SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC Jun 1, 2024 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0238 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 012000Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE OKLAHOMA/TEXAS PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...20z Update... The Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) has been expanded northward across parts of northeast TX into northern LA. A cluster of storms has persisted through the morning and into the mid-afternoon. A likely MCV associated with this activity and a very moist/unstable downstream airmass will continue to support storms into early evening. This activity may sporadically produce strong gusts and perhaps marginally severe hail. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) has also been expanded across parts of the LA coastal vicinity where Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 is in effect. Strong to severe thunderstorm clusters will continue to pose a risk for locally damaging gusts the next few hours. See MCD 1108 for more details. The Slight risk (level 2 of 5) also has been expanded across south-central TX to the Middle TX Coast. The 12z MPAS suite of guidance, and to a lesser degree the 18z HRRR, shows a cluster of supercells near the Rio Grande developing eastward across the Edward Plateau vicinity this evening into tonight. If this occurs, the overall environment will support severe gusts and large hail. Elsewhere, the outlook remains unchanged (including the Enhanced risk (level 3 of 5) across parts of the western KS/OK vicinity. See previous discussion below for more details, and latest MCDs for short term information regarding severe potential. ..Leitman.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. Read more

SPC MD 1107

1 year 3 months ago
MD 1107 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR PARTS OF NORTH-CENTRAL/NORTHEAST TX
Mesoscale Discussion 1107 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1236 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Areas affected...parts of north-central/northeast TX Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely Valid 011736Z - 011930Z Probability of Watch Issuance...20 percent SUMMARY...Some threat for isolated hail and damaging wind may spread eastward this afternoon. DISCUSSION...A small storm cluster has recently intensified across northern portions of the Metroplex, immediately in advance of an MCV moving across north TX. Visible satellite and recent objective mesoanalyses suggest that the ongoing cluster is moving toward the northeastern periphery of deeper low-level moisture, so its longevity is somewhat uncertain. However, moderate buoyancy and somewhat enhanced deep-layer shear attendant to the MCV will continue to support at least a short-term threat for hail and locally damaging wind. ..Dean/Smith.. 06/01/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...SHV...FWD... LAT...LON 33109733 33429643 33359534 33059493 32679508 32329572 32499649 32829720 33109733 Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 365 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0365 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 365 THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SEE MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 1108 ..WEINMAN..06/01/24 ATTN...WFO...LCH...CRP...HGX...EWX... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 365 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS LAC001-003-011-019-023-053-113-011940- LA . LOUISIANA PARISHES INCLUDED ARE ACADIA ALLEN BEAUREGARD CALCASIEU CAMERON JEFFERSON DAVIS VERMILION TXC007-015-039-057-071-089-123-157-167-175-199-201-239-241-245- 285-291-321-339-351-361-391-457-469-473-481-011940- TX . TEXAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ARANSAS AUSTIN BRAZORIA CALHOUN CHAMBERS COLORADO DEWITT FORT BEND GALVESTON GOLIAD HARDIN HARRIS JACKSON JASPER JEFFERSON LAVACA LIBERTY MATAGORDA MONTGOMERY NEWTON ORANGE REFUGIO TYLER VICTORIA Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0123 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 021200Z - 031200Z Minor modifications were made to the Elevated area based on the latest high-resolution forecast guidance and precipitation analysis. Locally elevated conditions are also possible on western portions of the Florida Peninsula. Otherwise, the previous forecast remains on track. ..Nauslar.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Synopsis... Zonal mid-level flow is expected to continue this weekend as the short-wave trough over the Four Corners moves eastward. A lee low over southeast Colorado will support gusty winds over parts of the Southwest. With warm temperatures and limited precipitation, elevated fire-weather conditions are possible. ...Southwest into parts of NM and SW Texas... With zonal flow aloft persisting into D2/Sunday, low-level westerly flow is expected to remain enhanced over much of the Southwest. A lee low will further bolster southwest surface winds through the afternoon hours with 15-20 mph gusts likely from parts of eastern AZ, into NM, and southwest TX. Fuels continue to become more receptive due to a lack of appreciable rainfall and persistent daily minimum RH in the low teens and single digits. With another dry and hot day expected, widespread elevated fire-weather conditions appear likely. A few hours of locally critical fire-weather conditions are also possible with winds sustained closer to 20-25 mph. However, the strongest surface winds are likely to be near the surface low in eastern NM where recent rainfall has likely tempered fuels somewhat. This should keep any critical conditions brief and relatively confined. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0123 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 021200Z - 031200Z Minor modifications were made to the Elevated area based on the latest high-resolution forecast guidance and precipitation analysis. Locally elevated conditions are also possible on western portions of the Florida Peninsula. Otherwise, the previous forecast remains on track. ..Nauslar.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Synopsis... Zonal mid-level flow is expected to continue this weekend as the short-wave trough over the Four Corners moves eastward. A lee low over southeast Colorado will support gusty winds over parts of the Southwest. With warm temperatures and limited precipitation, elevated fire-weather conditions are possible. ...Southwest into parts of NM and SW Texas... With zonal flow aloft persisting into D2/Sunday, low-level westerly flow is expected to remain enhanced over much of the Southwest. A lee low will further bolster southwest surface winds through the afternoon hours with 15-20 mph gusts likely from parts of eastern AZ, into NM, and southwest TX. Fuels continue to become more receptive due to a lack of appreciable rainfall and persistent daily minimum RH in the low teens and single digits. With another dry and hot day expected, widespread elevated fire-weather conditions appear likely. A few hours of locally critical fire-weather conditions are also possible with winds sustained closer to 20-25 mph. However, the strongest surface winds are likely to be near the surface low in eastern NM where recent rainfall has likely tempered fuels somewhat. This should keep any critical conditions brief and relatively confined. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0123 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 021200Z - 031200Z Minor modifications were made to the Elevated area based on the latest high-resolution forecast guidance and precipitation analysis. Locally elevated conditions are also possible on western portions of the Florida Peninsula. Otherwise, the previous forecast remains on track. ..Nauslar.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Synopsis... Zonal mid-level flow is expected to continue this weekend as the short-wave trough over the Four Corners moves eastward. A lee low over southeast Colorado will support gusty winds over parts of the Southwest. With warm temperatures and limited precipitation, elevated fire-weather conditions are possible. ...Southwest into parts of NM and SW Texas... With zonal flow aloft persisting into D2/Sunday, low-level westerly flow is expected to remain enhanced over much of the Southwest. A lee low will further bolster southwest surface winds through the afternoon hours with 15-20 mph gusts likely from parts of eastern AZ, into NM, and southwest TX. Fuels continue to become more receptive due to a lack of appreciable rainfall and persistent daily minimum RH in the low teens and single digits. With another dry and hot day expected, widespread elevated fire-weather conditions appear likely. A few hours of locally critical fire-weather conditions are also possible with winds sustained closer to 20-25 mph. However, the strongest surface winds are likely to be near the surface low in eastern NM where recent rainfall has likely tempered fuels somewhat. This should keep any critical conditions brief and relatively confined. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0123 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 021200Z - 031200Z Minor modifications were made to the Elevated area based on the latest high-resolution forecast guidance and precipitation analysis. Locally elevated conditions are also possible on western portions of the Florida Peninsula. Otherwise, the previous forecast remains on track. ..Nauslar.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Synopsis... Zonal mid-level flow is expected to continue this weekend as the short-wave trough over the Four Corners moves eastward. A lee low over southeast Colorado will support gusty winds over parts of the Southwest. With warm temperatures and limited precipitation, elevated fire-weather conditions are possible. ...Southwest into parts of NM and SW Texas... With zonal flow aloft persisting into D2/Sunday, low-level westerly flow is expected to remain enhanced over much of the Southwest. A lee low will further bolster southwest surface winds through the afternoon hours with 15-20 mph gusts likely from parts of eastern AZ, into NM, and southwest TX. Fuels continue to become more receptive due to a lack of appreciable rainfall and persistent daily minimum RH in the low teens and single digits. With another dry and hot day expected, widespread elevated fire-weather conditions appear likely. A few hours of locally critical fire-weather conditions are also possible with winds sustained closer to 20-25 mph. However, the strongest surface winds are likely to be near the surface low in eastern NM where recent rainfall has likely tempered fuels somewhat. This should keep any critical conditions brief and relatively confined. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0123 PM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 021200Z - 031200Z Minor modifications were made to the Elevated area based on the latest high-resolution forecast guidance and precipitation analysis. Locally elevated conditions are also possible on western portions of the Florida Peninsula. Otherwise, the previous forecast remains on track. ..Nauslar.. 06/01/2024 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0147 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024/ ...Synopsis... Zonal mid-level flow is expected to continue this weekend as the short-wave trough over the Four Corners moves eastward. A lee low over southeast Colorado will support gusty winds over parts of the Southwest. With warm temperatures and limited precipitation, elevated fire-weather conditions are possible. ...Southwest into parts of NM and SW Texas... With zonal flow aloft persisting into D2/Sunday, low-level westerly flow is expected to remain enhanced over much of the Southwest. A lee low will further bolster southwest surface winds through the afternoon hours with 15-20 mph gusts likely from parts of eastern AZ, into NM, and southwest TX. Fuels continue to become more receptive due to a lack of appreciable rainfall and persistent daily minimum RH in the low teens and single digits. With another dry and hot day expected, widespread elevated fire-weather conditions appear likely. A few hours of locally critical fire-weather conditions are also possible with winds sustained closer to 20-25 mph. However, the strongest surface winds are likely to be near the surface low in eastern NM where recent rainfall has likely tempered fuels somewhat. This should keep any critical conditions brief and relatively confined. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more