SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1041 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091700Z - 101200Z The previous forecast remains on track with no changes required. Latest surface observations within the southern CA coastal ranges show areas of elevated to critical fire weather conditions with winds gusting between 25-50 mph and RH in the upper teens and low 20s. Such conditions will likely persist through tonight and into early Sunday morning. Across southern TX, dry conditions are noted in recent observations with a gradual increase in winds still likely this afternoon. See the previous discussion below for additional information. ..Moore.. 12/09/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1141 PM CST Fri Dec 08 2023/ ...Synopsis... An upper-level trough will amplify as it moves into the Southeast today. This will push a cold front through the Plains to near the Appalachians. Surface high pressure will increase within the Great Basin and Four Corners regions. ...Southern California... Offshore winds will likely be maximized early this morning. Winds of 20-25 mph (with higher gusts) will overlap with at least marginally reduced RH. RH values will fall to near 10-15% in some locations by the afternoon. Winds will slowly lose some intensity with time, but should remain 15-20 mph for several hours. Lower elevation fuels will be the primary driver of fire spread. However, these fine fuels are only marginally dry at present. Elevated fire weather concerns are possible where these fuels are driest. ...Texas... Elevated fire weather is possible within part of the Permian Basin into the Edwards Plateau. Post-frontal winds will be 15-20 mph amid 15-20% RH. Locally lower RH could occur where a greater downsloping wind component exists. Fine fuels are marginally dry and will support a low-end threat for a large fire. Cold advection will tend to limit the fire weather threat, particularly farther north, as RH will likely remain above critical thresholds in those areas. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1041 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091700Z - 101200Z The previous forecast remains on track with no changes required. Latest surface observations within the southern CA coastal ranges show areas of elevated to critical fire weather conditions with winds gusting between 25-50 mph and RH in the upper teens and low 20s. Such conditions will likely persist through tonight and into early Sunday morning. Across southern TX, dry conditions are noted in recent observations with a gradual increase in winds still likely this afternoon. See the previous discussion below for additional information. ..Moore.. 12/09/2023 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1141 PM CST Fri Dec 08 2023/ ...Synopsis... An upper-level trough will amplify as it moves into the Southeast today. This will push a cold front through the Plains to near the Appalachians. Surface high pressure will increase within the Great Basin and Four Corners regions. ...Southern California... Offshore winds will likely be maximized early this morning. Winds of 20-25 mph (with higher gusts) will overlap with at least marginally reduced RH. RH values will fall to near 10-15% in some locations by the afternoon. Winds will slowly lose some intensity with time, but should remain 15-20 mph for several hours. Lower elevation fuels will be the primary driver of fire spread. However, these fine fuels are only marginally dry at present. Elevated fire weather concerns are possible where these fuels are driest. ...Texas... Elevated fire weather is possible within part of the Permian Basin into the Edwards Plateau. Post-frontal winds will be 15-20 mph amid 15-20% RH. Locally lower RH could occur where a greater downsloping wind component exists. Fine fuels are marginally dry and will support a low-end threat for a large fire. Cold advection will tend to limit the fire weather threat, particularly farther north, as RH will likely remain above critical thresholds in those areas. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1036 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091630Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...GULF COAST...TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging thunderstorm wind gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the Lower Mississippi Valley and middle Gulf Coast. ...Gulf Coast/Lower Mississippi Valley/Tennessee Valley... Region is being increasingly influenced by height falls but otherwise resides between larger scale influences of an upper trough over the Upper Midwest and a positive-tilt trough over the southern High Plains. Increasing warm-sector moisture (generally lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints) ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front, along with considerable deep-layer/low-level shear, will be favorable factors for a long-duration severe risk through the afternoon into tonight. However, the likelihood of a complex/mixed quasi-linear convective mode casts uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the severe risk, particularly regarding a supercell-related sustained/focused tornado risk. It is also noted that some guidance suggests that 1-3km AGL winds may somewhat weaken by late afternoon/early evening within the warm sector, while noting SRH will still remain favorable for rotating/severe storms. Storms should continue to increase in coverage through early afternoon, initially near the front across Arkansas northeastward into western portions of Tennessee/Kentucky. Sufficiently steep mid-level lapse rates will support some hail potential, especially the first part of the day, but the tendency for storm clustering will otherwise limit this overall potential, as well as limiting prospects for more consequential hail magnitudes. As the boundary layer warms this afternoon, the potential for initially semi-discrete supercells will increase along with related damaging wind risk as well as tornado potential, which will persist through the afternoon/evening even with a quasi-linear convective mode. As warm-sector inhibition further weakens later this afternoon, additional deepening convection may develop within weak pre-frontal convergence/confluence regime, mainly across Mississippi into Alabama, with this development eventually merging with or taking over as the main convective band this evening. Similarly, pre-frontal confluence may support isolated supercellular development along the Gulf Coast/Florida Panhandle vicinity through late night hours/early Sunday, within a somewhat separate regime capable of a few severe storms. ..Guyer/Weinman.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0644 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091300Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF THE MID-SOUTH AND DELTA REGIONS TO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging to severe thunderstorm gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the central Gulf Coast. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a positively tilted synoptic trough will amplify and proceed eastward across the central CONUS, predominantly in response to two accompanying shortwave troughs: 1. A northern-stream perturbation -- initially manifest as a closed cyclone over MN with trough southwestward over NE. This feature will devolve to an open wave across WI tonight, before reaching Lower MI and Lake Huron around 12Z tomorrow. 2. An elongated vorticity banner and speed max over the Four Corners States, which should reorient into a positively tilted trough by 00Z from southeastern KS across southwestern OK to southeastern NM. In doing so, it may absorb the southern portion of the northern-stream trough's vorticity field. By 12Z tomorrow, the reconfigured perturbation should extend from southern IL across central AR to south-central TX. The 11Z surface analysis showed a weakening, occluded low near HIB, with occluded front southeastward to a triple-point low near MKE. A cold front was drawn from there southwestward over the Ozarks to north-central TX and the Trans-Pecos region of west TX. By 00Z, the triple-point low will deepen into the dominant surface cyclone and eject northeastward to that portion of ON northeast of Lake Superior. The cold front should extend across central portions of OH/KY, southwestward over northern parts of MS/LA, to the middle TX Coast and deep south TX. The front should reach northern NY, central PA, WV, the TRI area, northern GA, southern AL, and the west-central Gulf by 12Z. ...Gulf Coast to Ohio Valley... Bands of scattered to locally numerous thunderstorms are expected to develop along and ahead of the cold front, perhaps as early as midday in northwestern areas of the outlook, but mainly from this afternoon through overnight hours. As activity sweeps eastward to northeastward over the region, damaging to severe gusts, sporadic hail near severe limits, and a few tornadoes are all possible. The tornado and wind threats should be relatively maximized from the Mid-South to Tennessee Valley region, given that area's probable overlap between the most favorable parameter space and thunderstorm probability. However, concerns over storm morphology -- particularly potential for messy/embedded convective modes and short duration of favorably mature supercell/mesocyclone production -- remain large. This notion is supported by the presence of short, low- to medium-magnitude UH tracks in the preponderance of CAM guidance. This does not preclude the possibility of a significant or longer-lived tornado threat locally, but makes it too conditional and uncertainly focused for a specific, greater-potential outlook area at this point. Deep shear and hodograph size will strengthen northward, with around 200-300 J/kg effective SRH being fairly common over the warm sector prior to arrival of the main frontal/ prefrontal band. With CINH being weak, additional convection may develop atop weak convergence zones in the nearby warm sector as well, especially over parts of northern AL and mid TN from late afternoon into evening, before either merging with or taking over as the main convective band. Forecast soundings show modest low/middle-level lapse rates beneath abundant cloud cover, with warm/theta-e advection contributing at least as much to surface destabilization as diurnal/diabatic warming. Surface dewpoints ranging from the upper 60s F near the coast to the 50s in the Ohio Valley (with temperatures not much warmer) will lead to a gently northward-diminishing buoyancy gradient. MLCAPE should range from around 1500-2000 J/kg over central/southern parts of the Delta region (where lift and shear will be weaker) to 500-800 J/kg over the Ohio Valley, in a prefrontal plume that narrows and has shorter duration with northward/inland extent. The eastern rim of the favorable surface-based buoyancy will shift across AL and into parts of GA, the FL Panhandle, eastern TN and perhaps western Carolinas overnight, supporting an eastward extension of marginal severe potential and more overlap with the start of the day-2 outlook area. ..Edwards/Gleason.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0644 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091300Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF THE MID-SOUTH AND DELTA REGIONS TO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging to severe thunderstorm gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the central Gulf Coast. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a positively tilted synoptic trough will amplify and proceed eastward across the central CONUS, predominantly in response to two accompanying shortwave troughs: 1. A northern-stream perturbation -- initially manifest as a closed cyclone over MN with trough southwestward over NE. This feature will devolve to an open wave across WI tonight, before reaching Lower MI and Lake Huron around 12Z tomorrow. 2. An elongated vorticity banner and speed max over the Four Corners States, which should reorient into a positively tilted trough by 00Z from southeastern KS across southwestern OK to southeastern NM. In doing so, it may absorb the southern portion of the northern-stream trough's vorticity field. By 12Z tomorrow, the reconfigured perturbation should extend from southern IL across central AR to south-central TX. The 11Z surface analysis showed a weakening, occluded low near HIB, with occluded front southeastward to a triple-point low near MKE. A cold front was drawn from there southwestward over the Ozarks to north-central TX and the Trans-Pecos region of west TX. By 00Z, the triple-point low will deepen into the dominant surface cyclone and eject northeastward to that portion of ON northeast of Lake Superior. The cold front should extend across central portions of OH/KY, southwestward over northern parts of MS/LA, to the middle TX Coast and deep south TX. The front should reach northern NY, central PA, WV, the TRI area, northern GA, southern AL, and the west-central Gulf by 12Z. ...Gulf Coast to Ohio Valley... Bands of scattered to locally numerous thunderstorms are expected to develop along and ahead of the cold front, perhaps as early as midday in northwestern areas of the outlook, but mainly from this afternoon through overnight hours. As activity sweeps eastward to northeastward over the region, damaging to severe gusts, sporadic hail near severe limits, and a few tornadoes are all possible. The tornado and wind threats should be relatively maximized from the Mid-South to Tennessee Valley region, given that area's probable overlap between the most favorable parameter space and thunderstorm probability. However, concerns over storm morphology -- particularly potential for messy/embedded convective modes and short duration of favorably mature supercell/mesocyclone production -- remain large. This notion is supported by the presence of short, low- to medium-magnitude UH tracks in the preponderance of CAM guidance. This does not preclude the possibility of a significant or longer-lived tornado threat locally, but makes it too conditional and uncertainly focused for a specific, greater-potential outlook area at this point. Deep shear and hodograph size will strengthen northward, with around 200-300 J/kg effective SRH being fairly common over the warm sector prior to arrival of the main frontal/ prefrontal band. With CINH being weak, additional convection may develop atop weak convergence zones in the nearby warm sector as well, especially over parts of northern AL and mid TN from late afternoon into evening, before either merging with or taking over as the main convective band. Forecast soundings show modest low/middle-level lapse rates beneath abundant cloud cover, with warm/theta-e advection contributing at least as much to surface destabilization as diurnal/diabatic warming. Surface dewpoints ranging from the upper 60s F near the coast to the 50s in the Ohio Valley (with temperatures not much warmer) will lead to a gently northward-diminishing buoyancy gradient. MLCAPE should range from around 1500-2000 J/kg over central/southern parts of the Delta region (where lift and shear will be weaker) to 500-800 J/kg over the Ohio Valley, in a prefrontal plume that narrows and has shorter duration with northward/inland extent. The eastern rim of the favorable surface-based buoyancy will shift across AL and into parts of GA, the FL Panhandle, eastern TN and perhaps western Carolinas overnight, supporting an eastward extension of marginal severe potential and more overlap with the start of the day-2 outlook area. ..Edwards/Gleason.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0644 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091300Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF THE MID-SOUTH AND DELTA REGIONS TO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging to severe thunderstorm gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the central Gulf Coast. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a positively tilted synoptic trough will amplify and proceed eastward across the central CONUS, predominantly in response to two accompanying shortwave troughs: 1. A northern-stream perturbation -- initially manifest as a closed cyclone over MN with trough southwestward over NE. This feature will devolve to an open wave across WI tonight, before reaching Lower MI and Lake Huron around 12Z tomorrow. 2. An elongated vorticity banner and speed max over the Four Corners States, which should reorient into a positively tilted trough by 00Z from southeastern KS across southwestern OK to southeastern NM. In doing so, it may absorb the southern portion of the northern-stream trough's vorticity field. By 12Z tomorrow, the reconfigured perturbation should extend from southern IL across central AR to south-central TX. The 11Z surface analysis showed a weakening, occluded low near HIB, with occluded front southeastward to a triple-point low near MKE. A cold front was drawn from there southwestward over the Ozarks to north-central TX and the Trans-Pecos region of west TX. By 00Z, the triple-point low will deepen into the dominant surface cyclone and eject northeastward to that portion of ON northeast of Lake Superior. The cold front should extend across central portions of OH/KY, southwestward over northern parts of MS/LA, to the middle TX Coast and deep south TX. The front should reach northern NY, central PA, WV, the TRI area, northern GA, southern AL, and the west-central Gulf by 12Z. ...Gulf Coast to Ohio Valley... Bands of scattered to locally numerous thunderstorms are expected to develop along and ahead of the cold front, perhaps as early as midday in northwestern areas of the outlook, but mainly from this afternoon through overnight hours. As activity sweeps eastward to northeastward over the region, damaging to severe gusts, sporadic hail near severe limits, and a few tornadoes are all possible. The tornado and wind threats should be relatively maximized from the Mid-South to Tennessee Valley region, given that area's probable overlap between the most favorable parameter space and thunderstorm probability. However, concerns over storm morphology -- particularly potential for messy/embedded convective modes and short duration of favorably mature supercell/mesocyclone production -- remain large. This notion is supported by the presence of short, low- to medium-magnitude UH tracks in the preponderance of CAM guidance. This does not preclude the possibility of a significant or longer-lived tornado threat locally, but makes it too conditional and uncertainly focused for a specific, greater-potential outlook area at this point. Deep shear and hodograph size will strengthen northward, with around 200-300 J/kg effective SRH being fairly common over the warm sector prior to arrival of the main frontal/ prefrontal band. With CINH being weak, additional convection may develop atop weak convergence zones in the nearby warm sector as well, especially over parts of northern AL and mid TN from late afternoon into evening, before either merging with or taking over as the main convective band. Forecast soundings show modest low/middle-level lapse rates beneath abundant cloud cover, with warm/theta-e advection contributing at least as much to surface destabilization as diurnal/diabatic warming. Surface dewpoints ranging from the upper 60s F near the coast to the 50s in the Ohio Valley (with temperatures not much warmer) will lead to a gently northward-diminishing buoyancy gradient. MLCAPE should range from around 1500-2000 J/kg over central/southern parts of the Delta region (where lift and shear will be weaker) to 500-800 J/kg over the Ohio Valley, in a prefrontal plume that narrows and has shorter duration with northward/inland extent. The eastern rim of the favorable surface-based buoyancy will shift across AL and into parts of GA, the FL Panhandle, eastern TN and perhaps western Carolinas overnight, supporting an eastward extension of marginal severe potential and more overlap with the start of the day-2 outlook area. ..Edwards/Gleason.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0644 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091300Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF THE MID-SOUTH AND DELTA REGIONS TO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging to severe thunderstorm gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the central Gulf Coast. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a positively tilted synoptic trough will amplify and proceed eastward across the central CONUS, predominantly in response to two accompanying shortwave troughs: 1. A northern-stream perturbation -- initially manifest as a closed cyclone over MN with trough southwestward over NE. This feature will devolve to an open wave across WI tonight, before reaching Lower MI and Lake Huron around 12Z tomorrow. 2. An elongated vorticity banner and speed max over the Four Corners States, which should reorient into a positively tilted trough by 00Z from southeastern KS across southwestern OK to southeastern NM. In doing so, it may absorb the southern portion of the northern-stream trough's vorticity field. By 12Z tomorrow, the reconfigured perturbation should extend from southern IL across central AR to south-central TX. The 11Z surface analysis showed a weakening, occluded low near HIB, with occluded front southeastward to a triple-point low near MKE. A cold front was drawn from there southwestward over the Ozarks to north-central TX and the Trans-Pecos region of west TX. By 00Z, the triple-point low will deepen into the dominant surface cyclone and eject northeastward to that portion of ON northeast of Lake Superior. The cold front should extend across central portions of OH/KY, southwestward over northern parts of MS/LA, to the middle TX Coast and deep south TX. The front should reach northern NY, central PA, WV, the TRI area, northern GA, southern AL, and the west-central Gulf by 12Z. ...Gulf Coast to Ohio Valley... Bands of scattered to locally numerous thunderstorms are expected to develop along and ahead of the cold front, perhaps as early as midday in northwestern areas of the outlook, but mainly from this afternoon through overnight hours. As activity sweeps eastward to northeastward over the region, damaging to severe gusts, sporadic hail near severe limits, and a few tornadoes are all possible. The tornado and wind threats should be relatively maximized from the Mid-South to Tennessee Valley region, given that area's probable overlap between the most favorable parameter space and thunderstorm probability. However, concerns over storm morphology -- particularly potential for messy/embedded convective modes and short duration of favorably mature supercell/mesocyclone production -- remain large. This notion is supported by the presence of short, low- to medium-magnitude UH tracks in the preponderance of CAM guidance. This does not preclude the possibility of a significant or longer-lived tornado threat locally, but makes it too conditional and uncertainly focused for a specific, greater-potential outlook area at this point. Deep shear and hodograph size will strengthen northward, with around 200-300 J/kg effective SRH being fairly common over the warm sector prior to arrival of the main frontal/ prefrontal band. With CINH being weak, additional convection may develop atop weak convergence zones in the nearby warm sector as well, especially over parts of northern AL and mid TN from late afternoon into evening, before either merging with or taking over as the main convective band. Forecast soundings show modest low/middle-level lapse rates beneath abundant cloud cover, with warm/theta-e advection contributing at least as much to surface destabilization as diurnal/diabatic warming. Surface dewpoints ranging from the upper 60s F near the coast to the 50s in the Ohio Valley (with temperatures not much warmer) will lead to a gently northward-diminishing buoyancy gradient. MLCAPE should range from around 1500-2000 J/kg over central/southern parts of the Delta region (where lift and shear will be weaker) to 500-800 J/kg over the Ohio Valley, in a prefrontal plume that narrows and has shorter duration with northward/inland extent. The eastern rim of the favorable surface-based buoyancy will shift across AL and into parts of GA, the FL Panhandle, eastern TN and perhaps western Carolinas overnight, supporting an eastward extension of marginal severe potential and more overlap with the start of the day-2 outlook area. ..Edwards/Gleason.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0644 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 091300Z - 101200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF THE MID-SOUTH AND DELTA REGIONS TO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... A few tornadoes, damaging to severe thunderstorm gusts, and isolated severe hail are possible today and tonight from portions of the Ohio Valley southward to the central Gulf Coast. ...Synopsis... In mid/upper levels, a positively tilted synoptic trough will amplify and proceed eastward across the central CONUS, predominantly in response to two accompanying shortwave troughs: 1. A northern-stream perturbation -- initially manifest as a closed cyclone over MN with trough southwestward over NE. This feature will devolve to an open wave across WI tonight, before reaching Lower MI and Lake Huron around 12Z tomorrow. 2. An elongated vorticity banner and speed max over the Four Corners States, which should reorient into a positively tilted trough by 00Z from southeastern KS across southwestern OK to southeastern NM. In doing so, it may absorb the southern portion of the northern-stream trough's vorticity field. By 12Z tomorrow, the reconfigured perturbation should extend from southern IL across central AR to south-central TX. The 11Z surface analysis showed a weakening, occluded low near HIB, with occluded front southeastward to a triple-point low near MKE. A cold front was drawn from there southwestward over the Ozarks to north-central TX and the Trans-Pecos region of west TX. By 00Z, the triple-point low will deepen into the dominant surface cyclone and eject northeastward to that portion of ON northeast of Lake Superior. The cold front should extend across central portions of OH/KY, southwestward over northern parts of MS/LA, to the middle TX Coast and deep south TX. The front should reach northern NY, central PA, WV, the TRI area, northern GA, southern AL, and the west-central Gulf by 12Z. ...Gulf Coast to Ohio Valley... Bands of scattered to locally numerous thunderstorms are expected to develop along and ahead of the cold front, perhaps as early as midday in northwestern areas of the outlook, but mainly from this afternoon through overnight hours. As activity sweeps eastward to northeastward over the region, damaging to severe gusts, sporadic hail near severe limits, and a few tornadoes are all possible. The tornado and wind threats should be relatively maximized from the Mid-South to Tennessee Valley region, given that area's probable overlap between the most favorable parameter space and thunderstorm probability. However, concerns over storm morphology -- particularly potential for messy/embedded convective modes and short duration of favorably mature supercell/mesocyclone production -- remain large. This notion is supported by the presence of short, low- to medium-magnitude UH tracks in the preponderance of CAM guidance. This does not preclude the possibility of a significant or longer-lived tornado threat locally, but makes it too conditional and uncertainly focused for a specific, greater-potential outlook area at this point. Deep shear and hodograph size will strengthen northward, with around 200-300 J/kg effective SRH being fairly common over the warm sector prior to arrival of the main frontal/ prefrontal band. With CINH being weak, additional convection may develop atop weak convergence zones in the nearby warm sector as well, especially over parts of northern AL and mid TN from late afternoon into evening, before either merging with or taking over as the main convective band. Forecast soundings show modest low/middle-level lapse rates beneath abundant cloud cover, with warm/theta-e advection contributing at least as much to surface destabilization as diurnal/diabatic warming. Surface dewpoints ranging from the upper 60s F near the coast to the 50s in the Ohio Valley (with temperatures not much warmer) will lead to a gently northward-diminishing buoyancy gradient. MLCAPE should range from around 1500-2000 J/kg over central/southern parts of the Delta region (where lift and shear will be weaker) to 500-800 J/kg over the Ohio Valley, in a prefrontal plume that narrows and has shorter duration with northward/inland extent. The eastern rim of the favorable surface-based buoyancy will shift across AL and into parts of GA, the FL Panhandle, eastern TN and perhaps western Carolinas overnight, supporting an eastward extension of marginal severe potential and more overlap with the start of the day-2 outlook area. ..Edwards/Gleason.. 12/09/2023 Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0317 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 121200Z - 171200Z ...DISCUSSION... Severe potential appears likely to remain negligible for several days in the wake of this weekend's cold front progressing across the Gulf Coast and the Atlantic Seaboard. Above-average agreement exists with the establishment of a surface anticyclone over the southern Appalachians vicinity on D3 into D4, and remaining anchored in this region through at least D7. This will yield predominant easterly surface winds over the Gulf and FL Peninsula, with gradual airmass modification. Next weekend, deterministic 00Z ECMWF, GFS, and CMC suggest potential for eastern Gulf or South Atlantic Coast cyclogenesis. This may occur in response to an upper low, that initially develops over the Southwest mid-week, being kicked east and subsequently amplifying towards the Deep South. Very large spread in timing and track, in addition to only a minority of ECMWF ensemble/GEFS members supporting such a scenario renders low confidence in predictability for the D8-10 time frame. Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0317 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 121200Z - 171200Z ...DISCUSSION... Severe potential appears likely to remain negligible for several days in the wake of this weekend's cold front progressing across the Gulf Coast and the Atlantic Seaboard. Above-average agreement exists with the establishment of a surface anticyclone over the southern Appalachians vicinity on D3 into D4, and remaining anchored in this region through at least D7. This will yield predominant easterly surface winds over the Gulf and FL Peninsula, with gradual airmass modification. Next weekend, deterministic 00Z ECMWF, GFS, and CMC suggest potential for eastern Gulf or South Atlantic Coast cyclogenesis. This may occur in response to an upper low, that initially develops over the Southwest mid-week, being kicked east and subsequently amplifying towards the Deep South. Very large spread in timing and track, in addition to only a minority of ECMWF ensemble/GEFS members supporting such a scenario renders low confidence in predictability for the D8-10 time frame. Read more

SPC Dec 9, 2023 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

1 year 8 months ago
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0317 AM CST Sat Dec 09 2023 Valid 121200Z - 171200Z ...DISCUSSION... Severe potential appears likely to remain negligible for several days in the wake of this weekend's cold front progressing across the Gulf Coast and the Atlantic Seaboard. Above-average agreement exists with the establishment of a surface anticyclone over the southern Appalachians vicinity on D3 into D4, and remaining anchored in this region through at least D7. This will yield predominant easterly surface winds over the Gulf and FL Peninsula, with gradual airmass modification. Next weekend, deterministic 00Z ECMWF, GFS, and CMC suggest potential for eastern Gulf or South Atlantic Coast cyclogenesis. This may occur in response to an upper low, that initially develops over the Southwest mid-week, being kicked east and subsequently amplifying towards the Deep South. Very large spread in timing and track, in addition to only a minority of ECMWF ensemble/GEFS members supporting such a scenario renders low confidence in predictability for the D8-10 time frame. Read more