SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1030 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 241200Z - 251200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The forecast remains on track. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 12/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0150 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... On Sunday, a mid-level trough will amplify into a closed low across the central/southern Plains. A deepening surface cyclone will move across Kansas/Missouri. There is still some uncertainty regarding the track of the surface low. However, regardless of the track, a strong pressure gradient is expected to develop across the central Plains. Despite the associated strong winds, the combination of antecedent rainfall and cold temperatures will limit fire-weather concerns on Sunday. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1030 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 241200Z - 251200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The forecast remains on track. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 12/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0150 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... On Sunday, a mid-level trough will amplify into a closed low across the central/southern Plains. A deepening surface cyclone will move across Kansas/Missouri. There is still some uncertainty regarding the track of the surface low. However, regardless of the track, a strong pressure gradient is expected to develop across the central Plains. Despite the associated strong winds, the combination of antecedent rainfall and cold temperatures will limit fire-weather concerns on Sunday. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1025 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING OVER PARTS OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS... ...SUMMARY... A few severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Southern High Plains... An upper low is tracking eastward across AZ this morning, with a 50-60 knot southwesterly mid-level jet overspreading much of the southern High Plains. Relatively strong southerly low-level winds across southwest TX are aiding the maintenance of mid-50s surface dewpoints across the region. Widespread clouds are currently suppressing heating, but visible imagery shows considerable breaks across parts of southeast NM and far southwest TX, with some slow clearing building eastward through the day. This should lead to a narrow corridor of 1000 J/kg of CAPE by late afternoon along the TX/NM border. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop in this corridor and track eastward into west TX through the evening. Initial storms may have supercell structures capable of hail owing to favorable vertical shear and moderately steep mid-level lapse rates. Activity should evolve into bowing line segments by early evening, with occasional gusty/damaging winds being the main threat. The primary period of concern for strong/severe storms appears to be roughly from 21-03z. Despite weaker instability, a few strong/severe storms may also occur farther north into the TX panhandle, and farther east into west-central TX. Gusty/damaging winds would be the main threats with these storms. ..Hart/Grams.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1025 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING OVER PARTS OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS... ...SUMMARY... A few severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Southern High Plains... An upper low is tracking eastward across AZ this morning, with a 50-60 knot southwesterly mid-level jet overspreading much of the southern High Plains. Relatively strong southerly low-level winds across southwest TX are aiding the maintenance of mid-50s surface dewpoints across the region. Widespread clouds are currently suppressing heating, but visible imagery shows considerable breaks across parts of southeast NM and far southwest TX, with some slow clearing building eastward through the day. This should lead to a narrow corridor of 1000 J/kg of CAPE by late afternoon along the TX/NM border. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop in this corridor and track eastward into west TX through the evening. Initial storms may have supercell structures capable of hail owing to favorable vertical shear and moderately steep mid-level lapse rates. Activity should evolve into bowing line segments by early evening, with occasional gusty/damaging winds being the main threat. The primary period of concern for strong/severe storms appears to be roughly from 21-03z. Despite weaker instability, a few strong/severe storms may also occur farther north into the TX panhandle, and farther east into west-central TX. Gusty/damaging winds would be the main threats with these storms. ..Hart/Grams.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1025 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING OVER PARTS OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS... ...SUMMARY... A few severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Southern High Plains... An upper low is tracking eastward across AZ this morning, with a 50-60 knot southwesterly mid-level jet overspreading much of the southern High Plains. Relatively strong southerly low-level winds across southwest TX are aiding the maintenance of mid-50s surface dewpoints across the region. Widespread clouds are currently suppressing heating, but visible imagery shows considerable breaks across parts of southeast NM and far southwest TX, with some slow clearing building eastward through the day. This should lead to a narrow corridor of 1000 J/kg of CAPE by late afternoon along the TX/NM border. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop in this corridor and track eastward into west TX through the evening. Initial storms may have supercell structures capable of hail owing to favorable vertical shear and moderately steep mid-level lapse rates. Activity should evolve into bowing line segments by early evening, with occasional gusty/damaging winds being the main threat. The primary period of concern for strong/severe storms appears to be roughly from 21-03z. Despite weaker instability, a few strong/severe storms may also occur farther north into the TX panhandle, and farther east into west-central TX. Gusty/damaging winds would be the main threats with these storms. ..Hart/Grams.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1025 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING OVER PARTS OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS... ...SUMMARY... A few severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Southern High Plains... An upper low is tracking eastward across AZ this morning, with a 50-60 knot southwesterly mid-level jet overspreading much of the southern High Plains. Relatively strong southerly low-level winds across southwest TX are aiding the maintenance of mid-50s surface dewpoints across the region. Widespread clouds are currently suppressing heating, but visible imagery shows considerable breaks across parts of southeast NM and far southwest TX, with some slow clearing building eastward through the day. This should lead to a narrow corridor of 1000 J/kg of CAPE by late afternoon along the TX/NM border. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop in this corridor and track eastward into west TX through the evening. Initial storms may have supercell structures capable of hail owing to favorable vertical shear and moderately steep mid-level lapse rates. Activity should evolve into bowing line segments by early evening, with occasional gusty/damaging winds being the main threat. The primary period of concern for strong/severe storms appears to be roughly from 21-03z. Despite weaker instability, a few strong/severe storms may also occur farther north into the TX panhandle, and farther east into west-central TX. Gusty/damaging winds would be the main threats with these storms. ..Hart/Grams.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1025 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING OVER PARTS OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS... ...SUMMARY... A few severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Southern High Plains... An upper low is tracking eastward across AZ this morning, with a 50-60 knot southwesterly mid-level jet overspreading much of the southern High Plains. Relatively strong southerly low-level winds across southwest TX are aiding the maintenance of mid-50s surface dewpoints across the region. Widespread clouds are currently suppressing heating, but visible imagery shows considerable breaks across parts of southeast NM and far southwest TX, with some slow clearing building eastward through the day. This should lead to a narrow corridor of 1000 J/kg of CAPE by late afternoon along the TX/NM border. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop in this corridor and track eastward into west TX through the evening. Initial storms may have supercell structures capable of hail owing to favorable vertical shear and moderately steep mid-level lapse rates. Activity should evolve into bowing line segments by early evening, with occasional gusty/damaging winds being the main threat. The primary period of concern for strong/severe storms appears to be roughly from 21-03z. Despite weaker instability, a few strong/severe storms may also occur farther north into the TX panhandle, and farther east into west-central TX. Gusty/damaging winds would be the main threats with these storms. ..Hart/Grams.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1025 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING OVER PARTS OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS... ...SUMMARY... A few severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Southern High Plains... An upper low is tracking eastward across AZ this morning, with a 50-60 knot southwesterly mid-level jet overspreading much of the southern High Plains. Relatively strong southerly low-level winds across southwest TX are aiding the maintenance of mid-50s surface dewpoints across the region. Widespread clouds are currently suppressing heating, but visible imagery shows considerable breaks across parts of southeast NM and far southwest TX, with some slow clearing building eastward through the day. This should lead to a narrow corridor of 1000 J/kg of CAPE by late afternoon along the TX/NM border. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop in this corridor and track eastward into west TX through the evening. Initial storms may have supercell structures capable of hail owing to favorable vertical shear and moderately steep mid-level lapse rates. Activity should evolve into bowing line segments by early evening, with occasional gusty/damaging winds being the main threat. The primary period of concern for strong/severe storms appears to be roughly from 21-03z. Despite weaker instability, a few strong/severe storms may also occur farther north into the TX panhandle, and farther east into west-central TX. Gusty/damaging winds would be the main threats with these storms. ..Hart/Grams.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1025 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231630Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING OVER PARTS OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS... ...SUMMARY... A few severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Southern High Plains... An upper low is tracking eastward across AZ this morning, with a 50-60 knot southwesterly mid-level jet overspreading much of the southern High Plains. Relatively strong southerly low-level winds across southwest TX are aiding the maintenance of mid-50s surface dewpoints across the region. Widespread clouds are currently suppressing heating, but visible imagery shows considerable breaks across parts of southeast NM and far southwest TX, with some slow clearing building eastward through the day. This should lead to a narrow corridor of 1000 J/kg of CAPE by late afternoon along the TX/NM border. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop in this corridor and track eastward into west TX through the evening. Initial storms may have supercell structures capable of hail owing to favorable vertical shear and moderately steep mid-level lapse rates. Activity should evolve into bowing line segments by early evening, with occasional gusty/damaging winds being the main threat. The primary period of concern for strong/severe storms appears to be roughly from 21-03z. Despite weaker instability, a few strong/severe storms may also occur farther north into the TX panhandle, and farther east into west-central TX. Gusty/damaging winds would be the main threats with these storms. ..Hart/Grams.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1026 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231700Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The forecast remains on track. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 12/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... A lee cyclone will develop in the central Plains today as a mid-level trough translates across the western CONUS and amplifies. This will bring some windy conditions to portions of the Southwest and the Southern and Central High Plains. However, this system will bring significant Pacific moisture and advect Gulf moisture northward as low-level flow strengthens. Therefore, relative humidity will remain quite high. In addition, fuels will be moist across the region with additional wetting rain expected. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1026 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231700Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The forecast remains on track. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 12/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... A lee cyclone will develop in the central Plains today as a mid-level trough translates across the western CONUS and amplifies. This will bring some windy conditions to portions of the Southwest and the Southern and Central High Plains. However, this system will bring significant Pacific moisture and advect Gulf moisture northward as low-level flow strengthens. Therefore, relative humidity will remain quite high. In addition, fuels will be moist across the region with additional wetting rain expected. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1026 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231700Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The forecast remains on track. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 12/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... A lee cyclone will develop in the central Plains today as a mid-level trough translates across the western CONUS and amplifies. This will bring some windy conditions to portions of the Southwest and the Southern and Central High Plains. However, this system will bring significant Pacific moisture and advect Gulf moisture northward as low-level flow strengthens. Therefore, relative humidity will remain quite high. In addition, fuels will be moist across the region with additional wetting rain expected. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1026 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231700Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The forecast remains on track. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 12/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... A lee cyclone will develop in the central Plains today as a mid-level trough translates across the western CONUS and amplifies. This will bring some windy conditions to portions of the Southwest and the Southern and Central High Plains. However, this system will bring significant Pacific moisture and advect Gulf moisture northward as low-level flow strengthens. Therefore, relative humidity will remain quite high. In addition, fuels will be moist across the region with additional wetting rain expected. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1026 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231700Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The forecast remains on track. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 12/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... A lee cyclone will develop in the central Plains today as a mid-level trough translates across the western CONUS and amplifies. This will bring some windy conditions to portions of the Southwest and the Southern and Central High Plains. However, this system will bring significant Pacific moisture and advect Gulf moisture northward as low-level flow strengthens. Therefore, relative humidity will remain quite high. In addition, fuels will be moist across the region with additional wetting rain expected. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1026 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231700Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The forecast remains on track. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 12/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... A lee cyclone will develop in the central Plains today as a mid-level trough translates across the western CONUS and amplifies. This will bring some windy conditions to portions of the Southwest and the Southern and Central High Plains. However, this system will bring significant Pacific moisture and advect Gulf moisture northward as low-level flow strengthens. Therefore, relative humidity will remain quite high. In addition, fuels will be moist across the region with additional wetting rain expected. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1026 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231700Z - 241200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... The forecast remains on track. For details, see the previous discussion below. ..Weinman.. 12/23/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023/ ...Synopsis... A lee cyclone will develop in the central Plains today as a mid-level trough translates across the western CONUS and amplifies. This will bring some windy conditions to portions of the Southwest and the Southern and Central High Plains. However, this system will bring significant Pacific moisture and advect Gulf moisture northward as low-level flow strengthens. Therefore, relative humidity will remain quite high. In addition, fuels will be moist across the region with additional wetting rain expected. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0649 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, phasing of northern and southern streams over the western CONUS will result in a full-latitude trough by the end of the period, from east-central MT southward over the central/ southern Rockies to eastern Chihuahua. This will occur as a weakening cyclone -- now centered over southern/central AZ -- ejects northeastward to the central High Plains by 12Z tomorrow, and weakens considerably. Meanwhile, a northern-stream shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over the northern Rockies -- will split, with the southern part digging south-southeastward to NM, and the northern part evolving to a 500-mb low over east-central MT by 12Z tomorrow. Height falls associated with this process will spread across the Great Plains. As that occurs, a long, broad fetch of low-level warm advection and moisture-transport will strengthen, expand laterally, and shift eastward over the Plains States through the period. At the surface, a cold front now moving across the Canadian border into MT will cross the northern High Plains today, then continue eastward and southeastward. Meanwhile, lee troughing over the High Plains will deepen and be overtaken by the front from north-south. By 00Z, the front should extend from the central Dakotas across western NE to a low over central/east-central CO. A weaker cold front -- preceding the southern-stream perturbation -- will emerge from the southern Rockies, reaching near the lee-trough position over eastern NM and far west TX around 00Z. By 12Z, the cold front should extend from a weak low over northwestern MN, across eastern SD, southern NE, western KS, to northeastern NM. A broad wind-shift zone, representing the remnant southern front and lee trough -- should extend by then from the eastern TX Panhandle southward to eastern Coahuila. ...Southern High Plains... Scattered thunderstorms should develop late this afternoon into evening, and sweep eastward to northeastward across the outlook area. Damaging to locally severe gusts and isolated large hail are possible. Within the broad belt of currently sub-15% severe-type probabilities, wind appears to be a somewhat greater threat than hail, especially over eastern parts of the outlook, where a squall line should become the main convective mode. While a tornado cannot be ruled out, that threat appears very conditional. Activity should develop as the plume of large-scale ascent and low-level convergence (near the southern front and lee trough) increasingly overlap, and related lift impinges on a moistening, gradually destabilizing sector from the TX Panhandle across the Permian Basin and Big Bend regions. Diurnal/diabatic destabilization will be restricted by cloud cover, and in some areas, precip. Still, positive theta-e advection is expected throughout the day, underlying cooling temperatures aloft from mid-afternoon onward. Resulting weakened MLCINH and increased (but still modest) lapse rates will boost buoyancy, with 50s F surface dewpoints over most of the area and near 60 along the Rio Grande just upstream from DRT. This should support MLCAPE ranging from around 1000 J/kg in the Big Bend area to 300-500 J/kg over the southern Panhandle and South Plains regions. Low-level and deep shear will favor early-stage supercell potential, though pronounced weaknesses should be noted in hodographs between 1-3 km. Effective-shear magnitudes of 40-50 kt should become common in the immediate preconvective environment. Upscale development into a QLCS is likely before the activity outruns its supporting plume of favorable surface-based buoyancy, which will be narrow in east-west extent. While elevated thunderstorms may persist for some distance eastward, a combination of more-stable near-surface air and messier, more-linear convective mode will reduce the severe threat with eastward extent into northwest through west-central TX and western OK tonight. Still, slightly more room has been allotted on the eastern rim of the outlook for this transition to occur. ..Edwards/Broyles.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0649 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, phasing of northern and southern streams over the western CONUS will result in a full-latitude trough by the end of the period, from east-central MT southward over the central/ southern Rockies to eastern Chihuahua. This will occur as a weakening cyclone -- now centered over southern/central AZ -- ejects northeastward to the central High Plains by 12Z tomorrow, and weakens considerably. Meanwhile, a northern-stream shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over the northern Rockies -- will split, with the southern part digging south-southeastward to NM, and the northern part evolving to a 500-mb low over east-central MT by 12Z tomorrow. Height falls associated with this process will spread across the Great Plains. As that occurs, a long, broad fetch of low-level warm advection and moisture-transport will strengthen, expand laterally, and shift eastward over the Plains States through the period. At the surface, a cold front now moving across the Canadian border into MT will cross the northern High Plains today, then continue eastward and southeastward. Meanwhile, lee troughing over the High Plains will deepen and be overtaken by the front from north-south. By 00Z, the front should extend from the central Dakotas across western NE to a low over central/east-central CO. A weaker cold front -- preceding the southern-stream perturbation -- will emerge from the southern Rockies, reaching near the lee-trough position over eastern NM and far west TX around 00Z. By 12Z, the cold front should extend from a weak low over northwestern MN, across eastern SD, southern NE, western KS, to northeastern NM. A broad wind-shift zone, representing the remnant southern front and lee trough -- should extend by then from the eastern TX Panhandle southward to eastern Coahuila. ...Southern High Plains... Scattered thunderstorms should develop late this afternoon into evening, and sweep eastward to northeastward across the outlook area. Damaging to locally severe gusts and isolated large hail are possible. Within the broad belt of currently sub-15% severe-type probabilities, wind appears to be a somewhat greater threat than hail, especially over eastern parts of the outlook, where a squall line should become the main convective mode. While a tornado cannot be ruled out, that threat appears very conditional. Activity should develop as the plume of large-scale ascent and low-level convergence (near the southern front and lee trough) increasingly overlap, and related lift impinges on a moistening, gradually destabilizing sector from the TX Panhandle across the Permian Basin and Big Bend regions. Diurnal/diabatic destabilization will be restricted by cloud cover, and in some areas, precip. Still, positive theta-e advection is expected throughout the day, underlying cooling temperatures aloft from mid-afternoon onward. Resulting weakened MLCINH and increased (but still modest) lapse rates will boost buoyancy, with 50s F surface dewpoints over most of the area and near 60 along the Rio Grande just upstream from DRT. This should support MLCAPE ranging from around 1000 J/kg in the Big Bend area to 300-500 J/kg over the southern Panhandle and South Plains regions. Low-level and deep shear will favor early-stage supercell potential, though pronounced weaknesses should be noted in hodographs between 1-3 km. Effective-shear magnitudes of 40-50 kt should become common in the immediate preconvective environment. Upscale development into a QLCS is likely before the activity outruns its supporting plume of favorable surface-based buoyancy, which will be narrow in east-west extent. While elevated thunderstorms may persist for some distance eastward, a combination of more-stable near-surface air and messier, more-linear convective mode will reduce the severe threat with eastward extent into northwest through west-central TX and western OK tonight. Still, slightly more room has been allotted on the eastern rim of the outlook for this transition to occur. ..Edwards/Broyles.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0649 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, phasing of northern and southern streams over the western CONUS will result in a full-latitude trough by the end of the period, from east-central MT southward over the central/ southern Rockies to eastern Chihuahua. This will occur as a weakening cyclone -- now centered over southern/central AZ -- ejects northeastward to the central High Plains by 12Z tomorrow, and weakens considerably. Meanwhile, a northern-stream shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over the northern Rockies -- will split, with the southern part digging south-southeastward to NM, and the northern part evolving to a 500-mb low over east-central MT by 12Z tomorrow. Height falls associated with this process will spread across the Great Plains. As that occurs, a long, broad fetch of low-level warm advection and moisture-transport will strengthen, expand laterally, and shift eastward over the Plains States through the period. At the surface, a cold front now moving across the Canadian border into MT will cross the northern High Plains today, then continue eastward and southeastward. Meanwhile, lee troughing over the High Plains will deepen and be overtaken by the front from north-south. By 00Z, the front should extend from the central Dakotas across western NE to a low over central/east-central CO. A weaker cold front -- preceding the southern-stream perturbation -- will emerge from the southern Rockies, reaching near the lee-trough position over eastern NM and far west TX around 00Z. By 12Z, the cold front should extend from a weak low over northwestern MN, across eastern SD, southern NE, western KS, to northeastern NM. A broad wind-shift zone, representing the remnant southern front and lee trough -- should extend by then from the eastern TX Panhandle southward to eastern Coahuila. ...Southern High Plains... Scattered thunderstorms should develop late this afternoon into evening, and sweep eastward to northeastward across the outlook area. Damaging to locally severe gusts and isolated large hail are possible. Within the broad belt of currently sub-15% severe-type probabilities, wind appears to be a somewhat greater threat than hail, especially over eastern parts of the outlook, where a squall line should become the main convective mode. While a tornado cannot be ruled out, that threat appears very conditional. Activity should develop as the plume of large-scale ascent and low-level convergence (near the southern front and lee trough) increasingly overlap, and related lift impinges on a moistening, gradually destabilizing sector from the TX Panhandle across the Permian Basin and Big Bend regions. Diurnal/diabatic destabilization will be restricted by cloud cover, and in some areas, precip. Still, positive theta-e advection is expected throughout the day, underlying cooling temperatures aloft from mid-afternoon onward. Resulting weakened MLCINH and increased (but still modest) lapse rates will boost buoyancy, with 50s F surface dewpoints over most of the area and near 60 along the Rio Grande just upstream from DRT. This should support MLCAPE ranging from around 1000 J/kg in the Big Bend area to 300-500 J/kg over the southern Panhandle and South Plains regions. Low-level and deep shear will favor early-stage supercell potential, though pronounced weaknesses should be noted in hodographs between 1-3 km. Effective-shear magnitudes of 40-50 kt should become common in the immediate preconvective environment. Upscale development into a QLCS is likely before the activity outruns its supporting plume of favorable surface-based buoyancy, which will be narrow in east-west extent. While elevated thunderstorms may persist for some distance eastward, a combination of more-stable near-surface air and messier, more-linear convective mode will reduce the severe threat with eastward extent into northwest through west-central TX and western OK tonight. Still, slightly more room has been allotted on the eastern rim of the outlook for this transition to occur. ..Edwards/Broyles.. 12/23/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 23, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 7 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0649 AM CST Sat Dec 23 2023 Valid 231300Z - 241200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the southern High Plains, mainly this afternoon and evening. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, phasing of northern and southern streams over the western CONUS will result in a full-latitude trough by the end of the period, from east-central MT southward over the central/ southern Rockies to eastern Chihuahua. This will occur as a weakening cyclone -- now centered over southern/central AZ -- ejects northeastward to the central High Plains by 12Z tomorrow, and weakens considerably. Meanwhile, a northern-stream shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over the northern Rockies -- will split, with the southern part digging south-southeastward to NM, and the northern part evolving to a 500-mb low over east-central MT by 12Z tomorrow. Height falls associated with this process will spread across the Great Plains. As that occurs, a long, broad fetch of low-level warm advection and moisture-transport will strengthen, expand laterally, and shift eastward over the Plains States through the period. At the surface, a cold front now moving across the Canadian border into MT will cross the northern High Plains today, then continue eastward and southeastward. Meanwhile, lee troughing over the High Plains will deepen and be overtaken by the front from north-south. By 00Z, the front should extend from the central Dakotas across western NE to a low over central/east-central CO. A weaker cold front -- preceding the southern-stream perturbation -- will emerge from the southern Rockies, reaching near the lee-trough position over eastern NM and far west TX around 00Z. By 12Z, the cold front should extend from a weak low over northwestern MN, across eastern SD, southern NE, western KS, to northeastern NM. A broad wind-shift zone, representing the remnant southern front and lee trough -- should extend by then from the eastern TX Panhandle southward to eastern Coahuila. ...Southern High Plains... Scattered thunderstorms should develop late this afternoon into evening, and sweep eastward to northeastward across the outlook area. Damaging to locally severe gusts and isolated large hail are possible. Within the broad belt of currently sub-15% severe-type probabilities, wind appears to be a somewhat greater threat than hail, especially over eastern parts of the outlook, where a squall line should become the main convective mode. While a tornado cannot be ruled out, that threat appears very conditional. Activity should develop as the plume of large-scale ascent and low-level convergence (near the southern front and lee trough) increasingly overlap, and related lift impinges on a moistening, gradually destabilizing sector from the TX Panhandle across the Permian Basin and Big Bend regions. Diurnal/diabatic destabilization will be restricted by cloud cover, and in some areas, precip. Still, positive theta-e advection is expected throughout the day, underlying cooling temperatures aloft from mid-afternoon onward. Resulting weakened MLCINH and increased (but still modest) lapse rates will boost buoyancy, with 50s F surface dewpoints over most of the area and near 60 along the Rio Grande just upstream from DRT. This should support MLCAPE ranging from around 1000 J/kg in the Big Bend area to 300-500 J/kg over the southern Panhandle and South Plains regions. Low-level and deep shear will favor early-stage supercell potential, though pronounced weaknesses should be noted in hodographs between 1-3 km. Effective-shear magnitudes of 40-50 kt should become common in the immediate preconvective environment. Upscale development into a QLCS is likely before the activity outruns its supporting plume of favorable surface-based buoyancy, which will be narrow in east-west extent. While elevated thunderstorms may persist for some distance eastward, a combination of more-stable near-surface air and messier, more-linear convective mode will reduce the severe threat with eastward extent into northwest through west-central TX and western OK tonight. Still, slightly more room has been allotted on the eastern rim of the outlook for this transition to occur. ..Edwards/Broyles.. 12/23/2023 Read more
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5 years 10 months ago
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