SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 051200Z - 061200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST AND PARTS OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Isolated severe storms will be possible Wednesday across the Midwest including portions of Indiana and Ohio into Lower Michigan. Severe storms may also occur across parts of south/east Texas to the Lower Mississippi Valley. ...Midwest/Ohio Valley... Height falls and strengthening cyclonic westerlies are expected via a shortwave trough over the western Great Lakes, to the southeast of a substantial mid/upper-level trough over the Canadian Prairies. The potential for at least widely scattered early day precipitation and cloud cover casts some uncertainty regarding the exact degree, and preferred regional corridors, of more appreciable diurnal destabilization within a moist airmass ahead of an eastward-advancing cold front. However, parts of Indiana into southern Lower Michigan and Ohio currently appear to have the most diurnally favorable ingredients for severe storms. While multicells capable of wind damage and possibly some hail should be the most common scenario regionally, somewhat stronger mid/low-level flow across Ohio may be conducive for a few supercells and possibly some tornado risk. ...South-central/East Texas to Lower Mississippi Valley... The region, mainly from east Texas northeastward, will be glancingly influenced by a weak height falls and moderately strong northwesterly winds aloft, but more directly by a probable MCS that could be located across the ArkLaTex, or perhaps even a bit farther south across Louisiana/east Texas around sunrise. This MCS may have largely weakened by daybreak Wednesday morning, but some strong/locally severe storms are plausible. Related convective outflow may also regionally focus renewed storm development and intensification into the afternoon. The details of storm development/likelihood are more uncertain with southwestward extent into south-central Texas and toward the Rio Grande, but a few severe storms could occur if/where storms develop within a hot and very unstable environment. ...Minnesota/Wisconsin... Low-topped thunderstorms are expected to develop Wednesday afternoon in the post-frontal environment characterized by limited boundary layer moisture (40s to lower 50s F surface dewpoints) and steep low/mid-level lapse rates. Relatively strong westerlies in the cloud-bearing layer and around 25+ degree F diurnal temperature/dewpoint spreads are suggestive of the possibility of strong convectively enhanced wind gusts, and possibly some hail. The region will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time frame for the potential introduction of low severe probabilities. ..Guyer.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1129 AM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 041630Z - 051200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are probable across central and eastern Oklahoma this evening. A tornado and large to very large hail will be possible this evening, before severe outflow winds of 60-85 mph potentially accompany the more intense downdrafts this evening into tonight. ...Southern Plains to lower MS Valley through tonight... Radar/satellite imagery late this morning shows a south-southeastward moving MCS along the TX/LA border. Heating of the airmass ahead of the MCS will continue to lead to strong destabilization. A rejuvenation of storm intensity along the western flank of the MCS is possible where a reservoir of very rich low-level moisture and steep 700-500 mb lapse rates will aid in strong/severe storm potential. Damaging gusts and perhaps large hail will be the primary hazards with the stronger storms. Outflow from the morning storms will reinforce a composite outflow boundary across north TX northward into OK. It appears that the outflow air mass will modify through the day across OK. Surface dewpoints are forecast to increase into the mid 70s across central-southern OK where isolated thunderstorm development is forecast by late this afternoon/early evening along the edge of richer moisture. Forecast soundings show MLCAPE could exceed 5000 J/kg with only small convective inhibition. However, forcing for ascent will be rather nebulous and storm initiation/initial coverage is uncertain. Nonetheless, a short window of opportunity may exist for a tornado risk if a quasi-discrete mode can occur early in the convective life cycle. Very large buoyancy and nearly dry adiabatic lapse rates across OK will support large/tall storms capable of producing isolated very large hail initially, and an increase in the threat for damaging winds (60-85 mph) as storms grow upscale into another MCS tonight. Have opted to upgrade to a 30-percent significant wind area for greater confidence in a severe MCS across central/eastern OK. Farther north, thunderstorms for forecast to develop across KS this afternoon into early tonight, as a weak surface cold front and associated midlevel trough will move southeastward and impinge on the very moist/unstable warm sector. Hail/wind will be the primary risks with those stronger storms. ...Mid MO to upper MS Valleys this afternoon/evening... A midlevel shortwave trough and associated cold front will move eastward from NE/Dakotas to eastern KS/IA and WI by the end of the period. The richest low-level moisture will remain farther south, but surface heating in pre-frontal cloud breaks and boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s will contribute to MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Some low-level hodographs enlargement in northern MN may aid in some brief updraft rotation potential before an extensive band of storms becomes outflow dominant. Vertical shear will be relatively weak in the warm sector which will primarily support multicell clusters and line segments capable of producing occasional wind damage and marginally severe hail. ...MO/IL today... A midlevel low over west central MO this morning will move northeastward toward central/northern IL by this evening. Lingering clouds will tend to slow surface heating, though cloud breaks could allow modest destabilization and support a few strong thunderstorm clusters capable of producing isolated strong/damaging outflow gusts and marginally severe hail. ..Smith/Barnes.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1129 AM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 041630Z - 051200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are probable across central and eastern Oklahoma this evening. A tornado and large to very large hail will be possible this evening, before severe outflow winds of 60-85 mph potentially accompany the more intense downdrafts this evening into tonight. ...Southern Plains to lower MS Valley through tonight... Radar/satellite imagery late this morning shows a south-southeastward moving MCS along the TX/LA border. Heating of the airmass ahead of the MCS will continue to lead to strong destabilization. A rejuvenation of storm intensity along the western flank of the MCS is possible where a reservoir of very rich low-level moisture and steep 700-500 mb lapse rates will aid in strong/severe storm potential. Damaging gusts and perhaps large hail will be the primary hazards with the stronger storms. Outflow from the morning storms will reinforce a composite outflow boundary across north TX northward into OK. It appears that the outflow air mass will modify through the day across OK. Surface dewpoints are forecast to increase into the mid 70s across central-southern OK where isolated thunderstorm development is forecast by late this afternoon/early evening along the edge of richer moisture. Forecast soundings show MLCAPE could exceed 5000 J/kg with only small convective inhibition. However, forcing for ascent will be rather nebulous and storm initiation/initial coverage is uncertain. Nonetheless, a short window of opportunity may exist for a tornado risk if a quasi-discrete mode can occur early in the convective life cycle. Very large buoyancy and nearly dry adiabatic lapse rates across OK will support large/tall storms capable of producing isolated very large hail initially, and an increase in the threat for damaging winds (60-85 mph) as storms grow upscale into another MCS tonight. Have opted to upgrade to a 30-percent significant wind area for greater confidence in a severe MCS across central/eastern OK. Farther north, thunderstorms for forecast to develop across KS this afternoon into early tonight, as a weak surface cold front and associated midlevel trough will move southeastward and impinge on the very moist/unstable warm sector. Hail/wind will be the primary risks with those stronger storms. ...Mid MO to upper MS Valleys this afternoon/evening... A midlevel shortwave trough and associated cold front will move eastward from NE/Dakotas to eastern KS/IA and WI by the end of the period. The richest low-level moisture will remain farther south, but surface heating in pre-frontal cloud breaks and boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s will contribute to MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Some low-level hodographs enlargement in northern MN may aid in some brief updraft rotation potential before an extensive band of storms becomes outflow dominant. Vertical shear will be relatively weak in the warm sector which will primarily support multicell clusters and line segments capable of producing occasional wind damage and marginally severe hail. ...MO/IL today... A midlevel low over west central MO this morning will move northeastward toward central/northern IL by this evening. Lingering clouds will tend to slow surface heating, though cloud breaks could allow modest destabilization and support a few strong thunderstorm clusters capable of producing isolated strong/damaging outflow gusts and marginally severe hail. ..Smith/Barnes.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1129 AM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 041630Z - 051200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are probable across central and eastern Oklahoma this evening. A tornado and large to very large hail will be possible this evening, before severe outflow winds of 60-85 mph potentially accompany the more intense downdrafts this evening into tonight. ...Southern Plains to lower MS Valley through tonight... Radar/satellite imagery late this morning shows a south-southeastward moving MCS along the TX/LA border. Heating of the airmass ahead of the MCS will continue to lead to strong destabilization. A rejuvenation of storm intensity along the western flank of the MCS is possible where a reservoir of very rich low-level moisture and steep 700-500 mb lapse rates will aid in strong/severe storm potential. Damaging gusts and perhaps large hail will be the primary hazards with the stronger storms. Outflow from the morning storms will reinforce a composite outflow boundary across north TX northward into OK. It appears that the outflow air mass will modify through the day across OK. Surface dewpoints are forecast to increase into the mid 70s across central-southern OK where isolated thunderstorm development is forecast by late this afternoon/early evening along the edge of richer moisture. Forecast soundings show MLCAPE could exceed 5000 J/kg with only small convective inhibition. However, forcing for ascent will be rather nebulous and storm initiation/initial coverage is uncertain. Nonetheless, a short window of opportunity may exist for a tornado risk if a quasi-discrete mode can occur early in the convective life cycle. Very large buoyancy and nearly dry adiabatic lapse rates across OK will support large/tall storms capable of producing isolated very large hail initially, and an increase in the threat for damaging winds (60-85 mph) as storms grow upscale into another MCS tonight. Have opted to upgrade to a 30-percent significant wind area for greater confidence in a severe MCS across central/eastern OK. Farther north, thunderstorms for forecast to develop across KS this afternoon into early tonight, as a weak surface cold front and associated midlevel trough will move southeastward and impinge on the very moist/unstable warm sector. Hail/wind will be the primary risks with those stronger storms. ...Mid MO to upper MS Valleys this afternoon/evening... A midlevel shortwave trough and associated cold front will move eastward from NE/Dakotas to eastern KS/IA and WI by the end of the period. The richest low-level moisture will remain farther south, but surface heating in pre-frontal cloud breaks and boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s will contribute to MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Some low-level hodographs enlargement in northern MN may aid in some brief updraft rotation potential before an extensive band of storms becomes outflow dominant. Vertical shear will be relatively weak in the warm sector which will primarily support multicell clusters and line segments capable of producing occasional wind damage and marginally severe hail. ...MO/IL today... A midlevel low over west central MO this morning will move northeastward toward central/northern IL by this evening. Lingering clouds will tend to slow surface heating, though cloud breaks could allow modest destabilization and support a few strong thunderstorm clusters capable of producing isolated strong/damaging outflow gusts and marginally severe hail. ..Smith/Barnes.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1129 AM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 041630Z - 051200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are probable across central and eastern Oklahoma this evening. A tornado and large to very large hail will be possible this evening, before severe outflow winds of 60-85 mph potentially accompany the more intense downdrafts this evening into tonight. ...Southern Plains to lower MS Valley through tonight... Radar/satellite imagery late this morning shows a south-southeastward moving MCS along the TX/LA border. Heating of the airmass ahead of the MCS will continue to lead to strong destabilization. A rejuvenation of storm intensity along the western flank of the MCS is possible where a reservoir of very rich low-level moisture and steep 700-500 mb lapse rates will aid in strong/severe storm potential. Damaging gusts and perhaps large hail will be the primary hazards with the stronger storms. Outflow from the morning storms will reinforce a composite outflow boundary across north TX northward into OK. It appears that the outflow air mass will modify through the day across OK. Surface dewpoints are forecast to increase into the mid 70s across central-southern OK where isolated thunderstorm development is forecast by late this afternoon/early evening along the edge of richer moisture. Forecast soundings show MLCAPE could exceed 5000 J/kg with only small convective inhibition. However, forcing for ascent will be rather nebulous and storm initiation/initial coverage is uncertain. Nonetheless, a short window of opportunity may exist for a tornado risk if a quasi-discrete mode can occur early in the convective life cycle. Very large buoyancy and nearly dry adiabatic lapse rates across OK will support large/tall storms capable of producing isolated very large hail initially, and an increase in the threat for damaging winds (60-85 mph) as storms grow upscale into another MCS tonight. Have opted to upgrade to a 30-percent significant wind area for greater confidence in a severe MCS across central/eastern OK. Farther north, thunderstorms for forecast to develop across KS this afternoon into early tonight, as a weak surface cold front and associated midlevel trough will move southeastward and impinge on the very moist/unstable warm sector. Hail/wind will be the primary risks with those stronger storms. ...Mid MO to upper MS Valleys this afternoon/evening... A midlevel shortwave trough and associated cold front will move eastward from NE/Dakotas to eastern KS/IA and WI by the end of the period. The richest low-level moisture will remain farther south, but surface heating in pre-frontal cloud breaks and boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s will contribute to MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Some low-level hodographs enlargement in northern MN may aid in some brief updraft rotation potential before an extensive band of storms becomes outflow dominant. Vertical shear will be relatively weak in the warm sector which will primarily support multicell clusters and line segments capable of producing occasional wind damage and marginally severe hail. ...MO/IL today... A midlevel low over west central MO this morning will move northeastward toward central/northern IL by this evening. Lingering clouds will tend to slow surface heating, though cloud breaks could allow modest destabilization and support a few strong thunderstorm clusters capable of producing isolated strong/damaging outflow gusts and marginally severe hail. ..Smith/Barnes.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1129 AM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 041630Z - 051200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are probable across central and eastern Oklahoma this evening. A tornado and large to very large hail will be possible this evening, before severe outflow winds of 60-85 mph potentially accompany the more intense downdrafts this evening into tonight. ...Southern Plains to lower MS Valley through tonight... Radar/satellite imagery late this morning shows a south-southeastward moving MCS along the TX/LA border. Heating of the airmass ahead of the MCS will continue to lead to strong destabilization. A rejuvenation of storm intensity along the western flank of the MCS is possible where a reservoir of very rich low-level moisture and steep 700-500 mb lapse rates will aid in strong/severe storm potential. Damaging gusts and perhaps large hail will be the primary hazards with the stronger storms. Outflow from the morning storms will reinforce a composite outflow boundary across north TX northward into OK. It appears that the outflow air mass will modify through the day across OK. Surface dewpoints are forecast to increase into the mid 70s across central-southern OK where isolated thunderstorm development is forecast by late this afternoon/early evening along the edge of richer moisture. Forecast soundings show MLCAPE could exceed 5000 J/kg with only small convective inhibition. However, forcing for ascent will be rather nebulous and storm initiation/initial coverage is uncertain. Nonetheless, a short window of opportunity may exist for a tornado risk if a quasi-discrete mode can occur early in the convective life cycle. Very large buoyancy and nearly dry adiabatic lapse rates across OK will support large/tall storms capable of producing isolated very large hail initially, and an increase in the threat for damaging winds (60-85 mph) as storms grow upscale into another MCS tonight. Have opted to upgrade to a 30-percent significant wind area for greater confidence in a severe MCS across central/eastern OK. Farther north, thunderstorms for forecast to develop across KS this afternoon into early tonight, as a weak surface cold front and associated midlevel trough will move southeastward and impinge on the very moist/unstable warm sector. Hail/wind will be the primary risks with those stronger storms. ...Mid MO to upper MS Valleys this afternoon/evening... A midlevel shortwave trough and associated cold front will move eastward from NE/Dakotas to eastern KS/IA and WI by the end of the period. The richest low-level moisture will remain farther south, but surface heating in pre-frontal cloud breaks and boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s will contribute to MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Some low-level hodographs enlargement in northern MN may aid in some brief updraft rotation potential before an extensive band of storms becomes outflow dominant. Vertical shear will be relatively weak in the warm sector which will primarily support multicell clusters and line segments capable of producing occasional wind damage and marginally severe hail. ...MO/IL today... A midlevel low over west central MO this morning will move northeastward toward central/northern IL by this evening. Lingering clouds will tend to slow surface heating, though cloud breaks could allow modest destabilization and support a few strong thunderstorm clusters capable of producing isolated strong/damaging outflow gusts and marginally severe hail. ..Smith/Barnes.. 06/04/2024 Read more

SPC Jun 4, 2024 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1129 AM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024 Valid 041630Z - 051200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are probable across central and eastern Oklahoma this evening. A tornado and large to very large hail will be possible this evening, before severe outflow winds of 60-85 mph potentially accompany the more intense downdrafts this evening into tonight. ...Southern Plains to lower MS Valley through tonight... Radar/satellite imagery late this morning shows a south-southeastward moving MCS along the TX/LA border. Heating of the airmass ahead of the MCS will continue to lead to strong destabilization. A rejuvenation of storm intensity along the western flank of the MCS is possible where a reservoir of very rich low-level moisture and steep 700-500 mb lapse rates will aid in strong/severe storm potential. Damaging gusts and perhaps large hail will be the primary hazards with the stronger storms. Outflow from the morning storms will reinforce a composite outflow boundary across north TX northward into OK. It appears that the outflow air mass will modify through the day across OK. Surface dewpoints are forecast to increase into the mid 70s across central-southern OK where isolated thunderstorm development is forecast by late this afternoon/early evening along the edge of richer moisture. Forecast soundings show MLCAPE could exceed 5000 J/kg with only small convective inhibition. However, forcing for ascent will be rather nebulous and storm initiation/initial coverage is uncertain. Nonetheless, a short window of opportunity may exist for a tornado risk if a quasi-discrete mode can occur early in the convective life cycle. Very large buoyancy and nearly dry adiabatic lapse rates across OK will support large/tall storms capable of producing isolated very large hail initially, and an increase in the threat for damaging winds (60-85 mph) as storms grow upscale into another MCS tonight. Have opted to upgrade to a 30-percent significant wind area for greater confidence in a severe MCS across central/eastern OK. Farther north, thunderstorms for forecast to develop across KS this afternoon into early tonight, as a weak surface cold front and associated midlevel trough will move southeastward and impinge on the very moist/unstable warm sector. Hail/wind will be the primary risks with those stronger storms. ...Mid MO to upper MS Valleys this afternoon/evening... A midlevel shortwave trough and associated cold front will move eastward from NE/Dakotas to eastern KS/IA and WI by the end of the period. The richest low-level moisture will remain farther south, but surface heating in pre-frontal cloud breaks and boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s will contribute to MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg. Some low-level hodographs enlargement in northern MN may aid in some brief updraft rotation potential before an extensive band of storms becomes outflow dominant. Vertical shear will be relatively weak in the warm sector which will primarily support multicell clusters and line segments capable of producing occasional wind damage and marginally severe hail. ...MO/IL today... A midlevel low over west central MO this morning will move northeastward toward central/northern IL by this evening. Lingering clouds will tend to slow surface heating, though cloud breaks could allow modest destabilization and support a few strong thunderstorm clusters capable of producing isolated strong/damaging outflow gusts and marginally severe hail. ..Smith/Barnes.. 06/04/2024 Read more