SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1151 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251700Z - 261200Z ...Southwest... Forecast remains on track as a mid-level trough moves through the region, promoting surface winds of around 15 mph amid a very dry conditions both in relative humidity (5-15 percent today) terms and fuel dryness. Elevated highlights continue across southern Arizona into southern/central New Mexico and far west Texas. ...Pacific Northwest... Increasing shear/instability and mid-level moisture ahead of an upper-level trough entering the Pacific Northwest will promote isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms along and east of the Cascades late this afternoon into the overnight hours. A dry sub-cloud layer in addition to a mid-level jet supporting fast storm motions will limit rainfall to less than one tenth of an inch in much of the Columbia Basin. However, fuels are not yet receptive to widespread ignitions with ongoing green up and ERCs generally in the 60-70th percentile range. ..Williams.. 05/25/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1212 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025/ ...Synopsis... A mid-level trough across the Southwest will continue to promote southwesterly breezes across southern Arizona into southern/central New Mexico this afternoon. Relative humidity reductions to around 10-15 percent will overlap sustained winds around 15 mph. An Elevated area was maintained with this outlook across this region where the best overlap of fuels and windy/dry conditions are expected. Some near Critical to Critical conditions will be possible in the lee of the higher terrain in favored downslope regions. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1151 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251700Z - 261200Z ...Southwest... Forecast remains on track as a mid-level trough moves through the region, promoting surface winds of around 15 mph amid a very dry conditions both in relative humidity (5-15 percent today) terms and fuel dryness. Elevated highlights continue across southern Arizona into southern/central New Mexico and far west Texas. ...Pacific Northwest... Increasing shear/instability and mid-level moisture ahead of an upper-level trough entering the Pacific Northwest will promote isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms along and east of the Cascades late this afternoon into the overnight hours. A dry sub-cloud layer in addition to a mid-level jet supporting fast storm motions will limit rainfall to less than one tenth of an inch in much of the Columbia Basin. However, fuels are not yet receptive to widespread ignitions with ongoing green up and ERCs generally in the 60-70th percentile range. ..Williams.. 05/25/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1212 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025/ ...Synopsis... A mid-level trough across the Southwest will continue to promote southwesterly breezes across southern Arizona into southern/central New Mexico this afternoon. Relative humidity reductions to around 10-15 percent will overlap sustained winds around 15 mph. An Elevated area was maintained with this outlook across this region where the best overlap of fuels and windy/dry conditions are expected. Some near Critical to Critical conditions will be possible in the lee of the higher terrain in favored downslope regions. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1151 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251700Z - 261200Z ...Southwest... Forecast remains on track as a mid-level trough moves through the region, promoting surface winds of around 15 mph amid a very dry conditions both in relative humidity (5-15 percent today) terms and fuel dryness. Elevated highlights continue across southern Arizona into southern/central New Mexico and far west Texas. ...Pacific Northwest... Increasing shear/instability and mid-level moisture ahead of an upper-level trough entering the Pacific Northwest will promote isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms along and east of the Cascades late this afternoon into the overnight hours. A dry sub-cloud layer in addition to a mid-level jet supporting fast storm motions will limit rainfall to less than one tenth of an inch in much of the Columbia Basin. However, fuels are not yet receptive to widespread ignitions with ongoing green up and ERCs generally in the 60-70th percentile range. ..Williams.. 05/25/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1212 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025/ ...Synopsis... A mid-level trough across the Southwest will continue to promote southwesterly breezes across southern Arizona into southern/central New Mexico this afternoon. Relative humidity reductions to around 10-15 percent will overlap sustained winds around 15 mph. An Elevated area was maintained with this outlook across this region where the best overlap of fuels and windy/dry conditions are expected. Some near Critical to Critical conditions will be possible in the lee of the higher terrain in favored downslope regions. ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more

SPC May 25, 2025 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

2 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1143 AM CDT Sun May 25 2025 Valid 251630Z - 261200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND MID-SOUTH/TENNESSEE VALLEY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms, including the risk for very large hail, swaths of severe winds with isolated 75+ mph gusts, and a few tornadoes, are expected across parts of the southern Plains this afternoon and evening, including northwest Texas and southern/central Oklahoma. Scattered severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds will also be a concern across the Mid-South, Tennessee Valley, and other parts of the Southeast. ...Arkansas/Mid-South to Tennessee Valley/Southeast... A rather complex scenario exists regionally owing to yesterday's MCS and its impacts in addition to renewed MCS development overnight across the Ozarks. That said, air mass recovery and boundary layer destabilization is well underway along the west/northwest-east/southeast-oriented outflow-reinforced baroclinic zone across the region. Multi-MCV-related enhancement to the flow field is also evident across the Ozarks, and this should translate downstream (east-southeasterly) toward the Mid-South and eventually Tennessee Valley. This scenario appears favorable for one or more well-organized east/southeastward-moving clusters/bowing line segments to evolve later this afternoon into evening. Damaging winds can be expected, with occasional large hail as well. Portions of the region have been upgraded to an Enhanced Risk for this potential. ...Southern High Plains to Oklahoma/North Texas/ArkLaTex... A low-amplitude mid-level shortwave trough over northern Mexico this morning will move northeastward across the southern High Plains by this afternoon/evening. Ahead of this feature, ample daytime heating will likely aid in the development of moderate to strong instability by mid afternoon amid a moist low-level airmass. A surface front will extend from eastern New Mexico across northwest Texas and the southern Texas Panhandle into parts of western/central Oklahoma, with a dryline extending southward from the front across west Texas. Both of these surface boundaries will likely prove instrumental, in combination with modest large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave trough, to focus intense thunderstorm development later today. While mid/upper-level winds are not expected to be overly strong, veering and gradual strengthening with height should support around 30-45 kt of deep-layer shear. Stronger shear is forecast near the front. Convective temperatures will likely be reached by 20-22Z, and explosive thunderstorm development is expected in this time frame across west/northwest Texas along the front and dryline. A mix of supercells and clusters will likely form and spread east-northeastward through the late afternoon and early evening. Very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter) will be possible with any initial supercells given favorably steep mid-level lapse rates and relatively long/straight hodographs at mid/upper levels. By early evening, consolidation into a bowing complex appears likely across northwest Texas and southern Oklahoma. An increasing threat for scattered to numerous severe winds will exist with this cluster as it develops generally east-southeastward ward into western north Texas and southern Oklahoma through the evening. Given steepened low-level lapse rates and the presence of strong to locally extreme instability, some wind gusts of 75+ mph appear possible with the bowing cluster. The potential for supercells to develop separately farther east along the front in western/central Oklahoma still remains unclear. If thunderstorms can form here, they would likely become severe quickly, and pose a threat for very large hail. Some risk for a few tornadoes may also exist this evening, either embedded with the bow or with semi-discrete supercells, as a southerly low-level jet and related 0-1 km SRH gradually strengthens. A continued threat for severe/damaging winds may continue into the overnight hours across north Texas. ...Eastern New Mexico... A somewhat separate area of at least isolated supercell potential is evident across northeast to east-central New Mexico this afternoon in a modest low-level upslope flow regime along and north of the front. Large hail should be the main threat with this activity. The eastward extent of the severe threat will likely be confined by weaker instability into the Oklahoma Panhandle and northern Texas Panhandle. ...Colorado Front Range... As clouds abate/thin, a relatively isolated/focused severe threat will again exist near the foothills/urban corridor of east-central Colorado later this afternoon. ...Florida... Compared to the prior couple of days, mid/upper-level winds appear somewhat weaker across the Florida Peninsula today, while mid-level temperatures are also slightly warmer per regionally observed 12Z soundings. Even so, another day of scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated over much of the Florida Peninsula, with various sea breezes acting as foci for initiation. Moderate instability coupled with modest deep-layer shear may still support an isolated threat for marginally severe hail and gusty winds with the stronger cores that can develop this afternoon. ..Guyer/Lyons.. 05/25/2025 Read more