SPC MD 1698

5 years 11 months ago
MD 1698 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH LIKELY FOR SOUTHWEST INTO CENTRAL MT
Mesoscale Discussion 1698 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1233 PM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Areas affected...Southwest into central MT Concerning...Severe potential...Watch likely Valid 111733Z - 111900Z Probability of Watch Issuance...95 percent SUMMARY...The severe thunderstorm threat will increase into this afternoon. A severe wind swath may eventually develop across central MT, though all severe hazards will be possible. One or two watches will likely be issued by 19-20Z. DISCUSSION...One ongoing thunderstorm cluster is moving into north-central MT as of 1730Z, while another is moving into southwest MT. While the northern cluster may pose some threat of strong wind gusts in the short term, of greater concern is the southern cluster, which will likely increase in coverage and intensity as it moves into an increasingly unstable environment and large-scale ascent is maintained ahead of a seasonably strong mid/upper low across ID. With low-level moisture likely to be maintained or increased somewhat this afternoon due to persistent easterly flow, MLCAPE will likely rise into the 1000-2000 J/kg range this afternoon. Increasing mid/upper southwesterlies will support effective shear in the 35-50 kt range, which will support organized storm structures. The ongoing cluster across southwest MT may evolve into a forward-propagating MCS with time, with more isolated supercell development also possible on the periphery of this system. A severe wind swath will be possible ahead of any upscale-growing cluster, while steep lapse rates will support a hail threat, with very large hail possible with any supercells later this afternoon. Some tornado threat will also be present with any sustained supercells, though the greater tornado threat may eventually develop further east across south-central/southeast MT. ..Dean/Grams.. 08/11/2019 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...BYZ...GGW...TFX...MSO... LAT...LON 45871380 46701261 47641107 48380782 47800703 46960691 45850898 45141084 44871179 44501278 44991335 45441375 45871380 Read more

Eastern North Pacific Tropical Weather Outlook

5 years 11 months ago

000
ABPZ20 KNHC 111730
TWOEP

Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
1100 AM PDT Sun Aug 11 2019

For the eastern North Pacific...east of 140 degrees west longitude:

Showers and thunderstorms located a few hundred miles
south-southwest of the southern tip of the Baja California peninsula
are associated with a broad area of low pressure. Some development
of this system is possible over the next day or so while it moves
west-northwestward, away from the coast of Mexico. Thereafter,
conditions are expected to become unfavorable for development.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...30 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...low...30 percent.

A disturbance located a little less than 1000 miles southwest of the
Baja California peninsula is producing a large area of disorganized
showers and thunderstorms. Environmental conditions are expected to
become more conducive for tropical cyclone formation by the middle
of the week while the system moves west-northwestward at 10 to 15
mph.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...near 0 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...medium...50 percent.

$$
Forecaster Latto/Pasch
NHC Webmaster

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1219 PM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 121200Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR CENTRAL ILLINOIS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are likely on Monday over the middle Mississippi Valley to the Ohio Valley. Damaging gusts are the primary risk but a few tornadoes are possible. ...Synopsis... Northern-stream upper trough will deamplify as it moves across the Dakotas into MN. In the low levels, a cold front will extend from central ND southward through western NE by Monday evening. A low-amplitude, convectively enhanced shortwave trough will move from the NE/IA area into the southern Great Lakes and OH Valley during the evening into the overnight. A weak surface low will develop eastward from the central Great Plains into IL by late afternoon. A quasi-stationary front will extend eastward from the low through southern IA then southeast as a warm front toward the TN Valley. ...Middle Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley... Considerable uncertainty for this forecast is largely related to thunderstorm development expected late tonight into Monday morning across the central Great Plains into the lower MO Valley. This forecast thinking is similar to the previous outlook. Storms will likely be ongoing Monday morning from eastern NE into IA in association with the progressive, low-amplitude shortwave trough and will continue east within zone of isentropic ascent north of the front and on nose of an eastward-migrating low-level jet. A cluster of storms is possible farther southeast along the warm front over northeast MO into IL. By the afternoon, the warm front activity will have weakened and moved farther east. Despite modest 700-500mb lapse rates, strong heating amidst high-quality moisture (16-19 g/kg lowest 100mb mean mixing ratio) will lead to a moderately to very unstable airmass developing across IL south of an effective boundary. A strong belt of westerly 700mb flow (30-40kt) is forecast to move across IA and into the northern half of IL by the mid-late afternoon. It is a possibility that convection is maintained from IA into IL during the day ahead of the mid-level wave moving from eastern NE to Lake MI by early evening. Models are in good agreement in the depiction and evolution of a south-southwesterly LLJ over lower MO Valley being maintained and perhaps intensifying to 40kt as it shifts east into north-central IL by early evening. However, the variability shown by different model solutions in the magnitude of destabilization is very large and is due mostly to convective possibilities modulating the position of the buoyancy gradient across the mid MS Valley. With those uncertainty concerns, it seems prudent at this time to introduce a corridor of higher probabilities given the overlap of shear (40+ kt effective shear) and a moisture-rich/buoyant boundary layer. Supercells are possible, especially early during the convective lifecycle before upscale growth into bows favors potential for severe gusts and a corridor of wind damage. ...Northern Plains region... The atmosphere may become at least marginally unstable east of a cold front across the eastern Dakotas and into eastern NE where a belt of stronger winds within base of the northern-stream shortwave trough will reside. A few storms may redevelop in this region during the afternoon, posing some risk for hail or locally strong wind gusts. ...Maine... A few storms may develop along pre-frontal trough during the afternoon where modest low-level moisture and mid-level lapse rates will support marginal instability. This region will reside within belt of stronger winds aloft within base of an amplifying upper trough supporting 35-40 kt effective shear. A few storms may produce locally strong wind gusts and small to marginally severe hail, but overall threat should remain limited by the expected weak thermodynamic environment. ...MAXIMUM RISK BY HAZARD... Tornado: 5% - Slight Wind: 30% - Enhanced Hail: 15% - Slight ..Smith.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1219 PM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 121200Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR CENTRAL ILLINOIS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are likely on Monday over the middle Mississippi Valley to the Ohio Valley. Damaging gusts are the primary risk but a few tornadoes are possible. ...Synopsis... Northern-stream upper trough will deamplify as it moves across the Dakotas into MN. In the low levels, a cold front will extend from central ND southward through western NE by Monday evening. A low-amplitude, convectively enhanced shortwave trough will move from the NE/IA area into the southern Great Lakes and OH Valley during the evening into the overnight. A weak surface low will develop eastward from the central Great Plains into IL by late afternoon. A quasi-stationary front will extend eastward from the low through southern IA then southeast as a warm front toward the TN Valley. ...Middle Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley... Considerable uncertainty for this forecast is largely related to thunderstorm development expected late tonight into Monday morning across the central Great Plains into the lower MO Valley. This forecast thinking is similar to the previous outlook. Storms will likely be ongoing Monday morning from eastern NE into IA in association with the progressive, low-amplitude shortwave trough and will continue east within zone of isentropic ascent north of the front and on nose of an eastward-migrating low-level jet. A cluster of storms is possible farther southeast along the warm front over northeast MO into IL. By the afternoon, the warm front activity will have weakened and moved farther east. Despite modest 700-500mb lapse rates, strong heating amidst high-quality moisture (16-19 g/kg lowest 100mb mean mixing ratio) will lead to a moderately to very unstable airmass developing across IL south of an effective boundary. A strong belt of westerly 700mb flow (30-40kt) is forecast to move across IA and into the northern half of IL by the mid-late afternoon. It is a possibility that convection is maintained from IA into IL during the day ahead of the mid-level wave moving from eastern NE to Lake MI by early evening. Models are in good agreement in the depiction and evolution of a south-southwesterly LLJ over lower MO Valley being maintained and perhaps intensifying to 40kt as it shifts east into north-central IL by early evening. However, the variability shown by different model solutions in the magnitude of destabilization is very large and is due mostly to convective possibilities modulating the position of the buoyancy gradient across the mid MS Valley. With those uncertainty concerns, it seems prudent at this time to introduce a corridor of higher probabilities given the overlap of shear (40+ kt effective shear) and a moisture-rich/buoyant boundary layer. Supercells are possible, especially early during the convective lifecycle before upscale growth into bows favors potential for severe gusts and a corridor of wind damage. ...Northern Plains region... The atmosphere may become at least marginally unstable east of a cold front across the eastern Dakotas and into eastern NE where a belt of stronger winds within base of the northern-stream shortwave trough will reside. A few storms may redevelop in this region during the afternoon, posing some risk for hail or locally strong wind gusts. ...Maine... A few storms may develop along pre-frontal trough during the afternoon where modest low-level moisture and mid-level lapse rates will support marginal instability. This region will reside within belt of stronger winds aloft within base of an amplifying upper trough supporting 35-40 kt effective shear. A few storms may produce locally strong wind gusts and small to marginally severe hail, but overall threat should remain limited by the expected weak thermodynamic environment. ...MAXIMUM RISK BY HAZARD... Tornado: 5% - Slight Wind: 30% - Enhanced Hail: 15% - Slight ..Smith.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1219 PM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 121200Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR CENTRAL ILLINOIS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are likely on Monday over the middle Mississippi Valley to the Ohio Valley. Damaging gusts are the primary risk but a few tornadoes are possible. ...Synopsis... Northern-stream upper trough will deamplify as it moves across the Dakotas into MN. In the low levels, a cold front will extend from central ND southward through western NE by Monday evening. A low-amplitude, convectively enhanced shortwave trough will move from the NE/IA area into the southern Great Lakes and OH Valley during the evening into the overnight. A weak surface low will develop eastward from the central Great Plains into IL by late afternoon. A quasi-stationary front will extend eastward from the low through southern IA then southeast as a warm front toward the TN Valley. ...Middle Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley... Considerable uncertainty for this forecast is largely related to thunderstorm development expected late tonight into Monday morning across the central Great Plains into the lower MO Valley. This forecast thinking is similar to the previous outlook. Storms will likely be ongoing Monday morning from eastern NE into IA in association with the progressive, low-amplitude shortwave trough and will continue east within zone of isentropic ascent north of the front and on nose of an eastward-migrating low-level jet. A cluster of storms is possible farther southeast along the warm front over northeast MO into IL. By the afternoon, the warm front activity will have weakened and moved farther east. Despite modest 700-500mb lapse rates, strong heating amidst high-quality moisture (16-19 g/kg lowest 100mb mean mixing ratio) will lead to a moderately to very unstable airmass developing across IL south of an effective boundary. A strong belt of westerly 700mb flow (30-40kt) is forecast to move across IA and into the northern half of IL by the mid-late afternoon. It is a possibility that convection is maintained from IA into IL during the day ahead of the mid-level wave moving from eastern NE to Lake MI by early evening. Models are in good agreement in the depiction and evolution of a south-southwesterly LLJ over lower MO Valley being maintained and perhaps intensifying to 40kt as it shifts east into north-central IL by early evening. However, the variability shown by different model solutions in the magnitude of destabilization is very large and is due mostly to convective possibilities modulating the position of the buoyancy gradient across the mid MS Valley. With those uncertainty concerns, it seems prudent at this time to introduce a corridor of higher probabilities given the overlap of shear (40+ kt effective shear) and a moisture-rich/buoyant boundary layer. Supercells are possible, especially early during the convective lifecycle before upscale growth into bows favors potential for severe gusts and a corridor of wind damage. ...Northern Plains region... The atmosphere may become at least marginally unstable east of a cold front across the eastern Dakotas and into eastern NE where a belt of stronger winds within base of the northern-stream shortwave trough will reside. A few storms may redevelop in this region during the afternoon, posing some risk for hail or locally strong wind gusts. ...Maine... A few storms may develop along pre-frontal trough during the afternoon where modest low-level moisture and mid-level lapse rates will support marginal instability. This region will reside within belt of stronger winds aloft within base of an amplifying upper trough supporting 35-40 kt effective shear. A few storms may produce locally strong wind gusts and small to marginally severe hail, but overall threat should remain limited by the expected weak thermodynamic environment. ...MAXIMUM RISK BY HAZARD... Tornado: 5% - Slight Wind: 30% - Enhanced Hail: 15% - Slight ..Smith.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1219 PM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 121200Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR CENTRAL ILLINOIS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are likely on Monday over the middle Mississippi Valley to the Ohio Valley. Damaging gusts are the primary risk but a few tornadoes are possible. ...Synopsis... Northern-stream upper trough will deamplify as it moves across the Dakotas into MN. In the low levels, a cold front will extend from central ND southward through western NE by Monday evening. A low-amplitude, convectively enhanced shortwave trough will move from the NE/IA area into the southern Great Lakes and OH Valley during the evening into the overnight. A weak surface low will develop eastward from the central Great Plains into IL by late afternoon. A quasi-stationary front will extend eastward from the low through southern IA then southeast as a warm front toward the TN Valley. ...Middle Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley... Considerable uncertainty for this forecast is largely related to thunderstorm development expected late tonight into Monday morning across the central Great Plains into the lower MO Valley. This forecast thinking is similar to the previous outlook. Storms will likely be ongoing Monday morning from eastern NE into IA in association with the progressive, low-amplitude shortwave trough and will continue east within zone of isentropic ascent north of the front and on nose of an eastward-migrating low-level jet. A cluster of storms is possible farther southeast along the warm front over northeast MO into IL. By the afternoon, the warm front activity will have weakened and moved farther east. Despite modest 700-500mb lapse rates, strong heating amidst high-quality moisture (16-19 g/kg lowest 100mb mean mixing ratio) will lead to a moderately to very unstable airmass developing across IL south of an effective boundary. A strong belt of westerly 700mb flow (30-40kt) is forecast to move across IA and into the northern half of IL by the mid-late afternoon. It is a possibility that convection is maintained from IA into IL during the day ahead of the mid-level wave moving from eastern NE to Lake MI by early evening. Models are in good agreement in the depiction and evolution of a south-southwesterly LLJ over lower MO Valley being maintained and perhaps intensifying to 40kt as it shifts east into north-central IL by early evening. However, the variability shown by different model solutions in the magnitude of destabilization is very large and is due mostly to convective possibilities modulating the position of the buoyancy gradient across the mid MS Valley. With those uncertainty concerns, it seems prudent at this time to introduce a corridor of higher probabilities given the overlap of shear (40+ kt effective shear) and a moisture-rich/buoyant boundary layer. Supercells are possible, especially early during the convective lifecycle before upscale growth into bows favors potential for severe gusts and a corridor of wind damage. ...Northern Plains region... The atmosphere may become at least marginally unstable east of a cold front across the eastern Dakotas and into eastern NE where a belt of stronger winds within base of the northern-stream shortwave trough will reside. A few storms may redevelop in this region during the afternoon, posing some risk for hail or locally strong wind gusts. ...Maine... A few storms may develop along pre-frontal trough during the afternoon where modest low-level moisture and mid-level lapse rates will support marginal instability. This region will reside within belt of stronger winds aloft within base of an amplifying upper trough supporting 35-40 kt effective shear. A few storms may produce locally strong wind gusts and small to marginally severe hail, but overall threat should remain limited by the expected weak thermodynamic environment. ...MAXIMUM RISK BY HAZARD... Tornado: 5% - Slight Wind: 30% - Enhanced Hail: 15% - Slight ..Smith.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1730Z Day 2 Outlook
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1219 PM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 121200Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR CENTRAL ILLINOIS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are likely on Monday over the middle Mississippi Valley to the Ohio Valley. Damaging gusts are the primary risk but a few tornadoes are possible. ...Synopsis... Northern-stream upper trough will deamplify as it moves across the Dakotas into MN. In the low levels, a cold front will extend from central ND southward through western NE by Monday evening. A low-amplitude, convectively enhanced shortwave trough will move from the NE/IA area into the southern Great Lakes and OH Valley during the evening into the overnight. A weak surface low will develop eastward from the central Great Plains into IL by late afternoon. A quasi-stationary front will extend eastward from the low through southern IA then southeast as a warm front toward the TN Valley. ...Middle Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley... Considerable uncertainty for this forecast is largely related to thunderstorm development expected late tonight into Monday morning across the central Great Plains into the lower MO Valley. This forecast thinking is similar to the previous outlook. Storms will likely be ongoing Monday morning from eastern NE into IA in association with the progressive, low-amplitude shortwave trough and will continue east within zone of isentropic ascent north of the front and on nose of an eastward-migrating low-level jet. A cluster of storms is possible farther southeast along the warm front over northeast MO into IL. By the afternoon, the warm front activity will have weakened and moved farther east. Despite modest 700-500mb lapse rates, strong heating amidst high-quality moisture (16-19 g/kg lowest 100mb mean mixing ratio) will lead to a moderately to very unstable airmass developing across IL south of an effective boundary. A strong belt of westerly 700mb flow (30-40kt) is forecast to move across IA and into the northern half of IL by the mid-late afternoon. It is a possibility that convection is maintained from IA into IL during the day ahead of the mid-level wave moving from eastern NE to Lake MI by early evening. Models are in good agreement in the depiction and evolution of a south-southwesterly LLJ over lower MO Valley being maintained and perhaps intensifying to 40kt as it shifts east into north-central IL by early evening. However, the variability shown by different model solutions in the magnitude of destabilization is very large and is due mostly to convective possibilities modulating the position of the buoyancy gradient across the mid MS Valley. With those uncertainty concerns, it seems prudent at this time to introduce a corridor of higher probabilities given the overlap of shear (40+ kt effective shear) and a moisture-rich/buoyant boundary layer. Supercells are possible, especially early during the convective lifecycle before upscale growth into bows favors potential for severe gusts and a corridor of wind damage. ...Northern Plains region... The atmosphere may become at least marginally unstable east of a cold front across the eastern Dakotas and into eastern NE where a belt of stronger winds within base of the northern-stream shortwave trough will reside. A few storms may redevelop in this region during the afternoon, posing some risk for hail or locally strong wind gusts. ...Maine... A few storms may develop along pre-frontal trough during the afternoon where modest low-level moisture and mid-level lapse rates will support marginal instability. This region will reside within belt of stronger winds aloft within base of an amplifying upper trough supporting 35-40 kt effective shear. A few storms may produce locally strong wind gusts and small to marginally severe hail, but overall threat should remain limited by the expected weak thermodynamic environment. ...MAXIMUM RISK BY HAZARD... Tornado: 5% - Slight Wind: 30% - Enhanced Hail: 15% - Slight ..Smith.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1130 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111630Z - 121200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SOUTHERN NE...NORTHERN KS...NORTHEAST CO...AND EAST-CENTRAL MT... ...SUMMARY... Scattered to numerous severe thunderstorms are likely across portions of the northern and central Great Plains. A few tornadoes, damaging wind gusts, and large hail are possible, mainly through this evening. ...Central High Plains to Mid-MS Valley... A belt of somewhat enhanced mid-level flow extends from the southern Rockies to the Lower MO Valley around the anticyclone centered near the Red River. Within this belt, an MCV from a remnant overnight MCS is sliding eastward near the IA/MO border. Some surface-based storm development is possible near this MCV along the leading edge of the residual cold pool and perhaps in the wake of the ongoing stratiform if modest boundary-layer heating can occur. Weak mid-level lapse rates and generally modest effective shear suggests the threat for damaging winds should be localized. Farther west, a low-level upslope regime has become established north of the remnant outflow/effective front that is draped near the I-70 corridor. Recovery of low-level moisture and surface heating will yield large buoyancy north of the front with MLCAPE likely reaching 2500-3500 J/kg by late afternoon. Thunderstorm development is expected first immediately east of the Front Range in CO, while the boundary layer should remain capped through much of the afternoon in far northeast CO vicinity. Buoyancy and deep-layer vertical shear will be sufficient for a mix of supercells and multicell clusters with large hail/severe gusts possible with the initial deep convection east of the Front Range. Wind profiles will be more favorable for supercells farther east on the High Plains where low-level easterly flow and hodograph curvature will be greater, though there will be a tendency for cell interactions and upscale growth later into the evening. Any semi-discrete supercells will pose a threat for a couple of tornadoes and large hail, while the severe wind threat will increase with storm clustering into the evening. These clusters should form into a forward-propagating MCS that may develop into a longer-lived bow along the KS/NE border region tonight. Weak low-level lapse rates should be a limiting factor, but the reservoir of large buoyancy along the nose of the low-level jet lends credence to the possibility of a swath of severe wind gusts into the early overnight. ...Northern High Plains... A shortwave trough will eject from western ID to eastern MT. Easterly low-level flow will be maintained ahead of this trough and its associated cold front that will push east across MT. This flow regime will maintain a broad plume of mid 50s to mid 60s surface dew points from west to east. Rather steep mid-level lapse rates of 8-9 C/km across WY/eastern MT will contribute to a corridor of MLCAPE reaching 2000-3000 J/kg where greater surface heating is underway across southeast MT/northeast WY/western SD. Episodic thunderstorm initiation is expected during the next few hours over the high terrain of southwest MT and downstream of a leading lobe of ascent approaching the WY/MT/Dakota border region, as well as by late afternoon in an arc off the higher terrain of WY. Effective bulk shear of 35-50 kt will favor several supercells initially with large hail and a couple of tornadoes. Convection is expected to grow upscale into multiple clusters/line segments across MT into the western Dakotas with an increasing threat of severe winds. The most likely corridor for a swath of severe gusts is across parts of east-central MT along the northern periphery of the buoyancy plume where large-scale ascent should be greatest ahead of the shortwave trough. ..Grams/Dean.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1130 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111630Z - 121200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SOUTHERN NE...NORTHERN KS...NORTHEAST CO...AND EAST-CENTRAL MT... ...SUMMARY... Scattered to numerous severe thunderstorms are likely across portions of the northern and central Great Plains. A few tornadoes, damaging wind gusts, and large hail are possible, mainly through this evening. ...Central High Plains to Mid-MS Valley... A belt of somewhat enhanced mid-level flow extends from the southern Rockies to the Lower MO Valley around the anticyclone centered near the Red River. Within this belt, an MCV from a remnant overnight MCS is sliding eastward near the IA/MO border. Some surface-based storm development is possible near this MCV along the leading edge of the residual cold pool and perhaps in the wake of the ongoing stratiform if modest boundary-layer heating can occur. Weak mid-level lapse rates and generally modest effective shear suggests the threat for damaging winds should be localized. Farther west, a low-level upslope regime has become established north of the remnant outflow/effective front that is draped near the I-70 corridor. Recovery of low-level moisture and surface heating will yield large buoyancy north of the front with MLCAPE likely reaching 2500-3500 J/kg by late afternoon. Thunderstorm development is expected first immediately east of the Front Range in CO, while the boundary layer should remain capped through much of the afternoon in far northeast CO vicinity. Buoyancy and deep-layer vertical shear will be sufficient for a mix of supercells and multicell clusters with large hail/severe gusts possible with the initial deep convection east of the Front Range. Wind profiles will be more favorable for supercells farther east on the High Plains where low-level easterly flow and hodograph curvature will be greater, though there will be a tendency for cell interactions and upscale growth later into the evening. Any semi-discrete supercells will pose a threat for a couple of tornadoes and large hail, while the severe wind threat will increase with storm clustering into the evening. These clusters should form into a forward-propagating MCS that may develop into a longer-lived bow along the KS/NE border region tonight. Weak low-level lapse rates should be a limiting factor, but the reservoir of large buoyancy along the nose of the low-level jet lends credence to the possibility of a swath of severe wind gusts into the early overnight. ...Northern High Plains... A shortwave trough will eject from western ID to eastern MT. Easterly low-level flow will be maintained ahead of this trough and its associated cold front that will push east across MT. This flow regime will maintain a broad plume of mid 50s to mid 60s surface dew points from west to east. Rather steep mid-level lapse rates of 8-9 C/km across WY/eastern MT will contribute to a corridor of MLCAPE reaching 2000-3000 J/kg where greater surface heating is underway across southeast MT/northeast WY/western SD. Episodic thunderstorm initiation is expected during the next few hours over the high terrain of southwest MT and downstream of a leading lobe of ascent approaching the WY/MT/Dakota border region, as well as by late afternoon in an arc off the higher terrain of WY. Effective bulk shear of 35-50 kt will favor several supercells initially with large hail and a couple of tornadoes. Convection is expected to grow upscale into multiple clusters/line segments across MT into the western Dakotas with an increasing threat of severe winds. The most likely corridor for a swath of severe gusts is across parts of east-central MT along the northern periphery of the buoyancy plume where large-scale ascent should be greatest ahead of the shortwave trough. ..Grams/Dean.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1130 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111630Z - 121200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SOUTHERN NE...NORTHERN KS...NORTHEAST CO...AND EAST-CENTRAL MT... ...SUMMARY... Scattered to numerous severe thunderstorms are likely across portions of the northern and central Great Plains. A few tornadoes, damaging wind gusts, and large hail are possible, mainly through this evening. ...Central High Plains to Mid-MS Valley... A belt of somewhat enhanced mid-level flow extends from the southern Rockies to the Lower MO Valley around the anticyclone centered near the Red River. Within this belt, an MCV from a remnant overnight MCS is sliding eastward near the IA/MO border. Some surface-based storm development is possible near this MCV along the leading edge of the residual cold pool and perhaps in the wake of the ongoing stratiform if modest boundary-layer heating can occur. Weak mid-level lapse rates and generally modest effective shear suggests the threat for damaging winds should be localized. Farther west, a low-level upslope regime has become established north of the remnant outflow/effective front that is draped near the I-70 corridor. Recovery of low-level moisture and surface heating will yield large buoyancy north of the front with MLCAPE likely reaching 2500-3500 J/kg by late afternoon. Thunderstorm development is expected first immediately east of the Front Range in CO, while the boundary layer should remain capped through much of the afternoon in far northeast CO vicinity. Buoyancy and deep-layer vertical shear will be sufficient for a mix of supercells and multicell clusters with large hail/severe gusts possible with the initial deep convection east of the Front Range. Wind profiles will be more favorable for supercells farther east on the High Plains where low-level easterly flow and hodograph curvature will be greater, though there will be a tendency for cell interactions and upscale growth later into the evening. Any semi-discrete supercells will pose a threat for a couple of tornadoes and large hail, while the severe wind threat will increase with storm clustering into the evening. These clusters should form into a forward-propagating MCS that may develop into a longer-lived bow along the KS/NE border region tonight. Weak low-level lapse rates should be a limiting factor, but the reservoir of large buoyancy along the nose of the low-level jet lends credence to the possibility of a swath of severe wind gusts into the early overnight. ...Northern High Plains... A shortwave trough will eject from western ID to eastern MT. Easterly low-level flow will be maintained ahead of this trough and its associated cold front that will push east across MT. This flow regime will maintain a broad plume of mid 50s to mid 60s surface dew points from west to east. Rather steep mid-level lapse rates of 8-9 C/km across WY/eastern MT will contribute to a corridor of MLCAPE reaching 2000-3000 J/kg where greater surface heating is underway across southeast MT/northeast WY/western SD. Episodic thunderstorm initiation is expected during the next few hours over the high terrain of southwest MT and downstream of a leading lobe of ascent approaching the WY/MT/Dakota border region, as well as by late afternoon in an arc off the higher terrain of WY. Effective bulk shear of 35-50 kt will favor several supercells initially with large hail and a couple of tornadoes. Convection is expected to grow upscale into multiple clusters/line segments across MT into the western Dakotas with an increasing threat of severe winds. The most likely corridor for a swath of severe gusts is across parts of east-central MT along the northern periphery of the buoyancy plume where large-scale ascent should be greatest ahead of the shortwave trough. ..Grams/Dean.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1130 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111630Z - 121200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SOUTHERN NE...NORTHERN KS...NORTHEAST CO...AND EAST-CENTRAL MT... ...SUMMARY... Scattered to numerous severe thunderstorms are likely across portions of the northern and central Great Plains. A few tornadoes, damaging wind gusts, and large hail are possible, mainly through this evening. ...Central High Plains to Mid-MS Valley... A belt of somewhat enhanced mid-level flow extends from the southern Rockies to the Lower MO Valley around the anticyclone centered near the Red River. Within this belt, an MCV from a remnant overnight MCS is sliding eastward near the IA/MO border. Some surface-based storm development is possible near this MCV along the leading edge of the residual cold pool and perhaps in the wake of the ongoing stratiform if modest boundary-layer heating can occur. Weak mid-level lapse rates and generally modest effective shear suggests the threat for damaging winds should be localized. Farther west, a low-level upslope regime has become established north of the remnant outflow/effective front that is draped near the I-70 corridor. Recovery of low-level moisture and surface heating will yield large buoyancy north of the front with MLCAPE likely reaching 2500-3500 J/kg by late afternoon. Thunderstorm development is expected first immediately east of the Front Range in CO, while the boundary layer should remain capped through much of the afternoon in far northeast CO vicinity. Buoyancy and deep-layer vertical shear will be sufficient for a mix of supercells and multicell clusters with large hail/severe gusts possible with the initial deep convection east of the Front Range. Wind profiles will be more favorable for supercells farther east on the High Plains where low-level easterly flow and hodograph curvature will be greater, though there will be a tendency for cell interactions and upscale growth later into the evening. Any semi-discrete supercells will pose a threat for a couple of tornadoes and large hail, while the severe wind threat will increase with storm clustering into the evening. These clusters should form into a forward-propagating MCS that may develop into a longer-lived bow along the KS/NE border region tonight. Weak low-level lapse rates should be a limiting factor, but the reservoir of large buoyancy along the nose of the low-level jet lends credence to the possibility of a swath of severe wind gusts into the early overnight. ...Northern High Plains... A shortwave trough will eject from western ID to eastern MT. Easterly low-level flow will be maintained ahead of this trough and its associated cold front that will push east across MT. This flow regime will maintain a broad plume of mid 50s to mid 60s surface dew points from west to east. Rather steep mid-level lapse rates of 8-9 C/km across WY/eastern MT will contribute to a corridor of MLCAPE reaching 2000-3000 J/kg where greater surface heating is underway across southeast MT/northeast WY/western SD. Episodic thunderstorm initiation is expected during the next few hours over the high terrain of southwest MT and downstream of a leading lobe of ascent approaching the WY/MT/Dakota border region, as well as by late afternoon in an arc off the higher terrain of WY. Effective bulk shear of 35-50 kt will favor several supercells initially with large hail and a couple of tornadoes. Convection is expected to grow upscale into multiple clusters/line segments across MT into the western Dakotas with an increasing threat of severe winds. The most likely corridor for a swath of severe gusts is across parts of east-central MT along the northern periphery of the buoyancy plume where large-scale ascent should be greatest ahead of the shortwave trough. ..Grams/Dean.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1048 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111700Z - 121200Z The previous forecast remains on track, with no changes made (please see below for more details). Locally elevated fire weather conditions may occur across portions of southern Nevada into far west Utah, but the localized nature of the threat, along with marginally receptive fuels, precludes the addition of an elevated area in this region. A few dry lightning strikes may also accompany thunderstorms across north-central Wyoming into south-central Montana this afternoon and evening, but the expected low density of dry strikes atop marginally receptive fuels precludes an isolated dry thunderstorm delineation in this area. ..Squitieri.. 08/11/2019 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1230 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather conditions will gradually improve compared to prior days. A longwave trough initially over Oregon will continue to weaken and lift northeastward toward the northern Rockies. As this occurs, a mid-level jet streak on the periphery of the trough will migrate toward Idaho/Wyoming through peak heating hours. Meanwhile, the widespread thunderstorms observed over Washington/Oregon/northern California and vicinity will diminish significantly as the region comes under the influence of mid/upper subsidence behind the trough. ...Eastern Idaho and western/central Wyoming... Vertical mixing processes beneath the approaching mid-level jet streak will result in areas of 15-25 mph surface winds during peak heating hours - strongest over the Snake River Valley of Idaho and also into southwestern/central Wyoming. RH values will only fall to critical thresholds on a localized basis and will be lowest in central Wyoming (15-30% elsewhere). The atmospheric conditions are most consistent with elevated fire weather thresholds, and the ongoing delineation remains in place for this outlook given the existence of dry fuels across the region. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1048 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111700Z - 121200Z The previous forecast remains on track, with no changes made (please see below for more details). Locally elevated fire weather conditions may occur across portions of southern Nevada into far west Utah, but the localized nature of the threat, along with marginally receptive fuels, precludes the addition of an elevated area in this region. A few dry lightning strikes may also accompany thunderstorms across north-central Wyoming into south-central Montana this afternoon and evening, but the expected low density of dry strikes atop marginally receptive fuels precludes an isolated dry thunderstorm delineation in this area. ..Squitieri.. 08/11/2019 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1230 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather conditions will gradually improve compared to prior days. A longwave trough initially over Oregon will continue to weaken and lift northeastward toward the northern Rockies. As this occurs, a mid-level jet streak on the periphery of the trough will migrate toward Idaho/Wyoming through peak heating hours. Meanwhile, the widespread thunderstorms observed over Washington/Oregon/northern California and vicinity will diminish significantly as the region comes under the influence of mid/upper subsidence behind the trough. ...Eastern Idaho and western/central Wyoming... Vertical mixing processes beneath the approaching mid-level jet streak will result in areas of 15-25 mph surface winds during peak heating hours - strongest over the Snake River Valley of Idaho and also into southwestern/central Wyoming. RH values will only fall to critical thresholds on a localized basis and will be lowest in central Wyoming (15-30% elsewhere). The atmospheric conditions are most consistent with elevated fire weather thresholds, and the ongoing delineation remains in place for this outlook given the existence of dry fuels across the region. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1048 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111700Z - 121200Z The previous forecast remains on track, with no changes made (please see below for more details). Locally elevated fire weather conditions may occur across portions of southern Nevada into far west Utah, but the localized nature of the threat, along with marginally receptive fuels, precludes the addition of an elevated area in this region. A few dry lightning strikes may also accompany thunderstorms across north-central Wyoming into south-central Montana this afternoon and evening, but the expected low density of dry strikes atop marginally receptive fuels precludes an isolated dry thunderstorm delineation in this area. ..Squitieri.. 08/11/2019 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1230 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather conditions will gradually improve compared to prior days. A longwave trough initially over Oregon will continue to weaken and lift northeastward toward the northern Rockies. As this occurs, a mid-level jet streak on the periphery of the trough will migrate toward Idaho/Wyoming through peak heating hours. Meanwhile, the widespread thunderstorms observed over Washington/Oregon/northern California and vicinity will diminish significantly as the region comes under the influence of mid/upper subsidence behind the trough. ...Eastern Idaho and western/central Wyoming... Vertical mixing processes beneath the approaching mid-level jet streak will result in areas of 15-25 mph surface winds during peak heating hours - strongest over the Snake River Valley of Idaho and also into southwestern/central Wyoming. RH values will only fall to critical thresholds on a localized basis and will be lowest in central Wyoming (15-30% elsewhere). The atmospheric conditions are most consistent with elevated fire weather thresholds, and the ongoing delineation remains in place for this outlook given the existence of dry fuels across the region. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1048 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111700Z - 121200Z The previous forecast remains on track, with no changes made (please see below for more details). Locally elevated fire weather conditions may occur across portions of southern Nevada into far west Utah, but the localized nature of the threat, along with marginally receptive fuels, precludes the addition of an elevated area in this region. A few dry lightning strikes may also accompany thunderstorms across north-central Wyoming into south-central Montana this afternoon and evening, but the expected low density of dry strikes atop marginally receptive fuels precludes an isolated dry thunderstorm delineation in this area. ..Squitieri.. 08/11/2019 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1230 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019/ ...Synopsis... Fire weather conditions will gradually improve compared to prior days. A longwave trough initially over Oregon will continue to weaken and lift northeastward toward the northern Rockies. As this occurs, a mid-level jet streak on the periphery of the trough will migrate toward Idaho/Wyoming through peak heating hours. Meanwhile, the widespread thunderstorms observed over Washington/Oregon/northern California and vicinity will diminish significantly as the region comes under the influence of mid/upper subsidence behind the trough. ...Eastern Idaho and western/central Wyoming... Vertical mixing processes beneath the approaching mid-level jet streak will result in areas of 15-25 mph surface winds during peak heating hours - strongest over the Snake River Valley of Idaho and also into southwestern/central Wyoming. RH values will only fall to critical thresholds on a localized basis and will be lowest in central Wyoming (15-30% elsewhere). The atmospheric conditions are most consistent with elevated fire weather thresholds, and the ongoing delineation remains in place for this outlook given the existence of dry fuels across the region. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111300Z - 121200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON/EVENING FOR PARTS OF NORTHEAST CO...NORTHWEST KS...AND SOUTHWEST NE... ...SUMMARY... Areas of strong to severe storms are expected over portions of the northern through central High Plains this afternoon into tonight. Large hail and severe gusts are the primary threats. ...Central High Plains to the middle MS Valley through tonight... A belt of somewhat enhanced midlevel flow extends from the southern Rockies to the central Plains, around the northwest periphery of the midlevel ridge over the southern Plains. Within this belt, an MCS and associated MCV are moving eastward over northeast KS. The convection has been maintained overnight by warm advection on the nose of a 30-40 kt low-level jet, within a corridor of PW near 2 inches and moderate buoyancy. The low-level jet will veer to more westerly through late morning and weaken, and the MCS will likewise weaken. Some additional storm development is expected during the day along the leading edge of the residual cold pool and zone of ascent preceding the MCV, but the storm environment will be less favorable for organized severe storms with damaging winds/hail with eastward extent across MO/IL. In the wake of the morning convection, an upslope regime will establish from northwest KS into northeast CO/southwest NE, north of a lee cyclone in southeast CO. Recovery of low-level moisture and surface heating will again boost MLCAPE to 2000-3000 J/kg by mid-late afternoon. Thunderstorm development is expected first near and immediately east of the Front Range in CO, while the boundary layer should remain capped through much of the afternoon in far northeast CO and vicinity. Buoyancy and deep-layer vertical shear will be sufficient for both supercells and multicell clusters with large hail/damaging winds with the initial deep convection east of the Front Range. Wind profiles will be more favorable for supercells farther east on the High Plains where low-level easterly flow and hodograph curvature will be greater, though there will be a tendency for cell interactions and upscale growth later into the evening and farther east. Any semi-discrete supercells will pose a threat for a couple of tornadoes and large hail, while the damaging wind threat will increase with storm clustering into the evening. Storms will likely evolve into an MCS tonight while spreading eastward on the immediate cool/moist side of a quasi-stationary front expected to reside a little south of I-70. ...MT/northern High Plains this afternoon/evening... A midlevel trough near the OR/ID border will eject east-northeastward over MT this afternoon and reach the northern High Plains overnight. Easterly low-level flow will be maintained through the day across southern MT, to the north of a surface cyclone in central WY. This will help draw 58-62 F dewpoints westward across southern MT, beneath steep midlevel lapse rates, which will contribute to MLCAPE of 1500-2000 J/kg. Convective initiation is expected by early afternoon over the high terrain of southwest MT, with storms subsequently moving northeastward and developing eastward across southern MT to northeast WY by mid-late afternoon. Effective bulk shear of 35-50 kt will favor supercells initially with large hail and possibly a couple of tornadoes, and convection is expected to grow upscale into a couple of clusters/line segments across MT/western SD by this evening, with an accompanying threat for damaging winds. ..Thompson/Kerr.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111300Z - 121200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON/EVENING FOR PARTS OF NORTHEAST CO...NORTHWEST KS...AND SOUTHWEST NE... ...SUMMARY... Areas of strong to severe storms are expected over portions of the northern through central High Plains this afternoon into tonight. Large hail and severe gusts are the primary threats. ...Central High Plains to the middle MS Valley through tonight... A belt of somewhat enhanced midlevel flow extends from the southern Rockies to the central Plains, around the northwest periphery of the midlevel ridge over the southern Plains. Within this belt, an MCS and associated MCV are moving eastward over northeast KS. The convection has been maintained overnight by warm advection on the nose of a 30-40 kt low-level jet, within a corridor of PW near 2 inches and moderate buoyancy. The low-level jet will veer to more westerly through late morning and weaken, and the MCS will likewise weaken. Some additional storm development is expected during the day along the leading edge of the residual cold pool and zone of ascent preceding the MCV, but the storm environment will be less favorable for organized severe storms with damaging winds/hail with eastward extent across MO/IL. In the wake of the morning convection, an upslope regime will establish from northwest KS into northeast CO/southwest NE, north of a lee cyclone in southeast CO. Recovery of low-level moisture and surface heating will again boost MLCAPE to 2000-3000 J/kg by mid-late afternoon. Thunderstorm development is expected first near and immediately east of the Front Range in CO, while the boundary layer should remain capped through much of the afternoon in far northeast CO and vicinity. Buoyancy and deep-layer vertical shear will be sufficient for both supercells and multicell clusters with large hail/damaging winds with the initial deep convection east of the Front Range. Wind profiles will be more favorable for supercells farther east on the High Plains where low-level easterly flow and hodograph curvature will be greater, though there will be a tendency for cell interactions and upscale growth later into the evening and farther east. Any semi-discrete supercells will pose a threat for a couple of tornadoes and large hail, while the damaging wind threat will increase with storm clustering into the evening. Storms will likely evolve into an MCS tonight while spreading eastward on the immediate cool/moist side of a quasi-stationary front expected to reside a little south of I-70. ...MT/northern High Plains this afternoon/evening... A midlevel trough near the OR/ID border will eject east-northeastward over MT this afternoon and reach the northern High Plains overnight. Easterly low-level flow will be maintained through the day across southern MT, to the north of a surface cyclone in central WY. This will help draw 58-62 F dewpoints westward across southern MT, beneath steep midlevel lapse rates, which will contribute to MLCAPE of 1500-2000 J/kg. Convective initiation is expected by early afternoon over the high terrain of southwest MT, with storms subsequently moving northeastward and developing eastward across southern MT to northeast WY by mid-late afternoon. Effective bulk shear of 35-50 kt will favor supercells initially with large hail and possibly a couple of tornadoes, and convection is expected to grow upscale into a couple of clusters/line segments across MT/western SD by this evening, with an accompanying threat for damaging winds. ..Thompson/Kerr.. 08/11/2019 Read more

SPC Aug 11, 2019 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

5 years 11 months ago
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0748 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2019 Valid 111300Z - 121200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON/EVENING FOR PARTS OF NORTHEAST CO...NORTHWEST KS...AND SOUTHWEST NE... ...SUMMARY... Areas of strong to severe storms are expected over portions of the northern through central High Plains this afternoon into tonight. Large hail and severe gusts are the primary threats. ...Central High Plains to the middle MS Valley through tonight... A belt of somewhat enhanced midlevel flow extends from the southern Rockies to the central Plains, around the northwest periphery of the midlevel ridge over the southern Plains. Within this belt, an MCS and associated MCV are moving eastward over northeast KS. The convection has been maintained overnight by warm advection on the nose of a 30-40 kt low-level jet, within a corridor of PW near 2 inches and moderate buoyancy. The low-level jet will veer to more westerly through late morning and weaken, and the MCS will likewise weaken. Some additional storm development is expected during the day along the leading edge of the residual cold pool and zone of ascent preceding the MCV, but the storm environment will be less favorable for organized severe storms with damaging winds/hail with eastward extent across MO/IL. In the wake of the morning convection, an upslope regime will establish from northwest KS into northeast CO/southwest NE, north of a lee cyclone in southeast CO. Recovery of low-level moisture and surface heating will again boost MLCAPE to 2000-3000 J/kg by mid-late afternoon. Thunderstorm development is expected first near and immediately east of the Front Range in CO, while the boundary layer should remain capped through much of the afternoon in far northeast CO and vicinity. Buoyancy and deep-layer vertical shear will be sufficient for both supercells and multicell clusters with large hail/damaging winds with the initial deep convection east of the Front Range. Wind profiles will be more favorable for supercells farther east on the High Plains where low-level easterly flow and hodograph curvature will be greater, though there will be a tendency for cell interactions and upscale growth later into the evening and farther east. Any semi-discrete supercells will pose a threat for a couple of tornadoes and large hail, while the damaging wind threat will increase with storm clustering into the evening. Storms will likely evolve into an MCS tonight while spreading eastward on the immediate cool/moist side of a quasi-stationary front expected to reside a little south of I-70. ...MT/northern High Plains this afternoon/evening... A midlevel trough near the OR/ID border will eject east-northeastward over MT this afternoon and reach the northern High Plains overnight. Easterly low-level flow will be maintained through the day across southern MT, to the north of a surface cyclone in central WY. This will help draw 58-62 F dewpoints westward across southern MT, beneath steep midlevel lapse rates, which will contribute to MLCAPE of 1500-2000 J/kg. Convective initiation is expected by early afternoon over the high terrain of southwest MT, with storms subsequently moving northeastward and developing eastward across southern MT to northeast WY by mid-late afternoon. Effective bulk shear of 35-50 kt will favor supercells initially with large hail and possibly a couple of tornadoes, and convection is expected to grow upscale into a couple of clusters/line segments across MT/western SD by this evening, with an accompanying threat for damaging winds. ..Thompson/Kerr.. 08/11/2019 Read more