SPC MD 850

1 year 3 months ago
MD 0850 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH POSSIBLE FOR NORTHERN IL INTO SOUTHEAST WI
Mesoscale Discussion 0850 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1013 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Areas affected...Northern IL into southeast WI Concerning...Severe potential...Watch possible Valid 201513Z - 201645Z Probability of Watch Issuance...60 percent SUMMARY...Strong to locally severe storms are possible later today. DISCUSSION...An MCV and related surface reflection are moving east-northeastward across eastern IA this morning. This feature is expected to track along a warm frontal zone that is moving northward from northern IL into southern WI. Along/south of the warm front, diurnal heating of a relatively moist environment will result in moderate destabilization, with MLCAPE expected to increase above 1500 J/kg by late morning/early afternoon. As this occurs, a zone of stronger low/midlevel flow associated with the MCV will move across the effective warm sector, resulting in a conditionally favorable environment for organized convection. While most convection has been focused north of the warm front through the morning, storm development appears imminent closer to the warm front from far southern WI into northern IL. Stronger storms, including the potential for organized clusters and a couple supercells, are expected to develop from late morning into early afternoon. Low-level shear/SRH will be sufficient to support a couple tornadoes if supercells can be sustained within this regime. Otherwise, damaging gusts and hail may accompany the stronger storms. Watch issuance is possible if trends continue to support storm development across the warm sector late this morning. ..Dean/Hart.. 05/20/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...LOT...ILX...MKX...DVN... LAT...LON 41288765 41008921 41198988 41468985 41668979 42618947 43078938 43448892 43508820 43418778 43138735 42428713 41768719 41288765 Read more

SPC May 20, 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 0747 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 201300Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF NORTHEASTERN COLORADO...CENTRAL/SOUTHWESTERN NEBRASKA...AND NORTHWESTERN KANSAS... ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SURROUNDING THE ENHANCED RISK...AND ALSO OVER PARTS OF THE SOUTHWESTERN LAKE MICHIGAN VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... The greatest severe-thunderstorm threat today appears to be over parts of the central Plains, with large to very large hail, severe gusts (some 75 mph or greater), and a few tornadoes all possible. ...Synopsis... Mid/upper-level troughing over the western CONUS is expected to shift slowly eastward through the period, as an associated, strong shortwave trough pivots southeastward from the interior Northwest to WY/UT. A southern-stream trough -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the Pacific west of southern CA/northern Baja -- should eject northeastward and reach AZ by 00Z, then the central High Plains by 12Z tomorrow. A broad fetch of difluent flow aloft will extend downstream across the Great Plains States, with westerlies over OK and southwesterlies from CO to the Upper Midwest. Meanwhile, a positively tilted trough will drift southeastward over the northern/central FL Peninsula. The 11Z surface map showed a low in the FSD/SUX region, with quasistationary front southwestward to another low over southwestern KS, then arching westward into southeastern CO. Cyclogenesis should occur along the western boundary today, over eastern CO, as well as tonight along a dryline over the northern TX/western OK Panhandles. The lows should combine along the front, over western KS, by the end of the period. A warm front was drawn from the Siouxland low across southeastern IA, and should move northeastward over northern IL today. ...Central Plains... Thunderstorm development is expected by late afternoon, initially over higher terrain and in post-frontal convergence/upslope-lift zones near the Palmer Divide and/or Cheyenne Ridge. Some of this activity should move east-northeastward over northeastern CO and adjoining portions of NE, with both supercells and upscale- aggregating storm cluster(s) expected. Multiple rounds of convection may cross the region in and near the "Enhanced" area through this evening. Large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible from any sustained supercells. Severe gusts may occur from supercell downdrafts, but should be more common once cells evolve to clusters and cold pools combine. Some significant (65+ kt) gusts are possible. Activity should move/grow into a corridor of favorable instability across and south of the front in NE, with more convection developing near the front tonight. Isolated development also is possible near the dryline over eastern CO/western KS, but should be shorter-lived. Large-scale ascent aloft (ahead of the approaching Intermountain West trough) and low-level lift each should increase across the outlook area throughout the afternoon and into the evening. The boundary layer also should destabilize (preferentially more at higher altitudes) diurnally -- though the influence of moisture will contribute to increasing CAPE eastward across CO to the southwestern NE/northwestern KS area. The airmass-recovery process over that region will continue for most of the day, and the threat may develop and peak later in the day/evening than usual for this region. Relatively moisture-rich boundary-layer trajectories (still bearing the imprint of some upstream convective modification) may not advect into the area until late afternoon or evening. Still, with steep midlevel lapse rates attributable to the EML, MLCAPE values commonly around 2000 J/kg should develop, amidst 40-50 kt effective-shear magnitudes. Long hodographs will support the hail threat. Nocturnal boundary-layer stabilization and delayed airmass recovery with eastward extent make probabilities more conditional into eastern NE, IA and southern MN. ...Upper Great Lakes region... A prominent MCV -- produced by last evening's destructive thunderstorm complex over KS -- is apparent in composite radar imagery over IA. This feature should move northeastward across the DBQ ares and southern WI today, then over central Lake Michigan and the northern Lower Peninsula through tonight. As the associated field of strengthening low/middle-level ascent and mesoscale shear enhancement spreads over a destabilizing boundary layer in northern IL and northwestern IN, one or more episodes of thunderstorms should develop and move across the area from later this morning through late afternoon. Pockets of heating in cloud breaks, along with surface dewpoints in the low/mid 60s F, should support MLCAPE in the 1500-2500 J/kg range. Ambient deep shear is progged to be modest, though this may be underrepresented by synoptic models as often seen east through southeast of a well-formed MCV. Organized multicells/ clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, are possible. Damaging gusts and isolated severe hail are the main concerns. Some convection-allowing progs depict either: 1. A rejuvenated version of the IL convection later over Lower MI, past the impediment of relatively cold lake waters, or 2. Additional development in the Lower Peninsula as the MCV approaches Lake Michigan and the associated ascent field spreads overhead. While either scenario cannot be ruled out, the timing would place the activity into marginally surface-based effective-inflow parcels, amid decreasing instability eastward and with time. Therefore, the unconditional severe probabilities will be kept marginal over Lower MI for now, though even slightly more favorable mesoscale trends or more-consistent progs may compel an upgrade to wind probabilities for parts of the area. ...Southeastern FL... Scattered multicell thunderstorms are expected to form over mainly eastern parts of the region today, especially south of a weak cold front, along the Atlantic sea breeze and on outflow boundaries from initial-stage convection. Isolated severe gusts and hail are possible. Surface dewpoints will remain in the 70s F, acting in concert with strong heating to weaken MLCINH, and offset modest midlevel lapse rates enough for around 1500-2500 J/kg MLCAPE. The main limiting factor will be modest shear. Mid/upper-level flow will not be as strong as previous days, limiting deep shear (effective-shear magnitudes less than 30 kt), while weak winds in the lowest km keep hodographs fairly small. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/20/2024 Read more

SPC May 20, 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 0747 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 201300Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF NORTHEASTERN COLORADO...CENTRAL/SOUTHWESTERN NEBRASKA...AND NORTHWESTERN KANSAS... ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SURROUNDING THE ENHANCED RISK...AND ALSO OVER PARTS OF THE SOUTHWESTERN LAKE MICHIGAN VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... The greatest severe-thunderstorm threat today appears to be over parts of the central Plains, with large to very large hail, severe gusts (some 75 mph or greater), and a few tornadoes all possible. ...Synopsis... Mid/upper-level troughing over the western CONUS is expected to shift slowly eastward through the period, as an associated, strong shortwave trough pivots southeastward from the interior Northwest to WY/UT. A southern-stream trough -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the Pacific west of southern CA/northern Baja -- should eject northeastward and reach AZ by 00Z, then the central High Plains by 12Z tomorrow. A broad fetch of difluent flow aloft will extend downstream across the Great Plains States, with westerlies over OK and southwesterlies from CO to the Upper Midwest. Meanwhile, a positively tilted trough will drift southeastward over the northern/central FL Peninsula. The 11Z surface map showed a low in the FSD/SUX region, with quasistationary front southwestward to another low over southwestern KS, then arching westward into southeastern CO. Cyclogenesis should occur along the western boundary today, over eastern CO, as well as tonight along a dryline over the northern TX/western OK Panhandles. The lows should combine along the front, over western KS, by the end of the period. A warm front was drawn from the Siouxland low across southeastern IA, and should move northeastward over northern IL today. ...Central Plains... Thunderstorm development is expected by late afternoon, initially over higher terrain and in post-frontal convergence/upslope-lift zones near the Palmer Divide and/or Cheyenne Ridge. Some of this activity should move east-northeastward over northeastern CO and adjoining portions of NE, with both supercells and upscale- aggregating storm cluster(s) expected. Multiple rounds of convection may cross the region in and near the "Enhanced" area through this evening. Large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible from any sustained supercells. Severe gusts may occur from supercell downdrafts, but should be more common once cells evolve to clusters and cold pools combine. Some significant (65+ kt) gusts are possible. Activity should move/grow into a corridor of favorable instability across and south of the front in NE, with more convection developing near the front tonight. Isolated development also is possible near the dryline over eastern CO/western KS, but should be shorter-lived. Large-scale ascent aloft (ahead of the approaching Intermountain West trough) and low-level lift each should increase across the outlook area throughout the afternoon and into the evening. The boundary layer also should destabilize (preferentially more at higher altitudes) diurnally -- though the influence of moisture will contribute to increasing CAPE eastward across CO to the southwestern NE/northwestern KS area. The airmass-recovery process over that region will continue for most of the day, and the threat may develop and peak later in the day/evening than usual for this region. Relatively moisture-rich boundary-layer trajectories (still bearing the imprint of some upstream convective modification) may not advect into the area until late afternoon or evening. Still, with steep midlevel lapse rates attributable to the EML, MLCAPE values commonly around 2000 J/kg should develop, amidst 40-50 kt effective-shear magnitudes. Long hodographs will support the hail threat. Nocturnal boundary-layer stabilization and delayed airmass recovery with eastward extent make probabilities more conditional into eastern NE, IA and southern MN. ...Upper Great Lakes region... A prominent MCV -- produced by last evening's destructive thunderstorm complex over KS -- is apparent in composite radar imagery over IA. This feature should move northeastward across the DBQ ares and southern WI today, then over central Lake Michigan and the northern Lower Peninsula through tonight. As the associated field of strengthening low/middle-level ascent and mesoscale shear enhancement spreads over a destabilizing boundary layer in northern IL and northwestern IN, one or more episodes of thunderstorms should develop and move across the area from later this morning through late afternoon. Pockets of heating in cloud breaks, along with surface dewpoints in the low/mid 60s F, should support MLCAPE in the 1500-2500 J/kg range. Ambient deep shear is progged to be modest, though this may be underrepresented by synoptic models as often seen east through southeast of a well-formed MCV. Organized multicells/ clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, are possible. Damaging gusts and isolated severe hail are the main concerns. Some convection-allowing progs depict either: 1. A rejuvenated version of the IL convection later over Lower MI, past the impediment of relatively cold lake waters, or 2. Additional development in the Lower Peninsula as the MCV approaches Lake Michigan and the associated ascent field spreads overhead. While either scenario cannot be ruled out, the timing would place the activity into marginally surface-based effective-inflow parcels, amid decreasing instability eastward and with time. Therefore, the unconditional severe probabilities will be kept marginal over Lower MI for now, though even slightly more favorable mesoscale trends or more-consistent progs may compel an upgrade to wind probabilities for parts of the area. ...Southeastern FL... Scattered multicell thunderstorms are expected to form over mainly eastern parts of the region today, especially south of a weak cold front, along the Atlantic sea breeze and on outflow boundaries from initial-stage convection. Isolated severe gusts and hail are possible. Surface dewpoints will remain in the 70s F, acting in concert with strong heating to weaken MLCINH, and offset modest midlevel lapse rates enough for around 1500-2500 J/kg MLCAPE. The main limiting factor will be modest shear. Mid/upper-level flow will not be as strong as previous days, limiting deep shear (effective-shear magnitudes less than 30 kt), while weak winds in the lowest km keep hodographs fairly small. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/20/2024 Read more

SPC May 20, 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 0747 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 201300Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF NORTHEASTERN COLORADO...CENTRAL/SOUTHWESTERN NEBRASKA...AND NORTHWESTERN KANSAS... ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SURROUNDING THE ENHANCED RISK...AND ALSO OVER PARTS OF THE SOUTHWESTERN LAKE MICHIGAN VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... The greatest severe-thunderstorm threat today appears to be over parts of the central Plains, with large to very large hail, severe gusts (some 75 mph or greater), and a few tornadoes all possible. ...Synopsis... Mid/upper-level troughing over the western CONUS is expected to shift slowly eastward through the period, as an associated, strong shortwave trough pivots southeastward from the interior Northwest to WY/UT. A southern-stream trough -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the Pacific west of southern CA/northern Baja -- should eject northeastward and reach AZ by 00Z, then the central High Plains by 12Z tomorrow. A broad fetch of difluent flow aloft will extend downstream across the Great Plains States, with westerlies over OK and southwesterlies from CO to the Upper Midwest. Meanwhile, a positively tilted trough will drift southeastward over the northern/central FL Peninsula. The 11Z surface map showed a low in the FSD/SUX region, with quasistationary front southwestward to another low over southwestern KS, then arching westward into southeastern CO. Cyclogenesis should occur along the western boundary today, over eastern CO, as well as tonight along a dryline over the northern TX/western OK Panhandles. The lows should combine along the front, over western KS, by the end of the period. A warm front was drawn from the Siouxland low across southeastern IA, and should move northeastward over northern IL today. ...Central Plains... Thunderstorm development is expected by late afternoon, initially over higher terrain and in post-frontal convergence/upslope-lift zones near the Palmer Divide and/or Cheyenne Ridge. Some of this activity should move east-northeastward over northeastern CO and adjoining portions of NE, with both supercells and upscale- aggregating storm cluster(s) expected. Multiple rounds of convection may cross the region in and near the "Enhanced" area through this evening. Large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible from any sustained supercells. Severe gusts may occur from supercell downdrafts, but should be more common once cells evolve to clusters and cold pools combine. Some significant (65+ kt) gusts are possible. Activity should move/grow into a corridor of favorable instability across and south of the front in NE, with more convection developing near the front tonight. Isolated development also is possible near the dryline over eastern CO/western KS, but should be shorter-lived. Large-scale ascent aloft (ahead of the approaching Intermountain West trough) and low-level lift each should increase across the outlook area throughout the afternoon and into the evening. The boundary layer also should destabilize (preferentially more at higher altitudes) diurnally -- though the influence of moisture will contribute to increasing CAPE eastward across CO to the southwestern NE/northwestern KS area. The airmass-recovery process over that region will continue for most of the day, and the threat may develop and peak later in the day/evening than usual for this region. Relatively moisture-rich boundary-layer trajectories (still bearing the imprint of some upstream convective modification) may not advect into the area until late afternoon or evening. Still, with steep midlevel lapse rates attributable to the EML, MLCAPE values commonly around 2000 J/kg should develop, amidst 40-50 kt effective-shear magnitudes. Long hodographs will support the hail threat. Nocturnal boundary-layer stabilization and delayed airmass recovery with eastward extent make probabilities more conditional into eastern NE, IA and southern MN. ...Upper Great Lakes region... A prominent MCV -- produced by last evening's destructive thunderstorm complex over KS -- is apparent in composite radar imagery over IA. This feature should move northeastward across the DBQ ares and southern WI today, then over central Lake Michigan and the northern Lower Peninsula through tonight. As the associated field of strengthening low/middle-level ascent and mesoscale shear enhancement spreads over a destabilizing boundary layer in northern IL and northwestern IN, one or more episodes of thunderstorms should develop and move across the area from later this morning through late afternoon. Pockets of heating in cloud breaks, along with surface dewpoints in the low/mid 60s F, should support MLCAPE in the 1500-2500 J/kg range. Ambient deep shear is progged to be modest, though this may be underrepresented by synoptic models as often seen east through southeast of a well-formed MCV. Organized multicells/ clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, are possible. Damaging gusts and isolated severe hail are the main concerns. Some convection-allowing progs depict either: 1. A rejuvenated version of the IL convection later over Lower MI, past the impediment of relatively cold lake waters, or 2. Additional development in the Lower Peninsula as the MCV approaches Lake Michigan and the associated ascent field spreads overhead. While either scenario cannot be ruled out, the timing would place the activity into marginally surface-based effective-inflow parcels, amid decreasing instability eastward and with time. Therefore, the unconditional severe probabilities will be kept marginal over Lower MI for now, though even slightly more favorable mesoscale trends or more-consistent progs may compel an upgrade to wind probabilities for parts of the area. ...Southeastern FL... Scattered multicell thunderstorms are expected to form over mainly eastern parts of the region today, especially south of a weak cold front, along the Atlantic sea breeze and on outflow boundaries from initial-stage convection. Isolated severe gusts and hail are possible. Surface dewpoints will remain in the 70s F, acting in concert with strong heating to weaken MLCINH, and offset modest midlevel lapse rates enough for around 1500-2500 J/kg MLCAPE. The main limiting factor will be modest shear. Mid/upper-level flow will not be as strong as previous days, limiting deep shear (effective-shear magnitudes less than 30 kt), while weak winds in the lowest km keep hodographs fairly small. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/20/2024 Read more

SPC May 20, 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 0747 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 201300Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF NORTHEASTERN COLORADO...CENTRAL/SOUTHWESTERN NEBRASKA...AND NORTHWESTERN KANSAS... ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SURROUNDING THE ENHANCED RISK...AND ALSO OVER PARTS OF THE SOUTHWESTERN LAKE MICHIGAN VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... The greatest severe-thunderstorm threat today appears to be over parts of the central Plains, with large to very large hail, severe gusts (some 75 mph or greater), and a few tornadoes all possible. ...Synopsis... Mid/upper-level troughing over the western CONUS is expected to shift slowly eastward through the period, as an associated, strong shortwave trough pivots southeastward from the interior Northwest to WY/UT. A southern-stream trough -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the Pacific west of southern CA/northern Baja -- should eject northeastward and reach AZ by 00Z, then the central High Plains by 12Z tomorrow. A broad fetch of difluent flow aloft will extend downstream across the Great Plains States, with westerlies over OK and southwesterlies from CO to the Upper Midwest. Meanwhile, a positively tilted trough will drift southeastward over the northern/central FL Peninsula. The 11Z surface map showed a low in the FSD/SUX region, with quasistationary front southwestward to another low over southwestern KS, then arching westward into southeastern CO. Cyclogenesis should occur along the western boundary today, over eastern CO, as well as tonight along a dryline over the northern TX/western OK Panhandles. The lows should combine along the front, over western KS, by the end of the period. A warm front was drawn from the Siouxland low across southeastern IA, and should move northeastward over northern IL today. ...Central Plains... Thunderstorm development is expected by late afternoon, initially over higher terrain and in post-frontal convergence/upslope-lift zones near the Palmer Divide and/or Cheyenne Ridge. Some of this activity should move east-northeastward over northeastern CO and adjoining portions of NE, with both supercells and upscale- aggregating storm cluster(s) expected. Multiple rounds of convection may cross the region in and near the "Enhanced" area through this evening. Large to very large hail and a few tornadoes are possible from any sustained supercells. Severe gusts may occur from supercell downdrafts, but should be more common once cells evolve to clusters and cold pools combine. Some significant (65+ kt) gusts are possible. Activity should move/grow into a corridor of favorable instability across and south of the front in NE, with more convection developing near the front tonight. Isolated development also is possible near the dryline over eastern CO/western KS, but should be shorter-lived. Large-scale ascent aloft (ahead of the approaching Intermountain West trough) and low-level lift each should increase across the outlook area throughout the afternoon and into the evening. The boundary layer also should destabilize (preferentially more at higher altitudes) diurnally -- though the influence of moisture will contribute to increasing CAPE eastward across CO to the southwestern NE/northwestern KS area. The airmass-recovery process over that region will continue for most of the day, and the threat may develop and peak later in the day/evening than usual for this region. Relatively moisture-rich boundary-layer trajectories (still bearing the imprint of some upstream convective modification) may not advect into the area until late afternoon or evening. Still, with steep midlevel lapse rates attributable to the EML, MLCAPE values commonly around 2000 J/kg should develop, amidst 40-50 kt effective-shear magnitudes. Long hodographs will support the hail threat. Nocturnal boundary-layer stabilization and delayed airmass recovery with eastward extent make probabilities more conditional into eastern NE, IA and southern MN. ...Upper Great Lakes region... A prominent MCV -- produced by last evening's destructive thunderstorm complex over KS -- is apparent in composite radar imagery over IA. This feature should move northeastward across the DBQ ares and southern WI today, then over central Lake Michigan and the northern Lower Peninsula through tonight. As the associated field of strengthening low/middle-level ascent and mesoscale shear enhancement spreads over a destabilizing boundary layer in northern IL and northwestern IN, one or more episodes of thunderstorms should develop and move across the area from later this morning through late afternoon. Pockets of heating in cloud breaks, along with surface dewpoints in the low/mid 60s F, should support MLCAPE in the 1500-2500 J/kg range. Ambient deep shear is progged to be modest, though this may be underrepresented by synoptic models as often seen east through southeast of a well-formed MCV. Organized multicells/ clusters, and perhaps a few supercells, are possible. Damaging gusts and isolated severe hail are the main concerns. Some convection-allowing progs depict either: 1. A rejuvenated version of the IL convection later over Lower MI, past the impediment of relatively cold lake waters, or 2. Additional development in the Lower Peninsula as the MCV approaches Lake Michigan and the associated ascent field spreads overhead. While either scenario cannot be ruled out, the timing would place the activity into marginally surface-based effective-inflow parcels, amid decreasing instability eastward and with time. Therefore, the unconditional severe probabilities will be kept marginal over Lower MI for now, though even slightly more favorable mesoscale trends or more-consistent progs may compel an upgrade to wind probabilities for parts of the area. ...Southeastern FL... Scattered multicell thunderstorms are expected to form over mainly eastern parts of the region today, especially south of a weak cold front, along the Atlantic sea breeze and on outflow boundaries from initial-stage convection. Isolated severe gusts and hail are possible. Surface dewpoints will remain in the 70s F, acting in concert with strong heating to weaken MLCINH, and offset modest midlevel lapse rates enough for around 1500-2500 J/kg MLCAPE. The main limiting factor will be modest shear. Mid/upper-level flow will not be as strong as previous days, limiting deep shear (effective-shear magnitudes less than 30 kt), while weak winds in the lowest km keep hodographs fairly small. ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/20/2024 Read more

SPC MD 849

1 year 3 months ago
MD 0849 CONCERNING SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH 266... FOR NORTHEASTERN AND EAST-CENTRAL OKLAHOMA
Mesoscale Discussion 0849 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0343 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Areas affected...northeastern and east-central Oklahoma Concerning...Severe Thunderstorm Watch 266... Valid 200843Z - 201015Z The severe weather threat for Severe Thunderstorm Watch 266 continues. SUMMARY...Locally strong/damaging gusts will likely continue over the next 1 to 2 hours, though a gradual decrease in convective intensity is anticipated. DISCUSSION...Latest radar loop shows a cluster of convection across roughly the northeastern quarter of Oklahoma -- most intense along its southern flank. As the individual storms move in a generally easterly direction at around 35 kt, the overall area of storms continues to sag gradually southeastward -- north of southward-moving outflow. With the convection slightly elevated for the most part atop the aforementioned outflow, severe-caliber wind gusts have become sparse, with the last reported about around 3 AM at Tulsa (51 kt). In general, a slow decreasing trend in convective intensity (and thus severe potential) should continue over the next couple of hours, as storms encounter a progressive/gradual decrease in surface-based instability both areally and temporally. Still, an occasional stronger gust or two -- near severe levels -- will remain possible in the short term. ..Goss.. 05/20/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...TSA...OUN... LAT...LON 35699739 36309717 36089689 36109625 36429577 36609534 36239462 35809456 35379508 35129615 35699739 Read more

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 266 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0266 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 266 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 25 SSW CQB TO 25 NNE CQB TO 15 SSW TUL TO 25 E TUL TO 10 E GMJ. ..GOSS..05/20/24 ATTN...WFO...TSA...OUN... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 266 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS OKC001-021-035-037-041-081-083-091-097-101-107-111-115-119-131- 143-145-201040- OK . OKLAHOMA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ADAIR CHEROKEE CRAIG CREEK DELAWARE LINCOLN LOGAN MCINTOSH MAYES MUSKOGEE OKFUSKEE OKMULGEE OTTAWA PAYNE ROGERS TULSA WAGONER 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

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 266 Status Reports

1 year 3 months ago
WW 0266 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 266 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 25 SSW CQB TO 25 NNE CQB TO 15 SSW TUL TO 25 E TUL TO 10 E GMJ. ..GOSS..05/20/24 ATTN...WFO...TSA...OUN... STATUS REPORT FOR WS 266 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS OKC001-021-035-037-041-081-083-091-097-101-107-111-115-119-131- 143-145-201040- OK . OKLAHOMA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE ADAIR CHEROKEE CRAIG CREEK DELAWARE LINCOLN LOGAN MCINTOSH MAYES MUSKOGEE OKFUSKEE OKMULGEE OTTAWA PAYNE ROGERS TULSA WAGONER 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

SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 266

1 year 3 months ago
WW 266 SEVERE TSTM OK 200440Z - 201100Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED Severe Thunderstorm Watch Number 266 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1140 PM CDT Sun May 19 2024 The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a * Severe Thunderstorm Watch for portions of Northern into Northeast Oklahoma * Effective this Sunday night and Monday morning from 1140 PM until 600 AM CDT. * Primary threats include... Scattered large hail and isolated very large hail events to 2 inches in diameter possible Scattered damaging wind gusts to 70 mph possible SUMMARY...Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms will likely persist tonight and gradually develop east across the Watch area. A west to east oriented cluster of thunderstorms, occasionally containing a supercell or two, will potentially be capable of large hail and severe gusts. The severe thunderstorm watch area is approximately along and 35 statute miles north and south of a line from 45 miles southwest of Ponca City OK to 5 miles east of Grove OK. For a complete depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU6). PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... REMEMBER...A Severe Thunderstorm Watch means conditions are favorable for 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. Severe thunderstorms can and occasionally do produce tornadoes. && OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 262...WW 264...WW 265... AVIATION...A few severe thunderstorms with hail surface and aloft to 2 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind gusts to 60 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 500. Mean storm motion vector 27025. ...Smith Read more

SPC May 20, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 231200Z - 281200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Thu - Great Plains... A weak upper shortwave trough is expected to spread east from the southern Rockies to the Mid-South on Thursday. As this occurs, a band of enhanced southwesterly flow will overspread parts of OK and the ArkLaTex vicinity. A very moist airmass will be in place as southerly low-level flow maintains upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints. This will aid in strong to extreme instability across portions of the southern Plains/ArkLaTex. While convective evolution is a bit uncertain, the overall pattern will support severe-thunderstorm potential. A potent shortwave upper trough will move across the northern Rockies to the northern Plains. As this occurs, a surface low will deepen and move from the northern High Plains eastward across the Dakotas. Some severe potential may accompany this system. However, boundary-layer moisture will likely be poor given a prior cold frontal passage and better-quality moisture return only making it as far north as KS or southeast NE. Low-end severe probabilities may be needed in future outlooks, but potential appears too low for a 15 percent delineation at this time. ...Days 5-8/Fri-Mon... Spread among forecast guidance increases Day 5/Fri and beyond. However, a general pattern where subtle upper shortwave troughs emanate from the Rockies into the Plains and central U.S. will likely continue. Forecast guidance varies in timing and location of these features, but at least some severe-thunderstorm potential will be possible from portions of the Plains into the Midwest/Mid-South vicinity through the weekend. Given uncertainty, confidence is too low to introduce 15 percent probabilities for any given area at this time. Read more

SPC May 20, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 231200Z - 281200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Thu - Great Plains... A weak upper shortwave trough is expected to spread east from the southern Rockies to the Mid-South on Thursday. As this occurs, a band of enhanced southwesterly flow will overspread parts of OK and the ArkLaTex vicinity. A very moist airmass will be in place as southerly low-level flow maintains upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints. This will aid in strong to extreme instability across portions of the southern Plains/ArkLaTex. While convective evolution is a bit uncertain, the overall pattern will support severe-thunderstorm potential. A potent shortwave upper trough will move across the northern Rockies to the northern Plains. As this occurs, a surface low will deepen and move from the northern High Plains eastward across the Dakotas. Some severe potential may accompany this system. However, boundary-layer moisture will likely be poor given a prior cold frontal passage and better-quality moisture return only making it as far north as KS or southeast NE. Low-end severe probabilities may be needed in future outlooks, but potential appears too low for a 15 percent delineation at this time. ...Days 5-8/Fri-Mon... Spread among forecast guidance increases Day 5/Fri and beyond. However, a general pattern where subtle upper shortwave troughs emanate from the Rockies into the Plains and central U.S. will likely continue. Forecast guidance varies in timing and location of these features, but at least some severe-thunderstorm potential will be possible from portions of the Plains into the Midwest/Mid-South vicinity through the weekend. Given uncertainty, confidence is too low to introduce 15 percent probabilities for any given area at this time. Read more

SPC May 20, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 231200Z - 281200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Thu - Great Plains... A weak upper shortwave trough is expected to spread east from the southern Rockies to the Mid-South on Thursday. As this occurs, a band of enhanced southwesterly flow will overspread parts of OK and the ArkLaTex vicinity. A very moist airmass will be in place as southerly low-level flow maintains upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints. This will aid in strong to extreme instability across portions of the southern Plains/ArkLaTex. While convective evolution is a bit uncertain, the overall pattern will support severe-thunderstorm potential. A potent shortwave upper trough will move across the northern Rockies to the northern Plains. As this occurs, a surface low will deepen and move from the northern High Plains eastward across the Dakotas. Some severe potential may accompany this system. However, boundary-layer moisture will likely be poor given a prior cold frontal passage and better-quality moisture return only making it as far north as KS or southeast NE. Low-end severe probabilities may be needed in future outlooks, but potential appears too low for a 15 percent delineation at this time. ...Days 5-8/Fri-Mon... Spread among forecast guidance increases Day 5/Fri and beyond. However, a general pattern where subtle upper shortwave troughs emanate from the Rockies into the Plains and central U.S. will likely continue. Forecast guidance varies in timing and location of these features, but at least some severe-thunderstorm potential will be possible from portions of the Plains into the Midwest/Mid-South vicinity through the weekend. Given uncertainty, confidence is too low to introduce 15 percent probabilities for any given area at this time. Read more

SPC May 20, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 231200Z - 281200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Thu - Great Plains... A weak upper shortwave trough is expected to spread east from the southern Rockies to the Mid-South on Thursday. As this occurs, a band of enhanced southwesterly flow will overspread parts of OK and the ArkLaTex vicinity. A very moist airmass will be in place as southerly low-level flow maintains upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints. This will aid in strong to extreme instability across portions of the southern Plains/ArkLaTex. While convective evolution is a bit uncertain, the overall pattern will support severe-thunderstorm potential. A potent shortwave upper trough will move across the northern Rockies to the northern Plains. As this occurs, a surface low will deepen and move from the northern High Plains eastward across the Dakotas. Some severe potential may accompany this system. However, boundary-layer moisture will likely be poor given a prior cold frontal passage and better-quality moisture return only making it as far north as KS or southeast NE. Low-end severe probabilities may be needed in future outlooks, but potential appears too low for a 15 percent delineation at this time. ...Days 5-8/Fri-Mon... Spread among forecast guidance increases Day 5/Fri and beyond. However, a general pattern where subtle upper shortwave troughs emanate from the Rockies into the Plains and central U.S. will likely continue. Forecast guidance varies in timing and location of these features, but at least some severe-thunderstorm potential will be possible from portions of the Plains into the Midwest/Mid-South vicinity through the weekend. Given uncertainty, confidence is too low to introduce 15 percent probabilities for any given area at this time. Read more

SPC May 20, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 231200Z - 281200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Thu - Great Plains... A weak upper shortwave trough is expected to spread east from the southern Rockies to the Mid-South on Thursday. As this occurs, a band of enhanced southwesterly flow will overspread parts of OK and the ArkLaTex vicinity. A very moist airmass will be in place as southerly low-level flow maintains upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints. This will aid in strong to extreme instability across portions of the southern Plains/ArkLaTex. While convective evolution is a bit uncertain, the overall pattern will support severe-thunderstorm potential. A potent shortwave upper trough will move across the northern Rockies to the northern Plains. As this occurs, a surface low will deepen and move from the northern High Plains eastward across the Dakotas. Some severe potential may accompany this system. However, boundary-layer moisture will likely be poor given a prior cold frontal passage and better-quality moisture return only making it as far north as KS or southeast NE. Low-end severe probabilities may be needed in future outlooks, but potential appears too low for a 15 percent delineation at this time. ...Days 5-8/Fri-Mon... Spread among forecast guidance increases Day 5/Fri and beyond. However, a general pattern where subtle upper shortwave troughs emanate from the Rockies into the Plains and central U.S. will likely continue. Forecast guidance varies in timing and location of these features, but at least some severe-thunderstorm potential will be possible from portions of the Plains into the Midwest/Mid-South vicinity through the weekend. Given uncertainty, confidence is too low to introduce 15 percent probabilities for any given area at this time. Read more

SPC May 20, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 231200Z - 281200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Thu - Great Plains... A weak upper shortwave trough is expected to spread east from the southern Rockies to the Mid-South on Thursday. As this occurs, a band of enhanced southwesterly flow will overspread parts of OK and the ArkLaTex vicinity. A very moist airmass will be in place as southerly low-level flow maintains upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints. This will aid in strong to extreme instability across portions of the southern Plains/ArkLaTex. While convective evolution is a bit uncertain, the overall pattern will support severe-thunderstorm potential. A potent shortwave upper trough will move across the northern Rockies to the northern Plains. As this occurs, a surface low will deepen and move from the northern High Plains eastward across the Dakotas. Some severe potential may accompany this system. However, boundary-layer moisture will likely be poor given a prior cold frontal passage and better-quality moisture return only making it as far north as KS or southeast NE. Low-end severe probabilities may be needed in future outlooks, but potential appears too low for a 15 percent delineation at this time. ...Days 5-8/Fri-Mon... Spread among forecast guidance increases Day 5/Fri and beyond. However, a general pattern where subtle upper shortwave troughs emanate from the Rockies into the Plains and central U.S. will likely continue. Forecast guidance varies in timing and location of these features, but at least some severe-thunderstorm potential will be possible from portions of the Plains into the Midwest/Mid-South vicinity through the weekend. Given uncertainty, confidence is too low to introduce 15 percent probabilities for any given area at this time. Read more

SPC May 20, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 231200Z - 281200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Thu - Great Plains... A weak upper shortwave trough is expected to spread east from the southern Rockies to the Mid-South on Thursday. As this occurs, a band of enhanced southwesterly flow will overspread parts of OK and the ArkLaTex vicinity. A very moist airmass will be in place as southerly low-level flow maintains upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints. This will aid in strong to extreme instability across portions of the southern Plains/ArkLaTex. While convective evolution is a bit uncertain, the overall pattern will support severe-thunderstorm potential. A potent shortwave upper trough will move across the northern Rockies to the northern Plains. As this occurs, a surface low will deepen and move from the northern High Plains eastward across the Dakotas. Some severe potential may accompany this system. However, boundary-layer moisture will likely be poor given a prior cold frontal passage and better-quality moisture return only making it as far north as KS or southeast NE. Low-end severe probabilities may be needed in future outlooks, but potential appears too low for a 15 percent delineation at this time. ...Days 5-8/Fri-Mon... Spread among forecast guidance increases Day 5/Fri and beyond. However, a general pattern where subtle upper shortwave troughs emanate from the Rockies into the Plains and central U.S. will likely continue. Forecast guidance varies in timing and location of these features, but at least some severe-thunderstorm potential will be possible from portions of the Plains into the Midwest/Mid-South vicinity through the weekend. Given uncertainty, confidence is too low to introduce 15 percent probabilities for any given area at this time. Read more

SPC May 20, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 231200Z - 281200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Thu - Great Plains... A weak upper shortwave trough is expected to spread east from the southern Rockies to the Mid-South on Thursday. As this occurs, a band of enhanced southwesterly flow will overspread parts of OK and the ArkLaTex vicinity. A very moist airmass will be in place as southerly low-level flow maintains upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints. This will aid in strong to extreme instability across portions of the southern Plains/ArkLaTex. While convective evolution is a bit uncertain, the overall pattern will support severe-thunderstorm potential. A potent shortwave upper trough will move across the northern Rockies to the northern Plains. As this occurs, a surface low will deepen and move from the northern High Plains eastward across the Dakotas. Some severe potential may accompany this system. However, boundary-layer moisture will likely be poor given a prior cold frontal passage and better-quality moisture return only making it as far north as KS or southeast NE. Low-end severe probabilities may be needed in future outlooks, but potential appears too low for a 15 percent delineation at this time. ...Days 5-8/Fri-Mon... Spread among forecast guidance increases Day 5/Fri and beyond. However, a general pattern where subtle upper shortwave troughs emanate from the Rockies into the Plains and central U.S. will likely continue. Forecast guidance varies in timing and location of these features, but at least some severe-thunderstorm potential will be possible from portions of the Plains into the Midwest/Mid-South vicinity through the weekend. Given uncertainty, confidence is too low to introduce 15 percent probabilities for any given area at this time. Read more

SPC May 20, 2024 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 3 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0334 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Valid 231200Z - 281200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Thu - Great Plains... A weak upper shortwave trough is expected to spread east from the southern Rockies to the Mid-South on Thursday. As this occurs, a band of enhanced southwesterly flow will overspread parts of OK and the ArkLaTex vicinity. A very moist airmass will be in place as southerly low-level flow maintains upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints. This will aid in strong to extreme instability across portions of the southern Plains/ArkLaTex. While convective evolution is a bit uncertain, the overall pattern will support severe-thunderstorm potential. A potent shortwave upper trough will move across the northern Rockies to the northern Plains. As this occurs, a surface low will deepen and move from the northern High Plains eastward across the Dakotas. Some severe potential may accompany this system. However, boundary-layer moisture will likely be poor given a prior cold frontal passage and better-quality moisture return only making it as far north as KS or southeast NE. Low-end severe probabilities may be needed in future outlooks, but potential appears too low for a 15 percent delineation at this time. ...Days 5-8/Fri-Mon... Spread among forecast guidance increases Day 5/Fri and beyond. However, a general pattern where subtle upper shortwave troughs emanate from the Rockies into the Plains and central U.S. will likely continue. Forecast guidance varies in timing and location of these features, but at least some severe-thunderstorm potential will be possible from portions of the Plains into the Midwest/Mid-South vicinity through the weekend. Given uncertainty, confidence is too low to introduce 15 percent probabilities for any given area at this time. Read more

SPC MD 848

1 year 3 months ago
MD 0848 CONCERNING SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH 265...266... FOR NORTH-CENTRAL AND NORTHEASTERN OKLAHOMA
Mesoscale Discussion 0848 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0142 AM CDT Mon May 20 2024 Areas affected...north-central and northeastern Oklahoma Concerning...Severe Thunderstorm Watch 265...266... Valid 200642Z - 200845Z The severe weather threat for Severe Thunderstorm Watch 265, 266 continues. SUMMARY...Severe-weather risk will continue across portions of north-central and northeastern Oklahoma -- largely within WW 266. DISCUSSION...Latest radar loop shows a cluster of strong/locally severe storms ongoing across north-central and into northeastern Oklahoma -- in the far southeastern corner of soon-to-expire WW 265 and western portions of WW 266. Storms continue to regenerate on the southwestern flank of the convection, resulting in a slow southward drift to the convection. This is occurring as a strong (near 60 kt) southwesterly low-level jet continues to provide a feed of high theta-e air atop low-level convective outflow. With deep-layer shear favorable for organized/rotating storms, expect local/isolated -- but all-hazard -- severe risk to persist for some time. As WW 265 expires, and as storms creep southward with time, local WW extensions may be needed to cover the persistent/evolving risk. ..Goss.. 05/20/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...TSA...OUN... LAT...LON 36199815 36549775 36709727 36379579 35889519 35559583 35489694 35659812 35909821 36199815 Read more