provide sufficient effective shear for some storm organization, with
one or more clusters possible with a threat of damaging wind and
perhaps some hail.
...Southeast WY/northeast CO into central High Plains...
Moist low-level southeasterly flow is expected on Wednesday from
eastern CO/WY into the NE Panhandle, in the wake of a cold frontal
passage. Moderate destabilization will be possible during the
afternoon within this regime. While the region will initially be
under the influence of an upper-level ridge over the southern
Rockies, guidance suggests potential for a low-amplitude shortwave
trough to crest the ridge from WY into western NY. This will support
potential for at least isolated thunderstorm development.
Midlevel flow may remain rather modest, but sufficient veering with
height will support sufficient effective shear for storm
organization, including some supercell potential with a threat of
large hail and localized severe gusts. A strengthening nocturnal
low-level jet could support some upscale growth, which could spread
at least isolated severe-gust potential into parts of southwest NE
and western KS.
..Dean.. 06/24/2024
Read more
1 year 2 months ago
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024
Valid 261200Z - 271200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF PA
INTO NORTHERN NJ AND SOUTHEAST NY...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered damaging winds are possible over parts of the Northeast
and northern Mid Atlantic on Wednesday.
...Upper Ohio Valley into the Northeast/Mid Atlantic...
A mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to move from the
upper Midwest toward the lower Great Lakes and Northeast on
Wednesday. Rather moist low-level westerly flow will support
potential for moderate diurnal destabilization from OH into parts of
the Northeast and northern Mid Atlantic. Scattered thunderstorm
development will be possible Wednesday afternoon along/ahead of a
cold front across parts of OH/PA and southern NY, which will spread
eastward into the evening.
Strengthening flow in the 700-500 mb layer will support sufficient
effective shear for storm organization, with potential for a few
organized clusters and perhaps a couple of supercells. Damaging wind
and perhaps isolated hail will be possible, along with some
potential for a brief tornado if a supercell can be sustained. A
Slight Risk has been added for parts of PA into southeast NY and
northern NJ, where the most favorable overlap of instability, storm
coverage, and strengthening low/midlevel flow is currently
anticipated.
Diurnal storm coverage becomes increasingly uncertain with southward
extent, but at least an isolated severe threat could extend into
parts of the Mid Atlantic during the late afternoon and evening.
...Lower Ohio Valley into the Ozarks vicinity...
Uncertainty regarding storm potential and evolution is quite high
from the lower Ohio Valley vicinity into the Ozarks. There is some
potential for an MCS (or its remnant) to be ongoing at the start of
the period. An outflow-influenced front will be draped somewhere
across the region through the day, to the south of a reinforcing
cold front that will move southward from the upper Midwest.
Northwesterly mid/upper-level flow will be in place across the
region, though the strength of the flow and any embedded shortwave
troughs may also be influenced by antecedent convection and
potential development of any MCVs.
Some redevelopment of storms will be possible near the front and any
remaining outflow boundaries. The northwesterly flow regime may
provide sufficient effective shear for some storm organization, with
one or more clusters possible with a threat of damaging wind and
perhaps some hail.
...Southeast WY/northeast CO into central High Plains...
Moist low-level southeasterly flow is expected on Wednesday from
eastern CO/WY into the NE Panhandle, in the wake of a cold frontal
passage. Moderate destabilization will be possible during the
afternoon within this regime. While the region will initially be
under the influence of an upper-level ridge over the southern
Rockies, guidance suggests potential for a low-amplitude shortwave
trough to crest the ridge from WY into western NY. This will support
potential for at least isolated thunderstorm development.
Midlevel flow may remain rather modest, but sufficient veering with
height will support sufficient effective shear for storm
organization, including some supercell potential with a threat of
large hail and localized severe gusts. A strengthening nocturnal
low-level jet could support some upscale growth, which could spread
at least isolated severe-gust potential into parts of southwest NE
and western KS.
..Dean.. 06/24/2024
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5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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