SPC Tornado Watch 314 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0314 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 314 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 10 SE DYR TO 40 S PAH TO 10 S PAH TO 10 SSW PAH TO 15 WSW PAH TO 20 NNE POF. ..JEWELL..05/26/24 ATTN...WFO...LZK...MEG...PAH...LSX...SGF... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 314 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ILC003-047-055-059-065-069-077-081-087-127-145-151-153-165-181- 185-191-193-199-261440- IL . ILLINOIS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ALEXANDER EDWARDS FRANKLIN GALLATIN HAMILTON HARDIN JACKSON JEFFERSON JOHNSON MASSAC PERRY POPE PULASKI SALINE UNION WABASH WAYNE WHITE WILLIAMSON KYC007-035-039-055-083-105-139-143-145-157-261440- KY . KENTUCKY COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BALLARD CALLOWAY CARLISLE CRITTENDEN GRAVES HICKMAN LIVINGSTON LYON MCCRACKEN MARSHALL Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 314

1 year 3 months ago
WW 314 TORNADO AR IL KY MO TN 260735Z - 261500Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED Tornado Watch Number 314 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 235 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a * Tornado Watch for portions of Northern Arkansas Southern Illinois Western Kentucky South-central and southeastern Missouri Northwestern Tennessee * Effective this Sunday morning from 235 AM until 1000 AM CDT. * Primary threats include... A few tornadoes and a couple intense tornadoes possible Scattered damaging wind gusts to 70 mph likely Scattered large hail and isolated very large hail events to 2.5 inches in diameter possible SUMMARY...Severe thunderstorms (including a supercell with a history of tornadoes now just west of the AR part of the watch) should continue to shift eastward and develop anew, affecting areas from the Ozarks toward the lowest Ohio Valley through midmorning. All severe hazards are possible. The tornado watch area is approximately along and 70 statute miles north and south of a line from 25 miles south of Springfield MO to 35 miles east of Paducah KY. For a complete depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU4). PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... REMEMBER...A Tornado Watch means conditions are favorable for tornadoes and severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch area. Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for threatening weather conditions and listen for later statements and possible warnings. && OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 311...WW 313... AVIATION...Tornadoes and a few severe thunderstorms with hail surface and aloft to 2.5 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind gusts to 60 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 550. Mean storm motion vector 27035. ...Edwards Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC May 26, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0756 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Valid 261300Z - 271200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE EASTERN OZARKS TO PARTS OF THE OHIO VALLEY REGION... ...SUMMARY... Multiple rounds of severe storms are possible from the Ozarks and nearby Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley States today, with threats for tornadoes, severe gusts and occasional large hail. ...Synopsis... A progressive mid/upper-level pattern is apparent across the CONUS, perturbed mainly by a synoptic-scale trough initially over the central High Plains, and related cyclonic flow and embedded vorticity maxima/shortwaves over the Central States. The trough should shift eastward to WI, eastern IA, northern MO and central OK by 00Z, then over the Upper Great Lakes, Lower MI, and the lower Ohio Valley by 12Z tomorrow. At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary synoptic low over southwestern IA, with warm front across western IL behind convective outflow, and ahead of the outflow from central IL across southern IN to northeastern KY. The warm front should move slowly northward across the Ohio Valley through the afternoon. The cold front was drawn from the IA low southwestward to another low between ICT-PNC, then across western OK and northwest TX. This front will overtake a dryline today over northwest/west-central TX. By 00Z, the cold front should extend from a triple-point low near MSN across central IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, and north-central/central TX. By 12Z, the cold front should reach eastern IN, central KY, and western TN, becoming quasistationary southwestward over the Arklatex to central TX. The cold front will be preceded by an MCS outflow boundary over parts of the Ozarks and Ohio Valley region today. ...Ozarks/Arklatex to Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and south-central Appalachians... A complex, multi-episode severe scenario is apparent, still bearing some important mesoscale uncertainties. However, probabilities supporting an "enhanced" category appear solidly warranted over most of the original area that has not been too convectively processed, and mesoscale foci may yield denser swaths of severe (wind in particular) within that remaining broad corridor. An ongoing severe MCS, with embedded supercells and bowing segments and a history of several overnight tornadoes in the Ozarks, will continue to pose a threat for all severe hazards (including tornadoes) for at least the next several hours past midday. This threat should persist as activity exits the Ozarks, crosses the adjoining Mississippi Valley, and moves into parts of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. Some northward expansion toward/past the warm front is possible over the Ohio Valley. This activity should only gradually outpace the most favorable buoyancy as it approaches the Appalachians, and may still have a severe threat across the higher terrain. Confidence in its persistence is heightened by the presence of at least one MCV over the eastern Ozarks, which should enhance ascent and lower/middle-tropospheric vertical wind profiles/shear on the mesoscale. Organization of these thunderstorms should continue to take advantage of forced lift with cold pools, as well as lift from internal rotational dynamics of supercells and bookend vortices, to overcome modest MLCINH this morning through midday. Inflow air will contain rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s F, locally higher), and will be diurnally destabilizing from heating and warm advection near and south of the warm front. For near-term guidance, see SPC Tornado Watch 314 and related mesoscale discussions. Details of subsequent round(s) of convection still remain to be resolved, based substantially on the character and extent of poleward return of the outflow boundary from the leading activity. As such, further modifications (some substantial) may be needed to especially western parts of the outlook areas today. One zone of relatively maximized deep ascent appears to be associated with passage of the convectively reinforced prefrontal boundary over parts of MO and southeastern KS, initially penetrating outflow air from the leading activity. This regime should continue to benefit from large-scale DCVA/ascent aloft, related to the shortwave trough and closely associated convectively induced/enhanced vorticity fields. Activity interacting with the outflow boundary's theta-e gradient, backed near-surface winds, and maximized mesoscale vorticity in low levels should pose the greatest potential for tornadoes. However the afternoon/evening tornado risk is not yet focused tightly, due to uncertainties regarding the evolution of a boundary still being produced at this time. The general large-scale ascent, along with direct frontal lift and heating of a very moist airmass in the warm sector, also should support at least isolated to widely scattered, near-frontal convective development farther south across parts of AR and eastern OK, southwest of the outflow boundary. This activity, including supercells, should occur in an environment of stronger EML-related MLCINH for much of the day, but also, steep midlevel lapse rates, optimal moisture (surface dewpoints commonly low-mid 70s F), and weakening capping with time this afternoon. Despite some veering of near-surface winds, which may limit convergence, any activity that develops still will occur in an environment of 50-65-kt effective- shear magnitudes, and peak local MLCAPE commonly in the 3500-4500 J/kg range. Forecast hodographs and 2D hail models suggest very large hail of 3+ inches in diameter may occur with any sustained, relatively discrete storm this afternoon into early evening. Additional development is possible farther east in the warm sector, near and east of the Mississippi River and south of the MCS outflow, off the eastern rim of the EML where MLCINH is weaker but moisture and heating are strong. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/26/2024 Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 314 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0314 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 314 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 25 NW HRO TO 25 NE HRO TO 35 WNW TBN AND 25 WSW HRO TO 25 E FLP TO 25 SE UNO TO 35 W POF TO 40 SW FAM TO 35 WSW FAM TO 20 NNE FAM. ..GOSS..05/26/24 ATTN...WFO...LZK...MEG...PAH...LSX...SGF... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 314 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC005-021-049-055-065-075-089-101-121-129-135-137-261240- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BAXTER CLAY FULTON GREENE IZARD LAWRENCE MARION NEWTON RANDOLPH SEARCY SHARP STONE ILC003-047-055-059-065-069-077-081-087-127-145-151-153-157-165- 181-185-191-193-199-261240- IL . ILLINOIS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ALEXANDER EDWARDS FRANKLIN GALLATIN HAMILTON HARDIN JACKSON JEFFERSON JOHNSON MASSAC PERRY POPE PULASKI RANDOLPH SALINE UNION WABASH WAYNE WHITE WILLIAMSON Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 314 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0314 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 314 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 25 NW HRO TO 25 NE HRO TO 35 WNW TBN AND 25 WSW HRO TO 25 E FLP TO 25 SE UNO TO 35 W POF TO 40 SW FAM TO 35 WSW FAM TO 20 NNE FAM. ..GOSS..05/26/24 ATTN...WFO...LZK...MEG...PAH...LSX...SGF... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 314 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC005-021-049-055-065-075-089-101-121-129-135-137-261240- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BAXTER CLAY FULTON GREENE IZARD LAWRENCE MARION NEWTON RANDOLPH SEARCY SHARP STONE ILC003-047-055-059-065-069-077-081-087-127-145-151-153-157-165- 181-185-191-193-199-261240- IL . ILLINOIS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ALEXANDER EDWARDS FRANKLIN GALLATIN HAMILTON HARDIN JACKSON JEFFERSON JOHNSON MASSAC PERRY POPE PULASKI RANDOLPH SALINE UNION WABASH WAYNE WHITE WILLIAMSON Read more

SPC MD 970

1 year 3 months ago
MD 0970 CONCERNING TORNADO WATCH 311...314... FOR SOUTHERN MISSOURI AND NORTHERN ARKANSAS
Mesoscale Discussion 0970 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0412 AM CDT Sun May 26 2024 Areas affected...southern Missouri and northern Arkansas Concerning...Tornado Watch 311...314... Valid 260912Z - 261045Z The severe weather threat for Tornado Watch 311, 314 continues. SUMMARY...Severe/tornado risk continues across southern Missouri and northern Arkansas. DISCUSSION...Latest radar loop shows complex clustering of severe/supercell storms, including spin-up of several small low-level circulations -- and associated/brief tornadoes -- in the past half hour over southern Missouri. Meanwhile, the two more substantial/long-lived supercells -- one now moving east-southeastward across Stone County Missouri and the other crossing Marion County Arkansas -- both remain capable of producing all-hazards severe weather. The Marion County storm, in particular, appears to have produced a tornado over the past 15 minutes per WSR-88D correlation coefficient. Severe potential will likely continue/spread eastward over the next few hours. Gradually, storms will vacate eastern portions of Tornado Watch 311, and move fully into Tornado Watch 314. However, storms may not fully clear WW 311 prior to its scheduled 10Z expiration -- possibly requiring an EXT to cover the ongoing risk. ..Goss.. 05/26/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...PAH...MEG...LSX...LZK...SGF...TSA... LAT...LON 35999286 36369401 36589430 37609396 37799303 37849139 37329021 36039066 35999286 Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 314 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0314 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 314 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 25 NW HRO TO 25 NE HRO TO 35 WNW TBN. ..GOSS..05/26/24 ATTN...WFO...LZK...MEG...PAH...LSX...SGF... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 314 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC005-009-021-049-055-065-075-089-101-121-129-135-137-261140- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BAXTER BOONE CLAY FULTON GREENE IZARD LAWRENCE MARION NEWTON RANDOLPH SEARCY SHARP STONE ILC003-047-055-059-065-069-077-081-087-127-145-151-153-157-165- 181-185-191-193-199-261140- IL . ILLINOIS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ALEXANDER EDWARDS FRANKLIN GALLATIN HAMILTON HARDIN JACKSON JEFFERSON JOHNSON MASSAC PERRY POPE PULASKI RANDOLPH SALINE UNION WABASH WAYNE WHITE WILLIAMSON Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 313 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0313 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 313 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 40 SW SJT TO 5 E SJT TO 30 WSW BWD. ..GOSS..05/26/24 ATTN...WFO...SJT...MAF... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 313 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS TXC049-095-105-413-451-261040- TX . TEXAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BROWN CONCHO CROCKETT SCHLEICHER TOM GREEN THE WATCH STATUS MESSAGE IS FOR GUIDANCE PURPOSES ONLY. PLEASE REFER TO WATCH COUNTY NOTIFICATION STATEMENTS FOR OFFICIAL INFORMATION ON COUNTIES...INDEPENDENT CITIES AND MARINE ZONES CLEARED FROM SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AND TORNADO WATCHES. Read more