• DAY48: Severe Risk Update

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Mar 26 07:59:00 2025
    ACUS48 KWNS 260906
    SWOD48
    SPC AC 260904

    Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0404 AM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025

    Valid 291200Z - 031200Z

    ...DISCUSSION...
    Medium-range models appear to be in reasonable agreement through Day
    6 (Monday March 31), with respect to synoptic-scale features.
    Divergence in solutions increases thereafter, particularly with the strength/progression of the next trough moving across the western
    CONUS and into the Plains. As such, no risk areas will be
    considered beyond Day 6/Monday.

    Day 4/Saturday, a couple of small-scale vorticity maxima/short-wave
    troughs are forecast to cross the central portion of the country,
    ahead of the stronger system advancing across the West. This
    feature is forecast to reach the High Plains overnight, as a surface
    low moves across the Kansas/Oklahoma vicinity. Models continue to
    indicate that capping will remain an issue, hindering convective
    development in the warm sector ahead of the low (across the Kansas/Oklahoma/western Missouri/western Arkansas area) at least
    until after dark/overnight. While some severe threat may evolve
    with storms which should be slightly elevated for the most part,
    risk does not appear sufficient to warrant inclusion of a 15% risk area.

    Day 5/Sunday, more substantial cyclogenesis is expected, though
    differences exist between the models in terms of timing/location of
    the developing low -- and associated cold front. Nonetheless,
    substantial warm-sector destabilization is forecast to occur from Missouri/Arkansas/eastern Texas eastward across the Mississippi
    Valley during the day, and extending eastward across the
    Midwest/Ohio and Tennessee Valleys. This will support scattered
    thunderstorm development, within an increasingly sheared
    environment. By early afternoon, severe/supercell storms are
    expected, accompanied by the risk for very large hail, damaging
    winds, and a few tornadoes. Storms should spread southeast of the
    Ohio and Mississippi Valleys overnight, accompanied by ongoing severe risk.

    Day 6/Monday, risk will likely have shifted to near and east of the Appalachians, and southward to the Gulf Coast area, as the surface
    cold front advances. Destabilization ahead of the front will
    support continuation of severe risk given favorably strong flow
    aloft, with storms reaching/moving off the Gulf and Atlantic Coasts
    late in the period.

    ..Goss.. 03/26/2025

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)