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1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1032 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181700Z - 191200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with no changes
or additions made.
..Squitieri.. 01/18/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1001 PM CST Wed Jan 17 2024/
...Synopsis...
A low-amplitude shortwave trough accompanied by a robust
northwesterly jet streak will cross the northern/central Rockies,
favoring the southward evolution of a weak lee cyclone over the
central High Plains -- immediately ahead of a southward-surging cold
front. A modest pressure gradient along the southern periphery of
the lee cyclone will support 15-20 mph sustained westerly surface
winds (with higher gusts) across the southern High Plains. Downslope
warming/drying should contribute to around 20 percent minimum RH
over the TX Trans-Pecos, where locally elevated fire-weather
conditions are possible. However, marginal fuels across the area
should limit fire-weather potential.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1032 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181700Z - 191200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with no changes
or additions made.
..Squitieri.. 01/18/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1001 PM CST Wed Jan 17 2024/
...Synopsis...
A low-amplitude shortwave trough accompanied by a robust
northwesterly jet streak will cross the northern/central Rockies,
favoring the southward evolution of a weak lee cyclone over the
central High Plains -- immediately ahead of a southward-surging cold
front. A modest pressure gradient along the southern periphery of
the lee cyclone will support 15-20 mph sustained westerly surface
winds (with higher gusts) across the southern High Plains. Downslope
warming/drying should contribute to around 20 percent minimum RH
over the TX Trans-Pecos, where locally elevated fire-weather
conditions are possible. However, marginal fuels across the area
should limit fire-weather potential.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1032 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181700Z - 191200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with no changes
or additions made.
..Squitieri.. 01/18/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1001 PM CST Wed Jan 17 2024/
...Synopsis...
A low-amplitude shortwave trough accompanied by a robust
northwesterly jet streak will cross the northern/central Rockies,
favoring the southward evolution of a weak lee cyclone over the
central High Plains -- immediately ahead of a southward-surging cold
front. A modest pressure gradient along the southern periphery of
the lee cyclone will support 15-20 mph sustained westerly surface
winds (with higher gusts) across the southern High Plains. Downslope
warming/drying should contribute to around 20 percent minimum RH
over the TX Trans-Pecos, where locally elevated fire-weather
conditions are possible. However, marginal fuels across the area
should limit fire-weather potential.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1032 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181700Z - 191200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with no changes
or additions made.
..Squitieri.. 01/18/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1001 PM CST Wed Jan 17 2024/
...Synopsis...
A low-amplitude shortwave trough accompanied by a robust
northwesterly jet streak will cross the northern/central Rockies,
favoring the southward evolution of a weak lee cyclone over the
central High Plains -- immediately ahead of a southward-surging cold
front. A modest pressure gradient along the southern periphery of
the lee cyclone will support 15-20 mph sustained westerly surface
winds (with higher gusts) across the southern High Plains. Downslope
warming/drying should contribute to around 20 percent minimum RH
over the TX Trans-Pecos, where locally elevated fire-weather
conditions are possible. However, marginal fuels across the area
should limit fire-weather potential.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1032 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181700Z - 191200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with no changes
or additions made.
..Squitieri.. 01/18/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1001 PM CST Wed Jan 17 2024/
...Synopsis...
A low-amplitude shortwave trough accompanied by a robust
northwesterly jet streak will cross the northern/central Rockies,
favoring the southward evolution of a weak lee cyclone over the
central High Plains -- immediately ahead of a southward-surging cold
front. A modest pressure gradient along the southern periphery of
the lee cyclone will support 15-20 mph sustained westerly surface
winds (with higher gusts) across the southern High Plains. Downslope
warming/drying should contribute to around 20 percent minimum RH
over the TX Trans-Pecos, where locally elevated fire-weather
conditions are possible. However, marginal fuels across the area
should limit fire-weather potential.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1032 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181700Z - 191200Z
...NO CRITICAL AREAS...
The previous forecast (see below) remains on track, with no changes
or additions made.
..Squitieri.. 01/18/2024
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1001 PM CST Wed Jan 17 2024/
...Synopsis...
A low-amplitude shortwave trough accompanied by a robust
northwesterly jet streak will cross the northern/central Rockies,
favoring the southward evolution of a weak lee cyclone over the
central High Plains -- immediately ahead of a southward-surging cold
front. A modest pressure gradient along the southern periphery of
the lee cyclone will support 15-20 mph sustained westerly surface
winds (with higher gusts) across the southern High Plains. Downslope
warming/drying should contribute to around 20 percent minimum RH
over the TX Trans-Pecos, where locally elevated fire-weather
conditions are possible. However, marginal fuels across the area
should limit fire-weather potential.
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1016 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181630Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today
into tonight.
...Synopsis...
Thunderstorm potential is expected to remain limited to southern
Florida, and perhaps the northern Gulf, for today and tonight. Cool
continental air remains in place across the majority of the country
with any appreciable moisture confined to the southern FL peninsula
in the vicinity of diffuse warm frontal zone. Weak ascent associated
with modest low-level warm air advection and lift within the
right-entrance region of an exiting upper-level jet should support
isolated thunderstorm development later this afternoon into the
early evening. While low-level wind profiles should remain meager,
40-50 knot flow aloft may support transient storm organization,
though weak forcing for ascent should preclude a more robust severe
thunderstorm threat.
To the northwest, broad cyclonic flow aloft over the central
Plains/Midwest is expected to amplify over the next 24 hours as a
surge of continental air pushes south. Embedded disturbances within
the mean cyclonic flow regime will propagate from the central/high
Plains towards the Southeast through tonight. Shallow convective
showers should develop over the northern Gulf and into coastal
LA/MS/AL within a modest warm advection regime ahead of one of these
disturbances. A few lightning flashes are possible, but poor
mid-level lapse rates and limited ascent should keep thunderstorm
coverage below 10%.
..Moore.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1016 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181630Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today
into tonight.
...Synopsis...
Thunderstorm potential is expected to remain limited to southern
Florida, and perhaps the northern Gulf, for today and tonight. Cool
continental air remains in place across the majority of the country
with any appreciable moisture confined to the southern FL peninsula
in the vicinity of diffuse warm frontal zone. Weak ascent associated
with modest low-level warm air advection and lift within the
right-entrance region of an exiting upper-level jet should support
isolated thunderstorm development later this afternoon into the
early evening. While low-level wind profiles should remain meager,
40-50 knot flow aloft may support transient storm organization,
though weak forcing for ascent should preclude a more robust severe
thunderstorm threat.
To the northwest, broad cyclonic flow aloft over the central
Plains/Midwest is expected to amplify over the next 24 hours as a
surge of continental air pushes south. Embedded disturbances within
the mean cyclonic flow regime will propagate from the central/high
Plains towards the Southeast through tonight. Shallow convective
showers should develop over the northern Gulf and into coastal
LA/MS/AL within a modest warm advection regime ahead of one of these
disturbances. A few lightning flashes are possible, but poor
mid-level lapse rates and limited ascent should keep thunderstorm
coverage below 10%.
..Moore.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1016 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181630Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today
into tonight.
...Synopsis...
Thunderstorm potential is expected to remain limited to southern
Florida, and perhaps the northern Gulf, for today and tonight. Cool
continental air remains in place across the majority of the country
with any appreciable moisture confined to the southern FL peninsula
in the vicinity of diffuse warm frontal zone. Weak ascent associated
with modest low-level warm air advection and lift within the
right-entrance region of an exiting upper-level jet should support
isolated thunderstorm development later this afternoon into the
early evening. While low-level wind profiles should remain meager,
40-50 knot flow aloft may support transient storm organization,
though weak forcing for ascent should preclude a more robust severe
thunderstorm threat.
To the northwest, broad cyclonic flow aloft over the central
Plains/Midwest is expected to amplify over the next 24 hours as a
surge of continental air pushes south. Embedded disturbances within
the mean cyclonic flow regime will propagate from the central/high
Plains towards the Southeast through tonight. Shallow convective
showers should develop over the northern Gulf and into coastal
LA/MS/AL within a modest warm advection regime ahead of one of these
disturbances. A few lightning flashes are possible, but poor
mid-level lapse rates and limited ascent should keep thunderstorm
coverage below 10%.
..Moore.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1016 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181630Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today
into tonight.
...Synopsis...
Thunderstorm potential is expected to remain limited to southern
Florida, and perhaps the northern Gulf, for today and tonight. Cool
continental air remains in place across the majority of the country
with any appreciable moisture confined to the southern FL peninsula
in the vicinity of diffuse warm frontal zone. Weak ascent associated
with modest low-level warm air advection and lift within the
right-entrance region of an exiting upper-level jet should support
isolated thunderstorm development later this afternoon into the
early evening. While low-level wind profiles should remain meager,
40-50 knot flow aloft may support transient storm organization,
though weak forcing for ascent should preclude a more robust severe
thunderstorm threat.
To the northwest, broad cyclonic flow aloft over the central
Plains/Midwest is expected to amplify over the next 24 hours as a
surge of continental air pushes south. Embedded disturbances within
the mean cyclonic flow regime will propagate from the central/high
Plains towards the Southeast through tonight. Shallow convective
showers should develop over the northern Gulf and into coastal
LA/MS/AL within a modest warm advection regime ahead of one of these
disturbances. A few lightning flashes are possible, but poor
mid-level lapse rates and limited ascent should keep thunderstorm
coverage below 10%.
..Moore.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1016 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181630Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today
into tonight.
...Synopsis...
Thunderstorm potential is expected to remain limited to southern
Florida, and perhaps the northern Gulf, for today and tonight. Cool
continental air remains in place across the majority of the country
with any appreciable moisture confined to the southern FL peninsula
in the vicinity of diffuse warm frontal zone. Weak ascent associated
with modest low-level warm air advection and lift within the
right-entrance region of an exiting upper-level jet should support
isolated thunderstorm development later this afternoon into the
early evening. While low-level wind profiles should remain meager,
40-50 knot flow aloft may support transient storm organization,
though weak forcing for ascent should preclude a more robust severe
thunderstorm threat.
To the northwest, broad cyclonic flow aloft over the central
Plains/Midwest is expected to amplify over the next 24 hours as a
surge of continental air pushes south. Embedded disturbances within
the mean cyclonic flow regime will propagate from the central/high
Plains towards the Southeast through tonight. Shallow convective
showers should develop over the northern Gulf and into coastal
LA/MS/AL within a modest warm advection regime ahead of one of these
disturbances. A few lightning flashes are possible, but poor
mid-level lapse rates and limited ascent should keep thunderstorm
coverage below 10%.
..Moore.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1016 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181630Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today
into tonight.
...Synopsis...
Thunderstorm potential is expected to remain limited to southern
Florida, and perhaps the northern Gulf, for today and tonight. Cool
continental air remains in place across the majority of the country
with any appreciable moisture confined to the southern FL peninsula
in the vicinity of diffuse warm frontal zone. Weak ascent associated
with modest low-level warm air advection and lift within the
right-entrance region of an exiting upper-level jet should support
isolated thunderstorm development later this afternoon into the
early evening. While low-level wind profiles should remain meager,
40-50 knot flow aloft may support transient storm organization,
though weak forcing for ascent should preclude a more robust severe
thunderstorm threat.
To the northwest, broad cyclonic flow aloft over the central
Plains/Midwest is expected to amplify over the next 24 hours as a
surge of continental air pushes south. Embedded disturbances within
the mean cyclonic flow regime will propagate from the central/high
Plains towards the Southeast through tonight. Shallow convective
showers should develop over the northern Gulf and into coastal
LA/MS/AL within a modest warm advection regime ahead of one of these
disturbances. A few lightning flashes are possible, but poor
mid-level lapse rates and limited ascent should keep thunderstorm
coverage below 10%.
..Moore.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0559 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181300Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow over the central/eastern
CONUS will amplify again as two connected events occur:
1. Synoptic-scale ridging -- now over the West Coast -- shifts
slowly inland, reaching the interior Northwest and western Great
Basin by the end of the period.
2. A series of shortwave troughs -- initially evident in
moisture-channel imagery from northernmost portions of ON/MB
southwestward to central/eastern MT -- dig southward to
southeastward and get more in phase. This will lead to a closed or
nearly closed 500-mb low over Lake Superior by 12Z tomorrow. The MT
perturbation will cross the central Plains to the lower Ohio Valley.
In response to these developments, a surface cold front -- analyzed
at 11Z across Lake Superior, northwestern WI, southern MN, to a weak
low over the northwestern NE Panhandle, to northwestern WY and
western MT -- should sweep eastward to southeastward across the
remainder of the Plains and Missouri/Mississippi Valleys. By 12Z
tomorrow, the front should extend from a low over WV across GA, the
FL Panhandle, and the central/southwestern Gulf. This evening and
overnight, thunderstorms should develop in a prefrontal convergence
zone (and perhaps along the front) near the Loop Current, where
air-sea thermodynamic fluxes can yield greatest boundary-layer
theta-e with minimized MLCINH. However, this activity should remain
west of FL before 12Z.
An area of widely scattered to scattered showers, with a few
embedded thunderstorms, may develop this afternoon over portions of
south FL. Convection will form in a weakly capped, moist, diurnally
heated boundary layer, near an older frontal zone now just south of
the peninsula. Activity should move eastward to northeastward off
the Atlantic Coast, followed by an evening decrease in coverage as
the boundary layer stabilizes. Forecast soundings suggest weak
midlevel lapse rates will keep buoyancy on the modest side -- with
MLCAPE generally 500-1000 J/kg, while low-level flow and shear
remain weak. As such, activity should be too disorganized for a
categorical severe threat.
..Edwards/Dean.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0559 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181300Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow over the central/eastern
CONUS will amplify again as two connected events occur:
1. Synoptic-scale ridging -- now over the West Coast -- shifts
slowly inland, reaching the interior Northwest and western Great
Basin by the end of the period.
2. A series of shortwave troughs -- initially evident in
moisture-channel imagery from northernmost portions of ON/MB
southwestward to central/eastern MT -- dig southward to
southeastward and get more in phase. This will lead to a closed or
nearly closed 500-mb low over Lake Superior by 12Z tomorrow. The MT
perturbation will cross the central Plains to the lower Ohio Valley.
In response to these developments, a surface cold front -- analyzed
at 11Z across Lake Superior, northwestern WI, southern MN, to a weak
low over the northwestern NE Panhandle, to northwestern WY and
western MT -- should sweep eastward to southeastward across the
remainder of the Plains and Missouri/Mississippi Valleys. By 12Z
tomorrow, the front should extend from a low over WV across GA, the
FL Panhandle, and the central/southwestern Gulf. This evening and
overnight, thunderstorms should develop in a prefrontal convergence
zone (and perhaps along the front) near the Loop Current, where
air-sea thermodynamic fluxes can yield greatest boundary-layer
theta-e with minimized MLCINH. However, this activity should remain
west of FL before 12Z.
An area of widely scattered to scattered showers, with a few
embedded thunderstorms, may develop this afternoon over portions of
south FL. Convection will form in a weakly capped, moist, diurnally
heated boundary layer, near an older frontal zone now just south of
the peninsula. Activity should move eastward to northeastward off
the Atlantic Coast, followed by an evening decrease in coverage as
the boundary layer stabilizes. Forecast soundings suggest weak
midlevel lapse rates will keep buoyancy on the modest side -- with
MLCAPE generally 500-1000 J/kg, while low-level flow and shear
remain weak. As such, activity should be too disorganized for a
categorical severe threat.
..Edwards/Dean.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0559 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181300Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow over the central/eastern
CONUS will amplify again as two connected events occur:
1. Synoptic-scale ridging -- now over the West Coast -- shifts
slowly inland, reaching the interior Northwest and western Great
Basin by the end of the period.
2. A series of shortwave troughs -- initially evident in
moisture-channel imagery from northernmost portions of ON/MB
southwestward to central/eastern MT -- dig southward to
southeastward and get more in phase. This will lead to a closed or
nearly closed 500-mb low over Lake Superior by 12Z tomorrow. The MT
perturbation will cross the central Plains to the lower Ohio Valley.
In response to these developments, a surface cold front -- analyzed
at 11Z across Lake Superior, northwestern WI, southern MN, to a weak
low over the northwestern NE Panhandle, to northwestern WY and
western MT -- should sweep eastward to southeastward across the
remainder of the Plains and Missouri/Mississippi Valleys. By 12Z
tomorrow, the front should extend from a low over WV across GA, the
FL Panhandle, and the central/southwestern Gulf. This evening and
overnight, thunderstorms should develop in a prefrontal convergence
zone (and perhaps along the front) near the Loop Current, where
air-sea thermodynamic fluxes can yield greatest boundary-layer
theta-e with minimized MLCINH. However, this activity should remain
west of FL before 12Z.
An area of widely scattered to scattered showers, with a few
embedded thunderstorms, may develop this afternoon over portions of
south FL. Convection will form in a weakly capped, moist, diurnally
heated boundary layer, near an older frontal zone now just south of
the peninsula. Activity should move eastward to northeastward off
the Atlantic Coast, followed by an evening decrease in coverage as
the boundary layer stabilizes. Forecast soundings suggest weak
midlevel lapse rates will keep buoyancy on the modest side -- with
MLCAPE generally 500-1000 J/kg, while low-level flow and shear
remain weak. As such, activity should be too disorganized for a
categorical severe threat.
..Edwards/Dean.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0559 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181300Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow over the central/eastern
CONUS will amplify again as two connected events occur:
1. Synoptic-scale ridging -- now over the West Coast -- shifts
slowly inland, reaching the interior Northwest and western Great
Basin by the end of the period.
2. A series of shortwave troughs -- initially evident in
moisture-channel imagery from northernmost portions of ON/MB
southwestward to central/eastern MT -- dig southward to
southeastward and get more in phase. This will lead to a closed or
nearly closed 500-mb low over Lake Superior by 12Z tomorrow. The MT
perturbation will cross the central Plains to the lower Ohio Valley.
In response to these developments, a surface cold front -- analyzed
at 11Z across Lake Superior, northwestern WI, southern MN, to a weak
low over the northwestern NE Panhandle, to northwestern WY and
western MT -- should sweep eastward to southeastward across the
remainder of the Plains and Missouri/Mississippi Valleys. By 12Z
tomorrow, the front should extend from a low over WV across GA, the
FL Panhandle, and the central/southwestern Gulf. This evening and
overnight, thunderstorms should develop in a prefrontal convergence
zone (and perhaps along the front) near the Loop Current, where
air-sea thermodynamic fluxes can yield greatest boundary-layer
theta-e with minimized MLCINH. However, this activity should remain
west of FL before 12Z.
An area of widely scattered to scattered showers, with a few
embedded thunderstorms, may develop this afternoon over portions of
south FL. Convection will form in a weakly capped, moist, diurnally
heated boundary layer, near an older frontal zone now just south of
the peninsula. Activity should move eastward to northeastward off
the Atlantic Coast, followed by an evening decrease in coverage as
the boundary layer stabilizes. Forecast soundings suggest weak
midlevel lapse rates will keep buoyancy on the modest side -- with
MLCAPE generally 500-1000 J/kg, while low-level flow and shear
remain weak. As such, activity should be too disorganized for a
categorical severe threat.
..Edwards/Dean.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0559 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 181300Z - 191200Z
...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...
...SUMMARY...
A few thunderstorms may develop across parts of south Florida today.
...Synopsis/Discussion...
In mid/upper levels, broadly cyclonic flow over the central/eastern
CONUS will amplify again as two connected events occur:
1. Synoptic-scale ridging -- now over the West Coast -- shifts
slowly inland, reaching the interior Northwest and western Great
Basin by the end of the period.
2. A series of shortwave troughs -- initially evident in
moisture-channel imagery from northernmost portions of ON/MB
southwestward to central/eastern MT -- dig southward to
southeastward and get more in phase. This will lead to a closed or
nearly closed 500-mb low over Lake Superior by 12Z tomorrow. The MT
perturbation will cross the central Plains to the lower Ohio Valley.
In response to these developments, a surface cold front -- analyzed
at 11Z across Lake Superior, northwestern WI, southern MN, to a weak
low over the northwestern NE Panhandle, to northwestern WY and
western MT -- should sweep eastward to southeastward across the
remainder of the Plains and Missouri/Mississippi Valleys. By 12Z
tomorrow, the front should extend from a low over WV across GA, the
FL Panhandle, and the central/southwestern Gulf. This evening and
overnight, thunderstorms should develop in a prefrontal convergence
zone (and perhaps along the front) near the Loop Current, where
air-sea thermodynamic fluxes can yield greatest boundary-layer
theta-e with minimized MLCINH. However, this activity should remain
west of FL before 12Z.
An area of widely scattered to scattered showers, with a few
embedded thunderstorms, may develop this afternoon over portions of
south FL. Convection will form in a weakly capped, moist, diurnally
heated boundary layer, near an older frontal zone now just south of
the peninsula. Activity should move eastward to northeastward off
the Atlantic Coast, followed by an evening decrease in coverage as
the boundary layer stabilizes. Forecast soundings suggest weak
midlevel lapse rates will keep buoyancy on the modest side -- with
MLCAPE generally 500-1000 J/kg, while low-level flow and shear
remain weak. As such, activity should be too disorganized for a
categorical severe threat.
..Edwards/Dean.. 01/18/2024
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0313 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 211200Z - 261200Z
...DISCUSSION...
An upper-level trough over the western U.S. early in the period will
slowly shift east toward the Rockies and adjacent High Plains
through at least Day 6/Tue. Beyond Tuesday, most medium-range
guidance depicts a mean upper trough roughly over the High Plains,
with a series of shortwave ejecting east/northeast into the
Mid-South/Midwest vicinity Days 7-8/Wed-Thu. This overall pattern
will support long-duration deep-layer southwesterly flow across the
southern Plains, Lower MS Valley/Gulf coast states and the
Mid-South. As a result, Gulf moisture is expected to return
northward, first across the Texas coastal vicinity on Day 4/Sun
before also increasing across much of the rest of the Gulf coast
states the remainder of the period.
Given increased southwesterly flow overspreading returning Gulf
moisture, at least some low-end severe potential appears possible
across coastal TX early in the period. Some severe potential could
then shift east across the Gulf Coast states later in the period,
(around Day 7 or 8/Wed or Thu) when some guidance shows a stronger
shortwave trough ejecting over the Lower MS/TN Valley vicinity in
conjunction with a deeper surface low and cold front.
Severe potential appears too low early in the period to include 15
percent probabilities. Uncertainty in timing and latitudinal
position of the possible late-period shortwave trough also precludes
probabilities at this time. Nevertheless, this pattern change could
support increasing severe potential with time across Gulf coast
areas, which may necessitate probabilities in the coming days.
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0313 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 211200Z - 261200Z
...DISCUSSION...
An upper-level trough over the western U.S. early in the period will
slowly shift east toward the Rockies and adjacent High Plains
through at least Day 6/Tue. Beyond Tuesday, most medium-range
guidance depicts a mean upper trough roughly over the High Plains,
with a series of shortwave ejecting east/northeast into the
Mid-South/Midwest vicinity Days 7-8/Wed-Thu. This overall pattern
will support long-duration deep-layer southwesterly flow across the
southern Plains, Lower MS Valley/Gulf coast states and the
Mid-South. As a result, Gulf moisture is expected to return
northward, first across the Texas coastal vicinity on Day 4/Sun
before also increasing across much of the rest of the Gulf coast
states the remainder of the period.
Given increased southwesterly flow overspreading returning Gulf
moisture, at least some low-end severe potential appears possible
across coastal TX early in the period. Some severe potential could
then shift east across the Gulf Coast states later in the period,
(around Day 7 or 8/Wed or Thu) when some guidance shows a stronger
shortwave trough ejecting over the Lower MS/TN Valley vicinity in
conjunction with a deeper surface low and cold front.
Severe potential appears too low early in the period to include 15
percent probabilities. Uncertainty in timing and latitudinal
position of the possible late-period shortwave trough also precludes
probabilities at this time. Nevertheless, this pattern change could
support increasing severe potential with time across Gulf coast
areas, which may necessitate probabilities in the coming days.
Read more
1 year 7 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0313 AM CST Thu Jan 18 2024
Valid 211200Z - 261200Z
...DISCUSSION...
An upper-level trough over the western U.S. early in the period will
slowly shift east toward the Rockies and adjacent High Plains
through at least Day 6/Tue. Beyond Tuesday, most medium-range
guidance depicts a mean upper trough roughly over the High Plains,
with a series of shortwave ejecting east/northeast into the
Mid-South/Midwest vicinity Days 7-8/Wed-Thu. This overall pattern
will support long-duration deep-layer southwesterly flow across the
southern Plains, Lower MS Valley/Gulf coast states and the
Mid-South. As a result, Gulf moisture is expected to return
northward, first across the Texas coastal vicinity on Day 4/Sun
before also increasing across much of the rest of the Gulf coast
states the remainder of the period.
Given increased southwesterly flow overspreading returning Gulf
moisture, at least some low-end severe potential appears possible
across coastal TX early in the period. Some severe potential could
then shift east across the Gulf Coast states later in the period,
(around Day 7 or 8/Wed or Thu) when some guidance shows a stronger
shortwave trough ejecting over the Lower MS/TN Valley vicinity in
conjunction with a deeper surface low and cold front.
Severe potential appears too low early in the period to include 15
percent probabilities. Uncertainty in timing and latitudinal
position of the possible late-period shortwave trough also precludes
probabilities at this time. Nevertheless, this pattern change could
support increasing severe potential with time across Gulf coast
areas, which may necessitate probabilities in the coming days.
Read more
Checked
5 years 10 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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