• DAY1SVR: Slight Risk MW

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Feb 27 09:11:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 271300
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 271258

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0658 AM CST Tue Feb 27 2024

    Valid 271300Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE MIDWEST VICINITY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms, associated with large hail
    (some 2 inches diameter), damaging gusts, and a few tornadoes will
    be possible from late this afternoon into the evening and overnight,
    from parts of the mid Mississippi Valley to the Ohio Valley and
    southern Great Lakes.

    ...Synopsis...
    A progressive upper trough over the western U.S. this morning is
    forecast to advance steadily eastward into/across the Plains this
    afternoon and evening, and then onward toward the Mid and Upper
    Mississippi Valley overnight.

    In tandem with the advance of this feature, a strengthening surface
    cold front currently stretching from the Upper Mississippi Valley to northeastern Colorado will continue plunging southeastward across
    the Plains through the day. A somewhat ill-defined frontal low will
    gradually consolidate into this evening over the northern Illinois
    vicinity, moving northeastward across Lower Michigan overnight. As
    it does, the trailing cold front will continue to surge
    southward/southeastward into/across the Midwest/Mid Mississippi
    Valley/Southern Plains overnight. By 12Z Wednesday, the front
    should extend from Lake Huron, south across the Middle Ohio Valley,
    and then southwestward across the Tennessee valley to the Texas
    Coastal Plain.

    ...The Midwest vicinity...
    Ahead of the advancing cold front, southerly low-level flow will
    continue to advect low-level moisture northward, beneath a low-level inversion/cap evident in morning RAOBs from the southern Plains into
    the Midwest. Evolution of this gradually moistening but capped
    low-level airmass will likely be a key determinant with respect to
    degree of convective evolution -- and the intensity thereof -- late
    this afternoon/and this evening.

    Low-level airmass concerns aside, the evolving scenario otherwise
    remains favorable for severe potential across the Midwest and
    vicinity. Steep lapse rates are evident above the low-level
    inversion, and increasingly strong deep-layer flow will accompany
    the advance of the upper system, and gradual consolidation of the
    surface frontal low. As such, from a broad dynamic and kinematic
    perspective, the pattern continues to appear favorable.

    Thermodynamically, there remain concerns that the boundary layer
    will remain somewhat cool/stable, relative to the warmer air in the
    roughly 900 to 800 mb layer. Further, heating/mixing will also
    result in mixing out, to some degree, of the shallow surface-based
    moisture returning northward on low-level southerly flow within the
    developing warm sector. With all that said, 500 to 1000 J/kg
    mixed-layer CAPE should characterize the boundary layer by late
    afternoon/early evening, as the front approaches. This will result
    in isolated to scattered storm development -- initially over the
    northern Illinois vicinity but later farther south nearer the Ohio
    Valley -- possibly in a somewhat bimodal manner with a relative
    minimum in between. Eventually, through mid to late evening,
    increasingly widespread storms should be expanding across the
    Midwest/Ohio Valley region, which will then continue eastward across
    the Upper Ohio Valley and toward the central Appalachians through
    the end of the period.

    Given the favorable kinematic environment, at least isolated
    organized/rotating storms are expected, with some upscale growth
    into bands possibly occurring overnight and spreading eastward with
    time. Along with potential for large hail -- locally near 2" in
    diameter, locally strong/damaging wind gusts are also expect with
    stronger storms/storm clusters. Additionally, a few tornadoes may
    also occur, though uncertainties regarding low-level
    moisture/instability suggest overall tornado potential should remain
    limited.

    ..Goss/Broyles.. 02/27/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Mar 26 08:46:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 261250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 261249

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0749 AM CDT Tue Mar 26 2024

    Valid 261300Z - 271200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE
    MICHIANA REGION TO EASTERN INDIANA...WESTERN OHIO AND CENTRAL LOWER
    MICHIGAN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Damaging to severe thunderstorm gusts are possible today over parts
    of the Lower Michigan/southern Great Lakes region, and the eastern
    Gulf Coastal Plain.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, mean troughing will shift eastward into the
    central CONUS, as northern- and southern-stream perturbations move
    into phase. The northern-stream system -- now manifest as a
    complex, closed cyclone over central Canada -- should remain nearly
    in place, but with intensification of its southern part into a
    distinct, closed 500-mb low over the southern MB/SK line by 18Z
    today. The low then should dig southeastward and eastward over the
    northern international border region, reaching northern MN and
    adjoining northwestern ON by 12Z tomorrow.

    To its southeast, a mid/upper-level cyclone over IA is devolving
    into an open-wave trough, and will pivot across the upper
    Mississippi Valley today. By 00Z, that trough should extend from
    western Lake Superior across WI to northwestern IN. By 12Z, a
    weakened version will have ejected to northern ON. In the southern
    stream, a series of mostly low-amplitude shortwave troughs and
    vorticity maxima will pivot from the Desert Southwest across TX to
    the lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valley regions, shifting that
    part of the larger-scale trough to Coahuila and west-central TX by
    the end of the period.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a strong/sub-989-mb low over west-
    central WI, with polar cold front across western IL, to near MEM,
    then southwestward over southwestern LA and the northwestern Gulf.
    The low should occlude and move northeastward to near MQT by 00Z,
    with polar front overtaking a leading/Pacific boundary across
    eastern Lower MI and western OH, then extending across middle TN to southeastern LA. The outflow-reinforced, Pacific front will shift
    from its present position over parts of southern AL and northwestern
    Fl Panhandle eastward across the Southeast, reaching western SC,
    central GA and the AAF area by 00Z. The combined front should reach
    central SC, southeastern GA and the FL coastal bend by 12Z.

    ...Southern Great Lakes, Lower MI...
    Surface-based convection is expected to develop this afternoon over
    western parts of the outlook area, in a zone of favorable low-level
    convergence near the arctic front, into a corridor of diurnal
    heating behind a plume of morning clouds/precip. Though buoyancy
    will be modest (MLCAPE generally under 500 J/kg), and much of the
    convection may not even deepen enough to produce lightning, fast
    cell motions and downward momentum transport from intense flow aloft
    may result in sporadic damaging to severe downdrafts. Even with
    activity being low-topped, 50-60 kt cloud-layer shear vectors
    aligned nearly parallel to the front will support an organized,
    quasi-linear convective system (QLCS). Convection should race
    northeastward across parts of IN, Lower MI and western OH while
    backbuilding somewhat, spreading a threat for strong/locally severe
    gusts over the region for a few hours. Activity should weaken this
    evening as it encounters both weaker ambient theta-e and nocturnal
    diabatic stabilization.

    ...Eastern Gulf Coastal Plain...
    A swath of precip, with scattered embedded thunderstorms, will
    continue to shift eastward across southern parts of AL/GA and the FL
    Panhandle through the period. Most of this activity should remain
    behind the outflow-reinforced front, keeping severe potential
    marginal. Though the overall threat appears to have decreased for
    this morning, isolated strong-severe gusts or a brief tornado still
    are possible with the convection as it shifts eastward across the
    outlook area through today and tonight.

    The net vector motion of the boundary remains to the right of flow
    aloft. Accordingly, anafrontal convective behavior has persisted
    for several hours as cells form either on the boundary or just to
    its east, then move to the cold side before deepening substantially. Isolated/brief strengthening of any such cells to severe limits
    remains possible, but conditional. Farther east, forecast soundings
    reasonably suggest that elevated buoyancy developing this afternoon
    and evening will transition to effectively surface-based late
    overnight (after about 08Z), and spread inland across the eastern
    Panhandle, coastal bend and southern GA region ahead of the
    boundary. A wind shift near the surface, from southeasterly off the
    relatively stable FL Peninsula to southerly and south-southwesterly
    off the Gulf, appears responsible for that, and may increase
    boundary-layer moisture/theta-e enough to yield 500-1000 J/kg
    MLCAPE. Some reintensification of the convection therefore is
    possible for a few hours before the start of the day-2 period.

    ...Central AZ...
    Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected today,
    particularly along and north of the Mogollon Rim. A few cells may
    produce strong gusts or small hail. The last in a series of
    shortwaves -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the Sierra
    and western NV -- should shift southeastward across this region
    today, contributing to cold air aloft (-25 deg C or less at 500 mb)
    and steep midlevel lapse rates. Meanwhile, diurnal heating of
    higher elevations on/above the rim will destabilize the boundary
    later and remove CINH, contributing to a field of up to about 500
    J/kg MLCAPE. While low/middle-level flow will be nearly
    unidirectional and not very strong (generally less than 25 kt from
    surface to 500 mb), with effective-shear magnitudes only around
    20-30 kt, intense upper/anvil-level flow may aid with some storm
    organization. Severe potential appears too low and conditional for
    an outlook area at this time.

    ..Edwards/Leitman.. 03/26/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Mar 31 18:25:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 311955
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 311953

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0253 PM CDT Sun Mar 31 2024

    Valid 312000Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON
    THROUGH TONIGHT FROM NORTHERN MO TO CENTRAL IL/IN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few storms may produce large hail later this afternoon into
    tonight from northern Missouri to central Illinois/Indiana.
    Isolated large hail and/or wind damage may also occur this afternoon
    from southern West Virginia into south central Virginia.

    ...20Z Update...
    No changes were made to the previous forecast.

    ..Wendt.. 03/31/2024

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1129 AM CDT Sun Mar 31 2024/

    ...MO/IL to VA through tonight...
    A largely east-west oriented baroclinic zone will drift slowly
    northward as a warm front across MO/IL, well east of lee
    cyclogenesis across eastern CO. The potential for surface-based
    storms along the warm front appears questionable, given lingering
    capping with a relatively warm elevated mixed layer atop the
    moistening boundary layer. Much of the convection through the
    period will likely be elevated atop the frontal surface and tied to
    low-level warm advection. There will be sufficient cloud-layer
    shear for supercells capable of producing large hail, but confidence
    in specific storm development this afternoon (see MD #315 for
    additional information) versus tonight is relatively low. Thus,
    will maintain the conditional outlook area with few changes.

    Farther east, some convection is ongoing in a loose cluster across
    southern WV in association with weak low-level warm advection. Some
    expansion of the weakly unstable warm sector is expected into VA
    through the afternoon, and a couple of storms could persist along
    this corridor to near the VA/NC by mid-late afternoon. There will
    be a conditional threat for a somewhat high-based supercell or two
    with an accompanying threat for isolated large hail and/or damaging
    outflow gusts.

    $$
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