• DAY1SVR: Enhanced Risk TX

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Mar 15 09:10:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 151247
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 151246

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0746 AM CDT Fri Mar 15 2024

    Valid 151300Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH LATE
    EVENING ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTH CENTRAL TX...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TODAY FROM
    SOUTHEAST MS INTO CENTRAL AL...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms with very large hail and isolated
    damaging winds are expected through this evening from the Edwards
    Plateau into south central Texas. Damaging winds will be possible
    today from southeast Mississippi into central Alabama.

    ...Synopsis...
    As part of an evolving Rex block, a midlevel closed low will remain quasi-stationary over the lower CO River Valley through tonight.
    Farther east, subtle embedded speed maxima will eject northeastward
    from northern Mexico to TX, while within the northern stream a
    shortwave trough digs southeastward toward the upper Great Lakes
    overnight. Near and ahead of a surface cold front, an expansive
    band of convection has persisted through the early morning hours
    from the AR/LA border into northern AL.

    ...Edwards Plateau/south central TX through tonight...
    Isolated supercells are ongoing over the Edwards Plateau in
    association with a subtle speed max moving northeastward from
    Mexico. Steep midlevel lapse rates, boundary-layer dewpoints of
    65-72 F south of a cold front, and sufficiently long hodographs will
    favor a continuation of the isolated supercell/very large hail
    threat this morning. Additional supercell development is expected
    later today through the afternoon into south central TX, with
    isolated storm development possible into parts of southeast TX. The
    more intense storms will be capable of producing swaths of very
    large hail (2-3 inches in diameter), along with isolated damaging
    winds of 60-70 mph. A storm cluster or two could also persist
    through tonight near or a little east of the Rio Grande, with a
    continued hail/wind threat into south TX.

    ...MS/AL today...
    The MS/AL convection will persist through the day as the moist
    boundary layer warms ahead of the storms. Low-level flow will tend
    to veer to westerly and slowly weaken through the day, though 50 kt
    midlevel flow will be maintained into the Southeast. This will
    support the potential for occasional/embedded line segments capable
    of producing damaging winds, mainly across southeast MS into central
    AL where the larger buoyancy is expected.

    ..Thompson/Dean.. 03/15/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri May 3 08:14:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 031254
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 031252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Fri May 03 2024

    Valid 031300Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NEAR THE
    WEST TEXAS CAPROCK ONTO ADJOINING LOW ROLLING PLAINS...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SURROUNDING THE
    ENHANCED AREA...AND OVER PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Large hail and damaging gusts are possible over parts of the
    central/southern Great Plains from southern Nebraska to west Texas,
    along with some tornado potential over parts of west Texas.

    ...Synopsis...
    Today's transitional mid/upper-level synoptic pattern is a tale of
    two cyclones -- one astride the Upper Midwest/Canadian border, and
    another digging southeastward out of the Gulf of Alaska. The broad,
    complex leading cyclone will eject northeastward over MB and
    northwestern ON through the period. A trailing shortwave trough --
    apparent in moisture-channel imagery over parts of southern ID and
    northern NV -- will move east-northeastward to eastern SD and
    central NE by 12Z tomorrow. The strong, well-developed Pacific
    cyclone will proceed southeastward to just off the coast of OR by
    the end of the period. Southwest flow aloft will be maintained with
    weak synoptic-scale height rises over most of the central/southern
    Plains. Still, sufficient moisture, buoyancy, lift and shear are
    apparent for a couple relative maxima in severe potential as
    discussed below.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low attached to a cold front
    over south-central WY. The front should proceed southeastward
    through the day, extending from southeastern SD to western NE an
    central CO by 00Z, with the low over northeastern CO. By 12Z
    tomorrow, the front should extend from a low over IA to south-
    central KS, the northern TX Panhandle, and north-central NM. This
    front will overtake a developing dryline over the central High
    Plains from north-south, with the dryline position at 00Z over
    eastern CO, the western TX Panhandle, and Permian Basin. A weak/
    residual, nearly stationary front extended from a low near FST
    northeastward across northwest TX, eastern OK and the Ozarks, and
    should continue to lose definition amidst considerable convective
    outflow. The southern rim of that outflow was evident from
    southeast TX (between GLS-BPT) across the HOU metro then west-
    northwestward to near SJT. The western part will shift northward
    slowly through the day toward the front, which itself should drift
    northward up the Caprock.

    ...West/southwest TX...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to form
    this afternoon near the dryline and the residual outflow boundary
    over the South Plains to Low Rolling Plains/Concho Valley regions.
    Isolated to widely scattered convection possible farther south off
    the dryline past the Rio Grande, and into strongly heated/CINH-
    minimized higher terrain of the Serranias del Burro range in
    northern Coahuila. This activity should move eastward across areas
    below the Caprock and around the Big Country to Edwards Plateau,
    with potential for some of the Mexican convection to cross the Rio
    Grande this evening as well. Supercells -- with large to very large
    hail and at least isolated potential for tornadoes -- will be more
    probable in and near the 30%/"enhanced" hail area. Dryline and
    orographic activity to the south will be an early hail/wind threat.
    Some of this activity may aggregate into clusters offering mainly
    strong-severe gusts, with one or two small MCSs possible this
    evening into the early overnight hours.

    Despite multiple days of MCS and smaller-scale convective activity
    to the east and southeast, a reservoir of rich low-level moisture
    remains not far upstream across south-central TX and into the
    southern Edwards Plateau, where upper 60s to low 70s F surface
    dewpoints and PW commonly 1-1.5 inches. When advected northwestward
    amid diurnal heating and beneath steep midlevel lapse rates,
    3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE should become common. Though low-level flow
    should not be particularly strong, it will be backed, contributing
    to elongated hodographs ad around 30-40 kt effective-shear
    magnitudes. Splitting storms may be common early, offering the
    greatest hail potential (size and coverage). The damaging-wind
    threat will be maximized on the mesoscale where organized cold pools
    can develop, and should extend farther east at greater density than
    the hail potential this evening into tonight. In the absence of
    substantial large-scale support, tornado potential will be locally
    maximized with any supercells that can interact favorably with
    outflow boundaries or each other.

    ...Central Plains...
    Large hail and severe gusts are possible from mid/late afternoon
    into tonight, from thunderstorms shifting eastward across portions
    of the central Plains. Though nowhere nearly as moist as the TX
    outlook area, a diurnally destabilized plume of moist advection
    should support a secondary relative max in severe potential
    along/ahead of the cold front and dryline from parts of eastern CO
    to western/northern KS and southern NE. Convection should develop
    by mid/late afternoon in a regional convergence maximum near and
    northeast of the surface low, with MLCINH weakened by favorable
    diurnal heating. Surface dewpoints in the 40s to low 50s F should
    be common, with steep surface-500-mb lapse rates, 500-1000 J/kg
    MLCAPE and well-mixed subcloud layers. Effective-shear magnitudes
    around 40-50 kt indicate potential for organized convection -- both
    in quasi-linear form near the front and initially discrete (but
    later merging upscale) off the dryline. Though activity will
    encounter a more-stable boundary layer with time and eastward extent
    across KS/NE, at least marginal severe-gust potential may last
    overnight as far eastward as parts of the Missouri Valley region.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 05/03/2024

    $$
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