• DAY1SVR: Day 1 Convective

    From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Fri Mar 5 18:48:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 051948
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 051946

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0146 PM CST Fri Mar 05 2021

    Valid 052000Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EAST
    CENTRAL INTO SOUTHEAST TEXAS AND FAR SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few thunderstorms capable of producing hail and gusty winds may
    develop this afternoon over portions of east-central through
    southeast Texas and far southwest Louisiana.

    ...Discussion...
    No appreciable change was made to the previous convective outlook.

    ..Smith.. 03/05/2021

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1030 AM CST Fri Mar 05 2021/

    ...East central through southeast Texas...

    As of late morning a cold front stretches from a surface low near
    Gainesville, south southwestward through east central and south TX.
    A warm front extends from the northwestern Gulf into southeast and
    south central TX. Partially modified Gulf air with upper 50s to near
    60 F dewpoints reside in the warm sector. Visible imagery still
    indicates widespread low and mid-level clouds in pre-frontal zone,
    but some of these clouds should mix out from the south and west
    resulting in a narrow corridor of modest surface heating which
    should boost MLCAPE to near 500 J/kg from east central into
    southeast TX and possibly far southwest LA. Deeper forcing attending
    a vorticity maximum embedded within a cutoff upper low circulation
    will move from northwest TX into east central and southeast TX this
    afternoon. This should foster thunderstorm development along and
    east of the cold front later today. Though winds increase
    substantially above 5 km, the anticipated relatively shallow
    convective layer should limit effective bulk shear to between 30 and
    40 kt. A few cells might develop weak mid-level updraft rotation and
    when combined with 7 C/km mid-level lapse rates and modest
    instability, could pose some risk for hail. Some clustering of
    storms is possible and a few locally strong wind gusts might occur
    before activity moves offshore this evening. Overall threat should
    remain limited by the marginal thermodynamic environment.

    $$
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  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sat Mar 6 17:49:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 062000
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 061959

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0159 PM CST Sat Mar 06 2021

    Valid 062000Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR THE EAST
    COAST OF SOUTH FLORIDA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few strong to locally severe thunderstorms are possible through
    the late afternoon near the east coast of south Florida.

    ...Discussion...
    Other than the removal of low-severe probabilities near the Space
    Coast in FL, the forecast remains largely unchanged and on track.
    See the previous convective outlook for details.

    ..Smith.. 03/06/2021

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1030 AM CST Sat Mar 06 2021/

    ...Central/southern Florida Peninsula...
    Thunderstorms have developed and increased across the north-central
    Florida Peninsula. In spite of weak mid-level lapse rates,
    relatively long hodographs accentuated by strong mid-level
    westerlies atop east-northeasterly boundary layer winds, coincident
    with modest but sufficient buoyancy, could support a few additional
    strong to locally severe storms this afternoon across the
    east-central Florida Peninsula.

    Farther south in a somewhat more moisture-rich air mass, additional thunderstorm development is expected later this afternoon,
    particularly across the near-coastal southeast Peninsula. This will
    be coincident with relatively long hodographs (35-45 kt effective
    shear) and upwards of 500-800 J/kg MLCAPE, which will be potentially
    supportive of a few strong to locally severe storms.

    $$
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  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sun Mar 14 19:15:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 141952
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 141951

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0251 PM CDT Sun Mar 14 2021

    Valid 142000Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH THIS
    EVENING FROM NORTHEAST CO INTO NORTHWEST KS AND SOUTHWEST NE...AND
    LATER TONIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF THE LOWER MS VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across a part of
    northeast Colorado, northwest Kansas and southwest Nebraska through
    early evening, and across a portion of the Lower Mississippi Valley
    tonight.

    ...20z Update - CO/KS/NE...

    The Marginal risk area has been shifted west/southwest this
    afternoon. This is based on current surface observations and visible
    satellite imagery. A surface low is located north of LAA and
    southwest of ITR with an occluded front extending from the low
    north/northeast a near the KS/NE border. Strong surface heating in
    the vicinity of this boundary has resulted in weak destabilization
    this afternoon and isolated thunderstorms have developed along the
    boundary and near the surface low. Marginal hail will be possible
    with this activity given steep midlevel lapse rates and moderate
    shear. Low level shear will remain enhanced near the boundary, and a
    funnel cloud has already been reported with a cell in Hitchcock
    County NE. Brief funnels or even a weak tornado will remain possible
    the next few hours. For more details, reference MCD 177.

    Otherwise, the remainder of the outlook remains on track and no
    other changes were made except to adjust 10% general thunder in line
    with current observations.

    ..Leitman.. 03/14/2021

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1122 AM CDT Sun Mar 14 2021/

    ...Lower MS Valley...
    A deep, occluded low over eastern CO will slowly fill as it drifts
    east into western KS through tonight. An embedded mid-upper jet
    streak will rotate around the southeastern periphery of the low,
    in conjunction with a Pacific cold front moving from eastern OK/TX
    into AR/LA by this evening. Only meager convection has been noted
    this morning in the band of ascent along and behind the front. This
    may continue through much of the period as a result of paltry
    warm-sector buoyancy, as well as a capping inversion around 700 mb
    in 12Z soundings from CRP-SHV-LZK. Still, conditional potential for
    a tornado or isolated strong wind gust exists tonight as mid 60s
    surface dew points spread toward the Ark-La-Miss and mid-level temps
    slightly cool. This may result in a small corridor of spatiotemporal
    overlap with 250-500 J/kg MLCAPE and a moderately enlarged low-level
    hodograph.

    ...Northwest/north-central KS to southwest NE...
    A narrow corridor of low-topped surface-based convection might
    develop during the late afternoon to early evening along a
    convergent occluded front where a plume of 40s surface dew points
    can be maintained. Here, surface heating beneath rather cold
    mid-level temperatures should result in steep low to mid-level lapse
    rates. Low probabilities are maintained for marginally severe hail
    along with a brief tornado from a cell or two.

    $$
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  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Mon Mar 15 17:02:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 151950
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 151949

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0249 PM CDT Mon Mar 15 2021

    Valid 152000Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER
    MO VALLEY AND MS/AL...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe storms are possible across parts of Alabama and
    Mississippi through tonight. Isolated severe storms are also
    possible from east-central Kansas through central Missouri through
    early evening.

    ...20z Update...

    The ongoing outlook remains on track and no changes are needed with
    this update. Reference MCD 180 for short-term severe threat across
    MS/AL, and MCD 181 for the short-term severe threat across KS/MO.

    ..Leitman.. 03/15/2021

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1130 AM CDT Mon Mar 15 2021/

    ...MS/AL...
    A low-confidence severe threat remains apparent across the region
    through tonight. A band of predominantly low-topped showers is
    ongoing from northwest AL to southwest MS along a weakening surface
    cold front, to the south of an embedded shortwave impulse advancing
    north across the Mid-MS Valley. While further frontolysis is
    expected, some of this convective activity should persist through
    the afternoon and become more west/east-oriented across
    northern/central AL and central MS. Broken cloudiness out ahead of
    this activity will support further boundary-layer heating amid mid
    60s dew points from the western half of AL to the southwest.
    Low-level wind profiles should slowly weaken and become more veered
    with western extent. The conditional threat for a supercell or two
    during the late afternoon to early evening may be focused across the west-central AL vicinity where all hazards would be possible. Still,
    given the poor forcing for large-scale ascent, probabilities remain
    too low to warrant an upgrade this outlook. Otherwise, additional
    convection may form overnight within a weak low-level warm advection
    regime to the north of the central Gulf Coast. Rich low-level
    moisture and continued strong deep-layer shear may support a
    low-probability severe threat.

    ...East-central KS to central MO...
    The deep closed low over central KS will evolve into an open wave
    and eject east-northeast across the Midwest through tonight, in
    response to upstream height falls with a strong shortwave trough
    digging across CA. Though the richer low-level moisture is confined
    to the Lower MS Valley, lingering boundary-layer dewpoints in the
    mid to upper 40s are prevalent within the northern extent of robust
    insolation across southeast KS and southwest MO. Beneath cold
    mid-level temperatures, the steep-lapse-rate environment will
    support meager MLCAPE approaching 500 J/kg in a corridor east of the
    surface cyclone and along a stalled front in central MO.

    Within the left-exit region of a strengthening mid-level jet,
    isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid
    afternoon in the zone of ascent near/east of the surface low towards
    the KS/MO border, with successive development of storms eastward
    into central MO through early evening. Wind profiles, especially
    with eastern extent in central MO, should support a couple
    low-topped supercells with effective bulk shear of at least 30 kt
    and some hodograph curvature in the low levels. Marginally severe
    hail, isolated damaging gusts, and a tornado will be possible with
    storms along the boundary this afternoon/evening. The bulk of
    convection should generally propagate further across the cool side
    of the front, where low-level stratus will likely remain pervasive,
    and become elevated before weakening later this evening.

    $$
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  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Thu Mar 18 18:12:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 182127
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 182126

    Day 1 Convective Outlook AMEND 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0426 PM CDT Thu Mar 18 2021

    Valid 182000Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHERN
    SOUTH CAROLINA THROUGH CENTRAL AND EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA AND
    SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND A PORTION OF NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    AMENDED FOR TO EXPAND ENHANCED RISK FARTHER NORTH INTO SOUTHEAST
    VIRGINIA FOR TORNADO AND DAMAGING WIND THREAT

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe storms remain possible this afternoon and evening
    mainly from a portion of South Carolina through central and eastern
    North Carolina and southeast Virginia. Other strong to severe storms
    are possible this afternoon over the southern Appalachian region as
    well as northern Florida.

    ...South Carolina through central and eastern North Carolina and
    southeast Virginia...

    Cluster of storms over western SC and southwestern NC is expected to
    continue developing northeast through central and eventually eastern
    NC this afternoon and evening. Vertical wind profiles with 50+ kt
    effective bulk shear and sizeable 0-2 km hodographs will remain
    supportive of organized severe storms including supercells. However,
    trend has been for a pocket of dry air in the low levels to advect
    northward through northern SC into southeastern NC, and this has at
    least temporarily reduced boundary layer instability. Nevertheless,
    some low-level theta-e advection will resume in wake of the dry
    pocket contributing to 1000-1500 J/kg MLCAPE. The best chance for
    severe storms are expected as activity develops northeast along
    instability gradient through a portion of central and eastern NC and
    possibly southeast VA this afternoon and evening with damaging wind,
    large hail and a few tornadoes possible.

    ...Southern Appalachian region...

    Storms are developing within corridor of ascent just east of the
    progressive shortwave trough. Cold temperatures aloft, steep lapse
    rates and diabatic heating will continue to foster widely scattered
    storm development this afternoon. Isolated large hail and a few
    locally strong wind gusts are the main threats. Activity should
    diminish toward late afternoon or early evening.

    ..Dial.. 03/18/2021

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1133 AM CDT Thu Mar 18 2021/

    ...Southeast...
    Overall severe threat will likely focus in two corridors which are
    encompassed by the cat 3/ENH risk for tornado and wind. Initial
    broken band of non-severe convection is ongoing from south-central
    GA through the eastern FL Panhandle. This activity has struggled to
    intensify despite strong low to deep-layer shear as it impinges on a
    relative minimum in buoyancy sampled by the 12Z JAX sounding and
    evident in mesoanalysis time-series. However, destabilization is
    occurring downstream from north FL to the coastal Carolinas and
    redevelopment of severe storms is anticipated at some point this
    afternoon. The eastward translation of a 50-55 kt LLJ will support
    an enlarged hodograph favorable for a few supercells. Modest
    mid-level lapse rates will remain a limiting factor, though MLCAPE
    will be large enough given to support a few tornadoes and scattered
    damaging winds, with a strong tornado or two still possible.

    The separate area of potential severe should be coincident with the
    track of a mesolow from the northeast GA/northwest SC border across
    the Piedmont towards south-central VA. Here, MLCAPE will likely
    remain weak but cloud breaks just ahead of the low near the
    mid-level dry slot may prove sufficient for an intensifying area of
    convection. Where sufficient buoyancy overlaps the more
    favorable/curved hodographs east of the mountains, a couple
    supercells capable of a strong tornado, damaging winds, and isolated
    large hail will all be possible this afternoon/evening.

    ...OH Valley...
    East and southeast of the weakening occluded cyclone, pockets of
    stronger boundary-layer heating are underway on the nose of the
    mid-level dry slot. In conjunction with cool mid-level temperatures,
    500-1000 J/kg of MLCAPE will be sufficient for a few strong-severe
    storms later this afternoon. This area will be on the northwest edge
    of the stronger flow/shear, where a mix of multicell clusters and a
    few low-end supercells are probable. A tornado or two, large hail,
    and damaging winds will be possible.

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.12-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Thu Mar 25 13:05:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 251246
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 251245

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0745 AM CDT Thu Mar 25 2021

    Valid 251300Z - 261200Z

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WITH A TORNADO
    OUTBREAK EXPECTED ACROSS PARTS OF NORTHERN MISSISSIPPI...NORTHERN
    ALABAMA...AND SOUTHERN TENNESSEE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A tornado outbreak -- including the threat of a few long-tracked,
    violent tornadoes -- is expected today into early this evening over
    the Southeast, especially parts of Mississippi, Alabama and
    Tennessee. Tornadoes, large to very large hail, and damaging winds
    to hurricane force also are possible over a broad area from the
    central Gulf Coast to the Ohio Valley and southern Appalachians.

    --- Technical Discussion ---

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a longwave trough will be maintained over the
    western CONUS, as a strong shortwave trough and related speed max
    dig south-southeastward across the interior Northwest, and a
    formerly basal trough ejects northeastward. The latter trough is
    evident in moisture-channel imagery over the southern High Plains to
    the Big Bend region of TX, and will move to MO/AR by 00Z. By 12Z,
    this feature should reach Lake Erie and OH. This trough will pack
    the height gradient to its southeast enough to yield 110-130-kt
    250-mb flow and 80-100-kt 500-mb winds over much of the Mid-South,
    and Tennessee/Ohio Valleys today and this evening.

    The associated surface low-pressure area was analyzed at 11Z across
    western AR to northwestern LA, still poorly consolidated around
    areas of rain-cooled air. A cold front was drawn from northwestern
    LA across southeast TX the middle TX Coast and deep south TX. A
    "synoptic" warm front arched from the low-pressure
  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sat Mar 27 09:05:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 270553
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 270551

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1251 AM CDT Sat Mar 27 2021

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM SOUTHERN
    ARKANSAS TO MIDDLE TENNESSEE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms are expected across the lower Mississippi through
    Tennessee Valley regions. All hazards are possible including very
    large hail, damaging wind, and tornadoes. Potential for a strong
    tornado exists from eastern Arkansas into western Tennessee. Other
    severe storms are possible across a portion of the Midwest with
    isolated damaging wind and large hail the main threats.

    ...Lower MS Valley/TN Valley...

    Large-scale heights will not change appreciably until late in the
    day1 period across the lower MS and TN Valley region. Water-vapor
    imagery depicts an upper low digging southeast across AZ early this
    morning. This feature is forecast to translate across far West TX
    during the evening before deamplifying as it ejects into
    north-central TX late. Prior to the influence of this feature, one
    LLJ branch will extend across the TX Coast-LA-middle TN. Low-level
    warm advection in association with this feature is expected to
    encourage a considerable amount of convection that should be ongoing
    at the start of the period. Several members of the HREF suggest a
    possible MCS may evolve over middle TN, then propagate east during
    the day. Areal extent of this activity may greatly influence
    convective development later in the day as rain-cooled boundary
    layer may establish an outflow boundary that could drape west across
    TN.

    Strongest low-level heating will be noted south of this rain-cooled
    air mass, and buoyancy should be greatest from northeast TX into
    northern MS where SBCAPE will exceed 2000-2500 J/kg. With
    temperatures warming into the mid-upper 70s, it appears surface
    parcels will reach their convective temperatures by 20z and
    scattered discrete storms will likely develop from the Arklatex,
    northeast toward the early-day outflow boundary over western TN.
    This corridor will likely experience significant convective coverage
    by the end of the period.

    Forecast wind profiles favor supercells and lapse rates should be
    sufficiently steep for very large hail with storms across the
    western half of the ENH Risk. Tornadoes are also possible, a few
    potentially strong, with discrete storms, though QLCS-type spin ups
    are also possible as a squall line matures later in the evening. As
    the squall line matures, the threat for strong, damaging winds will
    become more likely as deep-layer westerly flow increases across the
    mid-South Region.

    Farther north, strong mid-level height falls will overspread the
    upper Midwest region in advance of a northern branch short-wave
    trough that will dig into WI/IA/MO by 28/12z. It's not entirely
    clear how much moisture/instability will be drawn north ahead of the
    surface low into eastern MO/IL prior to convective initiation. 00z
    NAM suggests mid 50s surface dew points will advance across this
    region which will help destabilization; however, nearest mid 50s
    surface dew points are roughly 300 mi south across southeast
    AR/northern MS. If early-day convection disrupts this moisture flow,
    then somewhat less buoyancy may be available for convection
    extending ahead of the low into central IL. At this time wind/hail
    appear to be the primary risks with robust storms along the front.

    ..Darrow/Dean.. 03/27/2021

    $$
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  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sat Mar 27 18:06:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 271957
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 271955

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0255 PM CDT Sat Mar 27 2021

    Valid 272000Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON
    INTO TONIGHT FROM PARTS OF THE ARK-LA-TEX ACROSS THE MID SOUTH AND
    TN VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms are likely this afternoon into tonight from the
    Ark-La-Tex east-northeastward across parts of the Mid South and
    Tennessee Valley. All hazards are possible including very large
    hail, significant damaging winds, and a couple of strong tornadoes.

    Only minor changes have been made to adjust for the ongoing cluster
    of storms moving east across North Carolina. Elsewhere, the forecast
    remains on track. See the previous discussion for more details.

    ..Wendt.. 03/27/2021

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1124 AM CDT Sat Mar 27 2021/

    ...Mid South/TN Valley region through tonight...
    Elevated convection with a marginal hail threat that formed
    overnight in a zone of warm advection, along and north of the
    surface warm front from the Mid South into middle/eastern TN,
    persists as of late morning. The convection is also associated with
    a subtle mid-upper speed max moving east-northeastward over the Mid
    South. Farther west, additional storm development is expected by
    early-mid afternoon along the rain-reinforced front close to the
    MS/AL/TN border region. This afternoon convection will likely be
    rooted at the surface as the low levels continue to warm/moisten
    from the south, with a few supercells possible with MLCAPE near 2000
    J/kg, effective bulk shear near 50 kt, and effective SRH around 150
    m2/s2.

    Farther west into northeast TX and southern/eastern AR,
    surface-based supercell development is expected by mid afternoon
    along the moisture gradient/warm front, as the low levels continue
    to destabilize and the cap weakens. The forcing for ascent will be
    rather subtle, so the primary storm mode should be a mix of discrete
    supercells and clusters moving east-northeastward along the buoyancy gradient/front this afternoon into early tonight. Isolated very
    large hail, damaging winds, and a couple of tornadoes will be the
    main concerns this afternoon. Some increase in low-level shear is
    expected this evening, which will support an increase in the tornado
    threat, with an isolated strong tornado or two possible. Otherwise,
    storms overnight should consolidate into more of a solid band as the
    synoptic cold front overtakes the convection from the northwest, in
    response to phasing of the northern and southern streams, with
    cyclogenesis from IL to Lower MI.

    ...Eastern OK/northwestern AR to IL this afternoon/evening...
    The primary surface cyclone is expected to begin deepening this
    evening across IL, before moving to Lower MI overnight. In the wake
    of the low, a cold front will begin to accelerate southeastward
    later this evening into tonight. The primary uncertainties along
    this corridor are the degree of low-level
    moistening/destabilization, and the magnitude of the low-level
    shear. The main low-level mass response/low-level jet will likely
    be directed into the rather persistent zone of convection farther to
    the southeast along the effective warm front from northeast TX to
    western TN. These factors suggest substantial limitations to the
    wind/hail threat along the cold front farther to the northwest, with
    the most questionable area centered on northwestern AR.

    ...Carolinas this afternoon/evening...
    The cluster of storms in eastern TN has been elevated through the
    morning, but some northward expansion of the surface warm sector is
    expected through this afternoon from SC into NC. Given sufficient
    deep-layer vertical shear, an organized cluster with some threat for
    damaging winds/large hail may persist into the afternoon along the
    warm front from the Piedmont eastward across NC and adjacent
    portions of SC.

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.12-Linux
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  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sun Mar 28 07:39:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 280556
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 280555

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1255 AM CDT Sun Mar 28 2021

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    SOUTHEASTERN VIRGINIA AND ADJACENT FAR NORTHEAST NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe storms are likely along an advancing cold front
    from the Mid-Atlantic into the Carolinas. The highest confidence in
    damaging winds is in southeastern Virginia and vicinity. Farther
    south and west, a few strong to severe storms are possible from
    Mississippi into Georgia.

    ...Synopsis...
    Shortwave trough currently extending from the Upper Midwest back
    southwestward through the central Plains will continue eastward
    throughout the day, moving through the Great Lakes, OH Valley,
    Mid-Atlantic and much of the Northeast. As it does, the system is
    expected to mature significantly, with both a deep surface low over
    southern Quebec and strong mid-level flow from the TN Valley into
    the Mid-Atlantic predicated by this afternoon.

    A cold front will also accompany this system. Expectation is for
    this front to extend from western NY southwestward along the central
    and southern Appalachians by around 18Z this afternoon. The front is
    forecast to be off the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic coasts by 00Z
    Monday. A broad area of at severe potential will exist of this front
    from the northern Mid-Atlantic into the Southeast.

    ...Mid-Atlantic/Carolinas...
    Ongoing convective system over the TN and Lower MS Valleys is
    expected to continue eastward/northeastward this morning and into
    this afternoon. Most of the 00Z guidance is too slow with the
    forward progression of the system, particularly the portion entering
    middle TN, where more forward propagation has been noted. While some
    slowing of convective line is likely has instability wanes with
    eastern extent, overall expectation is for this area of convection
    to reach central VA/NC this morning.

    As such, severe potential across the region will be tied to the
    potential for re-development along the front. The bulk of the
    guidance suggests destabilization will occur ahead of the front, and
    that a strongly forced line will develop along the front. Intense
    low to mid-level flow will favorable strong, convectively enhanced
    wind gusts within this line. A few embedded tornadoes are possible
    as well.

    Given this severe potential, 30% wind/5% probabilities will be
    maintained with this outlook. However, uncertainty regarding the
    stability of the air mass preceding the front merits close
    observation of overnight trends and guidance, with potential
    downgrades needed in subsequent outlooks.

    ...Southeast...
    Modest buoyancy will continue to promote thunderstorm development
    along the front as it moves across the region this morning and into
    this afternoon. Low-level winds will likely veer before frontal
    passage and stronger flow aloft will be increasingly displaced
    north. However, the environment will remain conducive to
    occasionally organized storms capable of strong downbursts. A brief
    tornado or two could also occur within the line, particularly over
    northern GA where low-level flow is expected to remain strong as the
    line moves through.

    ..Mosier/Karstens.. 03/28/2021

    $$
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  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Tue Mar 30 16:38:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 301559
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 301557

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1057 AM CDT Tue Mar 30 2021

    Valid 301630Z - 311200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON
    AND TONIGHT FROM THE ARKLATEX REGION INTO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY....

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are expected to develop across the ArkLaTex region and
    lower Mississippi through Tennessee Valleys, mainly late this
    afternoon and tonight, with isolated strong/severe thunderstorms
    possible.

    ...Arklatex into the Tennessee Valley...
    Morning water vapor loop shows a broad upper trough across the
    northern Plains and Rockies, with moderately strong
    west-southwesterly flow aloft extending from TX into the southeast
    states. A cold front is pushing southeastward across OK/MO and will
    move into the Arklatex and TN Valleys tonight. Southerly low-level
    winds ahead of the front will help to moisten/destabilize the
    region, with dewpoints in the 60s and MUCAPE values of 500-1000 J/kg
    this evening and tonight. This will lead to a rather broad area of
    scattered thunderstorm potential. 12z CAM solutions generally agree
    in isolated coverage of storms, and suggest that weak large-scale
    forcing will limit the overall updraft/downdraft intensities.
    However, forecast soundings show profiles generally favorable for
    the risk of hail and gusty winds in the stronger cells that can
    develop. Therefore, will maintain the broad MRGL risk category at
    this time.

    ..Hart/Lyons.. 03/30/2021

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sun Apr 11 09:34:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 111259
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 111258

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0758 AM CDT Sun Apr 11 2021

    Valid 111300Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TODAY OVER
    CENTRAL FLORIDA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The main severe-thunderstorm threat today will be over portions of
    the Florida Peninsula, with damaging wind and occasional hail
    possible. A tornado cannot be ruled out as well.

    ...Synopsis...
    The mid/upper level pattern will continue to feature split flow
    across central North America, but with some shift in the location
    and amplitude of the splitting. That mainly will be related to two
    features:
    1. A cyclone now centered near the IL/IN state line, and forecast
    to gradually shrink/fill as its circulation center crosses IN and
    northern OH through the period.
    2. An initially open-wave, neutral-tilt trough over SK, eastern MT
    and northern WY, which will evolve into a closed cyclone as it
    crosses the northern Great Plains today. By 12Z tomorrow, the
    500-mb low should be near the SD/ND/MN border confluence, along a
    trough oriented west-northwest to east-southeast.

    In the southern peripheral cyclonic flow of the leading upper low,
    two small but important shortwave troughs are apparent: the first a convectively enhanced vorticity lobe over the northeastern Gulf
    south of the FL Panhandle, and the second upstream across southeast
    TX and LA. These perturbations will proceed eastward across
    central/northern FL and the central northeast Gulf Coast regions
    through 00Z, with the trailing one crossing northern/central FL
    tonight.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a primary occluded low over
    northern IL, with another near a triple point over northern Lower
    MI. A cold front extended from there across eastern OH, to the TRI
    and MOB areas, and across the northwestern Gulf. The surface low
    (or lows, in a broad cyclone with more than one center possible)
    should meander around the states bordering Lake Michigan through the
    period. Another cold front associated with the northern Plains
    upper trough should move southeastward over the northern/central
    Plains and southern High Plains. The cold front related to the
    Great Lakes cyclone will shift southeastward over the Carolinas, GA
    and northern FL, where convective processes will be largely
    prefrontal.

    ...FL...
    Scattered to numerous thunderstorms are expected to evolve from the
    ongoing, initially loosely organized activity over the northeastern
    Gulf. The resulting convection should sweep across and down the
    peninsula today in an increasingly organized, largely forward-
    propagational MCS. The main threat will be damaging gusts, some
    severe, and a tornado or two cannot be ruled out. (See SPC severe
    thunderstorm watch 91 and related mesoscale discussions for
    near-term situational coverage.) The main threat area, with
    greatest concentration of severe-wind potential, currently appears
    to be portions of central and perhaps south-central FL that
    experience longer-duration diurnal heating and sustained moisture advection/transport ahead of the complex.

    Veering flow with time is expected in much of the pre-MCS boundary
    layer, and should have these influences:
    1. Making deep-layer winds more unidirectional, with the mean-wind
    and deep-shear vectors assuming substantial component along the
    convective axis, thereby supporting denser, quasi-linear
    configuration,
    2. Reducing low-level shear and hodograph size somewhat (but not
    enough to forbid QLCS tornado potential entirely) and
    3. Advecting higher-theta-e Gulf air across the central/southern
    peninsula, supporting potential MLCAPE of 1500-2000 J/kg.

    The complex should reach South FL this evening at the latest, and
    may affect portions of the Keys as well. Mesoscale trends as the
    MCS and its cold-pool/pressure perturbation evolves likely will
    compel further extension or adjustment of the probabilities today.

    ...Mid-Atlantic region...
    Widely scattered thunderstorms may develop this afternoon, mainly
    along and east of a surface prefrontal/lee trough, moving eastward
    to northeastward over the outlook area. Isolated damaging gusts
    and/or marginally severe hail are possible.

    For generating buoyancy, diurnal destabilization of the boundary
    layer behind the morning clouds/precip will help to offset some
    relatively weak midlevel lapse rates, along with surface dew points
    commonly in the 50s to low 60s north, low/mid 60s south. Depending
    on the duration of heating, some mixing-related reduction in surface
    moisture is possible, tempering CAPE somewhat, but at the same time,
    yielding more evaporation-favoring subcloud layers for localized
    acceleration of downdrafts. Peak MLCAPE in the 500-1000 J/kg range
    is possible -- locally higher in the southern parts. The main
    factor precluding a better-organized threat will be lack of
    substantial vertical shear, with only 25-35-kt effective-shear
    magnitudes expected (also locally/briefly greater).

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 04/11/2021

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.12-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sat Apr 17 10:56:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 171232
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 171231

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0731 AM CDT Sat Apr 17 2021

    Valid 171300Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE
    GULF COAST STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe hail is possible over Deep South Texas this morning.
    Isolated severe hail and damaging winds are possible across portions
    of the central Gulf Coast through north Florida, mainly during the
    late afternoon and evening.

    ...Central Gulf Coast to north FL...
    A quasi-stationary front remains ensconced across far southern LA to north-central FL. A leading swath of convection driven by low-level
    warm advection is ongoing along and north of the FL portion of the
    front and this should push east off the South Atlantic Coast by
    midday. The next round of elevated convection should develop across
    the northern Gulf later this morning and spread east-northeast
    across the northeast Gulf Coast region this afternoon into this
    evening. Mid-level lapse rates will remain weak, yielding primarily
    thin elevated buoyancy, but mid-level flow will remain strong,
    contributing to favorable vertical shear for the threat of isolated
    severe storms. Primary threat will be marginal hail, although a
    damaging wind gust or two may be able to penetrate the relatively
    shallow low-level stability. Some northward retreat of the surface
    front may support convection containing surface-based effective
    inflow parcels across north FL this evening.

    ...Deep South TX...
    A few post-frontal elevated thunderstorms are ongoing across the
    Lower Rio Grande Valley and should spread into the northwest Gulf
    later this morning. Individual cells have repeatedly weakened over
    the past few hours despite 500-1200 J/kg of thin effective-layer
    CAPE amid 60-70 kt effective shear per the 12Z Brownsville and
    Corpus Christi soundings. Nevertheless, the environment suggests a
    discrete supercell producing severe hail is still possible through
    midday.

    ..Grams/Broyles.. 04/17/2021

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.12-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sun Apr 18 08:23:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 180516
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 180514

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1214 AM CDT Sun Apr 18 2021

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR CENTRAL
    FLORIDA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe storms may occur today across parts of the northern/central Florida Peninsula, with gusty winds and hail the
    main threats.

    ...Synopsis...
    Mostly zonal flow with periodic low-amplitude shortwave troughs will
    persist from the Gulf Coast states to Florida through the period. At
    the surface, a stalled front will be present from the central Gulf
    of Mexico to the central Florida Peninsula. This front will be a
    focus for storm activity through the day Sunday with the potential
    for a few strong to severe storms.

    ...Florida...
    A mid-level shortwave trough located off the Florida Peninsula early
    Sunday morning will shift eastward by morning and may provide enough
    ascent for scattered storm activity across north-central Florida.
    However, regional radar shows the surface front moving south from
    Citrus to Flagler counties with areas north of this boundary more
    stable. This may reduce the intensity of any convection which forms
    across north-central Florida early in the day.

    The aforementioned front is expected to stall somewhere near Orlando
    with little movement expected through the day. Temperatures are
    forecast to increase into the 80s with dewpoints ranging from the
    upper 60s to low 70s by the afternoon. Nebulous forcing may keep
    storm coverage isolated from late morning through mid-afternoon.
    However, by the late afternoon/evening, weak mid-level height falls
    are expected to overspread the region and this subtle ascent
    combined with an unstable boundary layer should be sufficient for
    scattered storm development. Effective shear in excess of 40 knots
    should aid in storm organization and may support some supercell
    structures. Mid-level lapse rates around 7 C/km are not overly
    steep, but should be sufficient for a threat for isolated large
    hail, especially if any sustained rotating updrafts can develop.
    Overall, scattered strong storms with isolated severe storms are
    expected with a threat for both large hail and damaging winds.

    An isolated strong to severe storm threat may persist overnight as
    the low-level jet strengthens and low-level moisture advection
    sustains surface based instability ahead of the surface front as it
    slowly moves south along the Peninsula.

    Elsewhere, some gusty winds may accompany storm activity in the
    northern Rockies as storms form in an environment with a dry
    sub-cloud layer and moderately strong northwesterly flow 0.5 to 1 km
    AGL. Limited instability precludes the addition of a marginal risk
    at this time.

    ..Bentley/Jewell.. 04/18/2021

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.12-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sat May 22 09:59:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 221240
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 221238

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0738 AM CDT Sat May 22 2021

    Valid 221300Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS CENTRAL/SOUTHERN
    HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe hail and wind along with a few tornadoes are
    possible across the central and southern High Plains this afternoon
    through about dusk.

    ...Central and southern High Plains...
    Within a meridional mid to upper-level flow regime downstream of an
    amplified trough over the West, the western extent of mid 50s to low
    60s surface dew points have reached the High Plains of eastern
    CO/NM. While some eastward mixing will occur, multiple rounds of
    scattered thunderstorms are expected to begin during the early
    afternoon. Low-level hodographs initially may remain modest, but
    should enlarge with time by late afternoon. A mixed mode of
    supercells evolving into broader clusters is anticipated,
    particularly in two regimes focused on eastern NM and separately in
    northeast CO to western NE. Moderate buoyancy should develop within
    confined corridors just ahead of this convection which should
    support potential for a few tornadoes, in addition to severe hail
    and wind.

    ...Central TX...
    An MCV located just east of San Antonio should gradually advance
    northwest across central TX through this afternoon. Low-topped
    showers and isolated thunderstorms are expected to peak in coverage
    from late morning through afternoon. A belt of enhanced 0-1 km shear
    within the eastern quadrant of the MCV coupled with limited
    boundary-layer heating may be sufficient for the threat of
    brief/weak tornadoes.

    ...Northern MN...
    Isolated thunderstorms may develop during the late afternoon to
    early evening along the trailing portion of a modest warm conveyor
    belt along/just ahead of a slow-moving cold front. The presence of
    an upstream mid-level ridge over the Dakotas within a pronounced
    gradient of mid-level westerlies suggest the corridor of severe
    potential should remain spatially confined. Isolated severe hail and
    locally damaging winds are possible.

    ..Grams/Mosier.. 05/22/2021

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.12-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sun May 23 08:31:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 231208
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 231207

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0707 AM CDT Sun May 23 2021

    Valid 231300Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WESTERN
    SD/NE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered to numerous severe thunderstorms are expected across a
    large portion of the western Great Plains. The most likely corridor
    for a few tornadoes and significant severe wind/hail is from western
    South Dakota to the central High Plains.

    ...Western/central SD to the CO/KS border...
    A surface cyclone in the lee of the Front Range will deepen as it
    tracks north-northeast into western SD by this evening. Northward
    advancement of the low in tandem with the surface warm front will
    result in poleward advection of upper 50s to lower 60s surface dew
    points towards the SD/ND border. Moderately steep mid-level lapse
    rates of 7-7.5 C/km should support an increasingly expansive plume
    of moderate buoyancy with MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg by peak heating.

    Pronounced mid-level height falls will overspread the region as a
    vort max embedded within the basal portion of the broader trough
    over AZ ejects northeast. Accompanied by an intense speed max,
    thunderstorms will rapidly develop by early to mid-afternoon within
    a strengthening deep-layer shear regime. Supercells will be favored
    initially but a quick transition into a northeast-moving QLCS is
    expected near the WY/SD/NE/CO border areas given the meridional flow
    regime. Large hail will be likely mainly early, with severe wind
    gusts becoming the primary hazard as upscale growth occurs across
    western portions of SD/NE.

    The potential for a few tornadoes is apparent across three primary
    corridors within the ENH and SLGT risk regions. First, any storm in
    proximity to the surface cyclone and warm front, where locally
    enhanced 0-1 km SRH (at or above 200 m2/s2) will exist. Second,
    embedded QLCS circulations are also possible as the line matures
    during the late afternoon to early evening. Finally to the south of
    the QLCS, a couple discrete supercells may persist through about
    dusk near the CO/KS border amid plentiful low-level moisture/SRH.

    ...Southern High Plains...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop during
    the afternoon in the vicinity of the dryline from the Raton Mesa
    vicinity to the Trans-Pecos of far west TX. A mix of supercells and
    multicell structures will be most favored in the Raton Mesa vicinity
    along the glancing periphery of the ejecting trough. Large hail,
    severe wind gusts, and a tornado or two are possible.

    ...Northeast...
    Convective coverage will likely remain sparse owing to modest
    convergence along a predominately west/east-oriented cold front,
    which will be pushing south across the region this afternoon.
    Despite weak mid-level lapse rates, surface temperatures warming
    into the 80s amid upper 50s to low 60s dew points should support
    weak buoyancy with MLCAPE of 250-750 J/kg. Along the periphery of a
    mid-level speed max ejecting across northern ME, adequate and nearly unidirectional deep-layer shear will exist for a few cells capable
    of producing locally damaging winds.

    ..Grams/Mosier.. 05/23/2021

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.12-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sat Jun 19 10:24:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 191259
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 191257

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0757 AM CDT Sat Jun 19 2021

    Valid 191300Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL PLAINS...LOWER MISSOURI/OHIO VALLEYS...MID-ATLANTIC...AND
    CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Damaging thunderstorm wind and isolated large hail are possible from
    portions of the central High Plains to the Mid-Atlantic. A tornado
    threat also exists over parts of the central Gulf Coast States to
    southwestern Georgia, east of the inland track of Tropical Storm
    Claudette.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, the main belt of northern-stream westerlies
    will become more cyclonic through the period from the northern
    Rockies to the Northeastern CONUS, as a series of shortwaves lead to
    height falls. As this occurs, the strong and persistent anticyclone
    to the south, over the Desert Southwest, will shift southward
    slightly, with the 500-mb high approaching the southern border of AZ
    by the end of the period. In between, a perturbation initially
    apparent in moisture-channel imagery over UT will move eastward,
    reaching southern WY and the CO Western Slope by 00Z. This trough
    should move over parts of the central Plains overnight, potentially
    with some convective vorticity reinforcement.

    Farther east, a strong shortwave trough will move from its present
    location over the western Lake Superior region and WI across the
    rest of the upper Great Lakes, with some weakening expected by 00Z
    as it reaches the Lake Erie vicinity. The trough should pivot
    eastward from there to southern New England by 12Z tomorrow. A weak
    mid/upper low will remain over east-central/southeast TX in the CLL
    area, as the perturbation accompanying T.S. Claudette ejects
    northeastward across MS/AL.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a cold front across portions of
    southeastern ON and Lake Ontario, which should move eastward/
    southeastward into parts of NY and New England today into tonight.
    The wavy frontal zone extended through a low over southern WI,
    southwestward across extreme southeastern NE to another low near the
    southern part of the CO/KS line. Frontolysis is expected along the
    High Plains portion of the boundary today, though easterly flow
    components to its north and relatively maximized low-level moisture
    will persist.

    ...Central Plains...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms should develop this
    afternoon over western parts of the outlook area, from the NE
    Panhandle across parts of eastern CO. As this activity moves
    roughly eastward through the late afternoon and early evening, it
    will encounter greater moisture and intensify, offering the threat
    for damaging gusts and large hail. The wind threat will
    increase/maximize when upscale cold-pool aggregation and related
    forced ascent can occur, while the foregoing boundary layer remains
    deep and well-mixed, favoring downdraft acceleration. As such, the
    potential for significant/65+ kt gusts is maintained over parts of
    the High Plains.

    As aforementioned height falls occur from this area northward, winds
    aloft will become more difluent and strengthen slightly,
    contributing to favorable deep shear. Meanwhile, large-scale ascent
    and low-level mass response will increase with the approach of the
    UT perturbation, leading to increased convergence north of the
    remnant front, near a lee trough. Destabilization will occur aloft
    with the DCVA and in the boundary layer from strong diurnal/diabatic
    heating, leading to steep lapse rates, with peak MLCAPE in the
    2000-2500 J/kg range. This will support the initial development and
    upscale growth. Eastward extent of the nocturnal wind threat into
    lower elevations and greater MLCINH (but also a strengthening
    southerly LLJ) is uncertain, and largely dependent on depth/strength
    of the MCS cold pool.

    ...Lower Missouri/Ohio Valleys...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms in clusters are possible
    this afternoon and evening, offering damaging gusts and severe hail.
    Aggregated outflow from the prior day's and night's convection has
    left a boundary across parts of northeastern KY and southern IN/IL,
    to near STL, and west-northwestward across northern MO. Isolated
    severe hail may be noted this morning with elevated convection north
    of the boundary, though the supportive west-southwesterly to
    westerly LLJ branch should weaken over the next few hours.

    Despite weak shortwave ridging behind the upper Great Lakes trough,
    strong low-level moisture/heating are likely along and south of the
    boundary, which may drift back northward over parts of MO. A
    boundary-parallel corridor of MLCAPE in the 3000-4000 J/kg range is
    possible, amidst surface dew points from the upper 60s to low 70s F,
    weak CINH, and a deep troposphere to aid in the development of
    deeply buoyant profiles. Although forecast soundings suggest modest
    deep shear, localized low-level shear/vorticity enhancement by the
    boundary, and well-mixed subcloud layers on the warm side, may aid
    storm organization as well. Low-level warm/moist advection may help
    some of the convection to persist at severe levels tonight across
    the Ohio Valley region. A relative minimum in severe potential may
    exist between this regime and that over the central Plains; however,
    confidence in that is not high enough yet to carve out lower
    unconditional probabilities.

    ...Mid-Atlantic/Northeast...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to form
    through this afternoon over western parts of the outlook area,
    especially over portions of western/central PA toward northern MD,
    and move eastward with the threat for strong-severe gusts and large
    hail. Some guidance indicates the potential for upscale clustering
    over the lower DE Valley region and/or NJ before activity moves
    offshore. Large-scale lift is expected to increase over the region
    ahead of the upper Great Lakes shortwave trough, spreading ahead of
    the cold front. Meanwhile, low-level destabilization will occur
    diurnally, steepening deep-layer lapse rates with favorable moisture
    in place. An area of 500-1500 J/kg MLCAPE should result, amidst
    favorable deep shear. Although low-level flow will be weak and
    veered, a 45-55-kt 500-mb speed max should shift over the region,
    contributing to effective-shear magnitudes in the 35-45-kt range.
    Organized multicells and isolated supercells are possible.

    A separate area of thunderstorms should develop this afternoon
    across portions of northeastern New England, along or ahead of the
    cold front, offering isolated damaging gusts and marginally severe
    hail. A zone of regionally maximized large-scale UVV -- preceding a
    compact mid/upper cyclone and related shortwave trough now located
    over western QC southeast of James Bay -- should spread over the
    region atop a destabilizing boundary layer with diurnally minimized
    MLCINH. A well-mixed boundary layer will support potential for
    hail/gusts to reach the surface, beneath 500-1200 J/kg MLCAPE.
    Effective-shear magnitudes around 30-40 kt will support some
    storm-scale organization.

    ...Gulf Coast...
    See tornado watch 284 and related mesoscale discussion for the
    near-term tornado potential with what now is T.S. Claudette. This
    highly asymmetric and strongly sheared cyclone is forecast by NHC to
    turn northeastward, then east-northeastward across MS/AL through the
    period. [See NHC advisories for latest specific track/intensity
    forecasts and tropical watches/warnings.] The tornado potential
    should remain displaced well away from the center, across those
    portions of the outer eastern semicircle that can destabilize
    sufficiently to support sustained supercells. That condition will
    remain most probable relatively close to the coast, both in
    persistent convergence/convective bands initially located over
    southwestern AL and the FL Panhandle, southward over the Gulf.
    Isolated discrete supercells also are possible east of the bands.

    Theta-e advection and diurnal heating should destabilize the
    boundary layer across the FL Panhandle, southeastern AL and perhaps southwestern GA as favorable low-level shear/hodographs spread
    eastward through the outlook area. The tornado threat should
    diminish this evening, both with inland/northeastward extent and
    with time, as Claudette continues to gain distance from the Gulf,
    flow veers to its south, and the most-favorable buoyancy and wind
    profiles become more displaced from each other.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 06/19/2021

    $$
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  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sun Jun 20 07:43:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 200533
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 200532

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1232 AM CDT Sun Jun 20 2021

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EASTERN
    IOWA TO SOUTHERN LOWER MICHIGAN...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SURROUNDING THE
    ENHANCED RISK FROM THE MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO THE LOWER GREAT
    LAKES ALONG WITH PARTS OF THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe storms are expected across the Midwest into the
    lower Great Lakes/upper Ohio Valley. Large hail, severe/damaging
    winds, and a few tornadoes are possible. Damaging winds and a couple
    of tornadoes are also possible across the Southeast.

    ...Midwest to Lower Great Lakes...

    Late Saturday central High Plains convection has spread downstream
    and matured into a significant MCS as it tracks east along the NE/KS
    border. Forward propagation appears to be reasonably similar to the
    latest NAM with the leading edge of the MCS likely spreading across southwestern into south-central IA early in the period. One concern
    is how poorly the models are handling the strong, sustained
    convection across northern MO. This activity continues to propagate
    northwest and will likely be absorbed into a larger complex by
    daybreak. The disruptive potential of this interaction is unknown.
    Even so, it appears a corridor of strong instability should evolve
    from northern IL into southern lower MI. Approaching convectively
    induced short-wave trough, strong heating, and the potential for a
    low-level confluence zone to be draped across this region suggest
    the potential for significant severe. Have opted to extend the ENH
    Risk downstream across southern lower MI and adjacent portions of
    northern IN/northwest OH as forecast soundings are impressively
    buoyant and strongly sheared. Profiles favor supercells but the
    early-day MCS will likely continue, in some form, through the day as
    it spreads downstream. If supercells evolve, tornadoes and large
    hail threat will increase with this activity. Otherwise, damaging
    winds can be expected.

    Later in the afternoon, surface heating should contribute to frontal
    convection that will initiate across the upper MS Valley, then
    spread/develop along the wind shift into eastern KS. Steep lapse
    rates, strong surface-6km shear, and abundant instability suggest
    the potential for very large hail with supercells in the wake of the
    early-day MCS.

    ...Southeast...

    Remnants of Claudette continue to shift downstream across AL into
    GA/northern FL. Low-level shear will remain strong from northern FL
    into coastal NC much of the period. While numerous showers/storms
    will be ongoing at daybreak, latest NAM suggests a narrow corridor
    of steeper surface-3km lapse rates within the zone of stronger shear
    from northeast FL through coastal SC. This may increase the
    potential for damaging winds and tornadoes. For these reasons have
    increased severe probabilities across this region.

    ..Darrow/Lyons.. 06/20/2021

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Sun Jun 20 19:07:00 2021
    ACUS01 KWNS 201938
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 201937

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0237 PM CDT Sun Jun 20 2021

    Valid 202000Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF
    EXTREME EASTERN IOWA ACROSS CHICAGOLAND TO NORTHWEST OHIO AND
    SOUTHERN LOWER MICHIGAN...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SURROUNDING THE
    ENHANCED RISK...AND ALSO OVER PARTS OF GEORGIA AND THE CAROLINAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe storms are expected across the Midwest into the
    lower Great Lakes/upper Ohio Valley. Large hail, severe/damaging
    winds, and a few tornadoes are possible. Damaging winds and a couple
    of tornadoes are also possible across the Southeast.

    ...20Z Update...

    ...Southeast Coast...
    Air mass downstream of Tropical Depression Claudette continues to
    destabilize amid modest heating and ample low-level moisture. As
    mentioned in MCD #1034, a couple of transient supercells may pose an
    isolated risk for a tornado or two through the afternoon. The
    highest conditional risk for a tornado appears to be over parts of
    eastern NC during the afternoon due to the larger hodographs.
    Additionally, based on recent trends and the location of center of
    TD Claudette, the severe risk across southeast GA has diminished
    enough to remove Slight Risk-equivalent probabilities. Isolated
    threat across southern GA/northern FL merits continued inclusion of
    5% wind probabilities.

    ...Elsewhere...
    Forecast delineated outlined in the previous outlook (discussion
    below) remains valid and no changes are needed.

    ..Mosier.. 06/20/2021

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1122 AM CDT Sun Jun 20 2021/

    ...MO to OH...
    Current water vapor loop shows a convectively augmented vort max
    over northern MO. New thunderstorm development has occurred in the
    past couple of hours in this region, with a corridor of rapid heating/destabilization occurring to the east from northeast MO into
    northern IL. Storms will likely intensify through the afternoon
    along this axis, with the risk of damaging winds, large hail, and
    isolated tornadoes. 12z CAM solutions differ on the handling of
    this cluster, but the potential appears to exist for a longer-lived
    bowing structure that would track all the way into northern OH this
    evening. Please refer to MCD #1032 for short-term details.

    ...MN/WI/IA/IL...
    Latest surface analysis shows a low over west-central MN. clearing
    skies ahead of the low, along with southerly low-level winds, will
    help to warm/moisten and destabilize this area by mid-afternoon. A
    consensus of model guidance shows intense thunderstorm development
    later today over southeast MN, southwest WI, and parts of
    northern/eastern IA. Large hail and damaging winds will be possible
    with these storms. A combination of remnant cloud debris and
    outflow boundaries complicate the scenario, but also increase the
    conditional risk of supercells and perhaps a few tornadoes this
    evening. If the storms over MO do not materialize into a
    longer-lived bow, then this area of storms may persist for several
    hours and track eastward across the ENH risk area.

    ...GA/SC/NC...
    The remnants of Claudette continue to affect parts of GA and the
    Carolinas today, with relatively strong low-level winds from
    southeast GA into southern SC. Considerable daytime heating and
    ample low level moisture will provide favorable thermodynamics for a
    few intense afternoon thunderstorms capable of damaging wind gusts
    and a few tornadoes.

    ...Southeast CO into southern KS late tonight...
    A surface cold front will extend from eastern CO into southern KS
    tonight, providing the focus for a few evening/overnight
    thunderstorms. Sufficient CAPE/shear along this zone will pose a
    risk of hail in the strongest storms.

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Apr 17 08:26:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 171253
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 171252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Wed Apr 17 2024

    Valid 171300Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    SOUTHERN LOWER MICHIGAN INTO THE OHIO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered thunderstorms capable of producing damaging winds, large
    hail, and a few tornadoes should develop across parts of the Ohio
    Valley and Lower Great Lakes this afternoon. Thunderstorms with
    mainly a large hail threat may occur tonight over parts of the
    central Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper trough/low over the Upper Midwest this morning will
    continue to move east-northeastward across the Great Lakes and OH
    Valley today while gradually de-amplifying/weakening. An associated
    40-60 kt mid-level jet will accompany this trough and overspread
    much of the OH/TN Valleys. At the surface, a low over southeastern
    MN/western WI should continue to gradually occlude through the day
    in tandem with the weakening upper cyclone. An attendant cold front
    will sweep eastward over the Lower Great Lakes/OH Valley through
    this evening, while a warm front advances as far north as parts of
    Lower MI and perhaps far western NY.

    ...Lower Michigan into the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and
    Mid-Atlantic...
    Upper 50s to low 60s surface dewpoints are expected to be in place
    ahead of the cold front late this morning/early afternoon. A
    pronounced mid-level dry slot evident on water vapor satellite
    imagery should aid in diurnal destabilization via a general lack of mid/upper-level cloud cover across parts of the OH Valley. As the
    boundary layer gradually warms/moistens, around 1000-1500 J/kg of
    MLCAPE should develop across southern Lower MI, eastern IN, and OH. Sufficiently strong low/mid-level winds will support 40-50 kt of
    deep-layer shear and updraft organization. Current expectations are
    for convection to develop along or just ahead of the cold front by
    early afternoon, and subsequently spread quickly east-northeastward
    across Lower MI, OH, and western PA through this evening. Tendency
    may be for thunderstorms to quickly organize into a line, especially
    across Lower MI which will be in closer proximity to the large-scale
    ascent attendant to the upper trough/low. If this evolution occurs,
    then severe/damaging winds would be the main threat with this
    activity. Have expanded the Marginal and Slight Risks northward
    across Lower MI to account for this potential.

    Farther south across eastern IN and OH, forcing will gradually
    become more limited, which may allow for somewhat lower thunderstorm
    coverage initially. Even so, deep-layer shear will be strong enough
    to support supercells, with large hail, damaging wind, and a few
    tornadoes all possible. The best tornado potential may be focused
    across parts of southeastern Lower MI and northern OH, in closer
    proximity to the warm front and greater low-level shear. Some
    upscale growth may also occur with this activity as it moves into
    eastern OH and western PA, with a potentially greater threat for
    damaging winds through the early evening before convection
    eventually weakens.

    Overall convective coverage should be lower across the TN Valley
    into the Southeast, with weaker large-scale ascent present over
    these regions. Still, isolated strong thunderstorms may occur this
    afternoon and early evening in a weakly unstable but strong
    deep-layer shear environment. Occasional hail and gusty winds appear
    possible with the more robust cores. Based on latest guidance
    trends, have trimmed the western extent of the Marginal Risk over
    western KY/TN and northern MS.

    Across the eastern Mid-Atlantic (northern VA/MD/DC/DE/south-central
    PA), a well-mixed boundary layer and steep low-level lapse rates
    forecast by some guidance may support occasional strong to damaging
    winds with convection spreading eastward off the higher terrain of
    the Appalachians and Blue Ridge Mountains. With limited instability,
    the overall severe wind threat will likely remain isolated.

    ...Nebraska/Kansas into Iowa/Missouri...
    An upper-level trough will move eastward across the north-central
    CONUS tonight. A 40-45 kt southerly low-level jet will develop this
    evening across parts of the southern/central Plains in response.
    Thunderstorms should eventually initiate near the northern edge of
    the low-level jet late this evening from central KS into far
    southeast NE. Ample MUCAPE, steep mid-level lapse rates, and strong
    shear in the cloud-bearing layer should support some threat for
    large hail with this mainly elevated convection. The large hail
    threat should to be greatest in the 04Z to 08Z time window with
    initial development, but it may persist through the end of the
    period. If convection can grow upscale into a small bowing cluster,
    then isolated damaging winds may also occur.

    A conditional threat for a supercell or two will exist farther south
    across south-central/southeastern KS into far northeastern OK. Here,
    modest low-level convergence along the intersection of a developing
    warm front and dryline may be sufficient to initiate isolated
    convection early this evening as the low-level jet strengthens. If
    this occurs, then all severe hazards appear possible.

    ...Texas...
    Very isolated thunderstorms may develop late this afternoon and
    early evening across parts of south-central into central TX along a
    surface dryline. If any convection can be sustained, it could
    produce severe winds and hail. But, this threat currently appears
    too conditional and uncertain to add low severe probabilities.

    ..Gleason/Bentley.. 04/17/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Apr 19 08:39:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 191232
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 191231

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0731 AM CDT Fri Apr 19 2024

    Valid 191300Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS
    AFTERNOON/EVENING FOR PARTS OF THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Sporadic strong to marginally severe storms are possible over parts
    of the Southeast later today.

    ...Southeast this afternoon/evening...
    A closed midlevel low will evolve into an open wave as it moves
    eastward over the Great Lakes and OH Valley. An associated surface
    cold front will continue to move slowly southeastward from TX to the
    southern Appalachians. A weak lead shortwave trough (enhanced some
    by overnight convection) will move eastward over the southern
    Appalachians and Piedmont this morning and the eastern Carolinas by
    early-mid afternoon. Isolated thunderstorms will be possible with
    the lead trough farther east in the Carolinas this afternoon, with
    little larger-scale forcing for ascent farther west. Still, widely
    scattered thunderstorm development will be possible this afternoon
    in conjunction with weak ascent along the front and local terrain
    circulations across the western parts of the MRGL risk area.
    Weak-moderate buoyancy, modest deep-layer shear and steepening
    low-level lapse rates will support some potential semi-organized
    storms capable of producing isolated wind damage and marginally
    severe hail for a few hours this afternoon/evening.

    ...TX through tonight...
    Weak upslope flow along a slow moving cold front will favor
    thunderstorm development over the east slopes of the Sierra Madre Oriental/Sierra del Burro this afternoon, with the potential for a
    couple of supercells. However, it is not clear that storm motions
    will bring the convection across the Rio Grande, and lingering
    convective inhibition suggests storms will likely weaken if they
    manage to cross the border. Later tonight in northwest TX, elevated
    convection will likely develop atop the frontal surface, in a warm
    advection regime downstream from a weak shortwave trough over AZ/NM.
    Some small hail may occur given lingering steep midlevel lapse rates
    and modest cloud-layer shear, but the potential for severe hail
    appears too low to warrant an outlook area.

    ..Thompson/Kerr.. 04/19/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Apr 20 10:42:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 201237
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 201235

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0735 AM CDT Sat Apr 20 2024

    Valid 201300Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON
    THROUGH LATE EVENING ACROSS CENTRAL/SOUTH TX...AND FROM SOUTHERN MS
    TO SOUTHERN NC...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Marginally severe storms capable of strong wind gusts and hail will
    be possible mainly this afternoon/evening across portions of central
    and south Texas, and from southern Mississippi to southern North
    Carolina.

    ...TX into the Southeast this afternoon/evening...
    South of a midlevel trough over the Great Lakes, a southern-stream
    shortwave trough will progress eastward from southern AZ/NM toward
    the lower MS Valley by Sunday morning. An associated surface
    baroclinic zone from south TX into the Carolinas will move only
    slowly southward through the period, providing a focus for isolated
    to scattered thunderstorm development. The more widespread
    convection is expected across TX near and to the north of the front,
    based on proximity to the richest moisture and the southern-stream
    trough.

    Boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s and surface heating in cloud
    breaks will drive MLCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range immediately
    south of the front across the Southeast this afternoon. Vertical
    shear will be relatively weak as a result of westerly wind profiles
    with only modest speed increases from the low to midlevels. The
    moderate buoyancy, weak vertical shear and steep low-level lapse
    rates will favor isolated strong/damaging outflow gusts for a few
    hours this afternoon/evening.

    Richer low-level moisture (dewpoints in the lower 70s) and steeper
    midlevel lapse rates will be present across south TX through this
    evening. Initially elevated convection is expected to increase atop
    the frontal surface from west central into central TX, and some of
    this convection will approach the surface front this afternoon.
    Separate surface-based thunderstorm development is also expected
    along the front, and the storms will subsequently spread
    east-southeastward into early tonight. Despite MLCAPE potentially
    exceeding 2000 J/kg, the steeper lapse rates will be relatively high
    in the profiles (above the 700 mb level), and vertical shear will
    not be particularly strong. Though isolated large hail and wind
    damage will be possible, along with some clustering of storms later
    this afternoon into early tonight, a MRGL risk (5% hail/wind and 2%
    tornado) appears to best characterize the overall severe threat in
    TX.

    ..Thompson/Kerr.. 04/20/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Apr 21 08:55:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 211246
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 211245

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0745 AM CDT Sun Apr 21 2024

    Valid 211300Z - 221200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS
    AFTERNOON/EVENING ACROSS NORTH FL/SOUTH GA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated damaging winds near 60 mph and large hail near 1 inch
    diameter will be possible for a few hours this afternoon/evening
    across south Georgia and north Florida.

    ...North FL/south GA this afternoon/evening...
    A low amplitude shortwave trough over the north central Gulf coast
    will progress eastward over south GA/north FL by late afternoon, in
    advance of an upstream trough over the mid MS Valley. An associated
    cold front will move slowly southeastward and offshore of the
    Carolinas this afternoon, and into central FL by Monday morning.
    Regional 12z soundings from JAX/TLH show lingering steep midlevel
    lapse rates and an associated cap which is expected to weaken from
    the west by afternoon, when thunderstorm development will become
    more probable with surface heating, ascent along the front, and with larger-scale ascent related to the approaching midlevel trough. The
    warm sector ahead of the front across south GA/north FL will be
    characterized by mid 60s dewpoints and surface temperatures ranging
    from the mid 70s to lower 80s in cloud breaks by afternoon, where
    MLCAPE could approach 1000 J/kg. Coincident with diurnal
    destabilization, midlevel flow will increase to 50 kt with largely
    straight hodographs and effective bulk shear of 35-40 kt. This
    environment of moderate buoyancy and vertical shear will support the
    potential for multicell clusters and/or low-end supercells capable
    of producing isolated damaging gusts near 60 mph and large hail near
    1 inch in diameter for a few hours this afternoon/evening.

    ..Thompson/Kerr.. 04/21/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Apr 22 08:59:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 221222
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 221220

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0720 AM CDT Mon Apr 22 2024

    Valid 221300Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON
    ALONG THE SOUTHEAST FL COAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to locally severe thunderstorms, capable of marginally severe
    wind gusts and hail, will be possible near the southeast Florida
    coast this afternoon.

    ...Southeast FL coast this afternoon...
    In conjunction with a midlevel shortwave trough moving over the
    Southeast, a surface cold front will progress southward from central
    to south FL through the day. Surface dewpoints near 70 F this
    morning will likely decrease with surface heating/mixing, though
    there is some uncertainty regarding the influence of morning
    clouds/convection. Assuming a few cloud breaks by midday/early
    afternoon, the more probable area for thunderstorm development this
    afternoon will be near the southeast FL coast. This area will be
    along the southern fringe of the stronger mid-upper westerlies,
    where deep-layer shear/hodograph length will be sufficient for
    semi-organized storms with a low-end wind/hail threat for a few
    hours this afternoon.

    ...Elsewhere...
    A midlevel trough will dig southeastward over the northern Plains
    and upper Great Lakes by Tuesday morning, as an associated surface
    cold front moves southeastward into the upper MS Valley and central
    Plains. Isolated high-based thunderstorms may form late this
    afternoon in the zone of deepest mixing along the front from
    northeast CO into northwest KS, where gusty winds will be possible.
    Elevated convection rooted near 700 mb is the more probable scenario
    tonight atop the frontal surface from southern NE/northern KS into
    southern IA/northern MO. Otherwise, weak/low-topped convection with
    isolated lightning flashes will also be possible this
    afternoon/evening within the midlevel cold pool over northern ND/MN.
    Strong wind gusts will be possible given deep mixing and strong
    synoptic flow over ND, but severe thunderstorms are unlikely.

    ..Thompson/Kerr.. 04/22/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Apr 23 09:27:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 231227
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 231226

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0726 AM CDT Tue Apr 23 2024

    Valid 231300Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS LATE THIS
    AFTERNOON/EVENING ACROSS NORTHWEST TX...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms capable of producing large hail (2+
    inch diameter) and gusts to 65 mph will be possible this afternoon
    and evening across northwest Texas. Additional strong storms
    producing hail up to 1 inch diameter and gusts up to 60 mph are
    possible from southeast Wisconsin and northern Illinois into Lower
    Michigan.

    ...Northwest TX area this afternoon/evening...
    No appreciable changes to the prior outlook. In the wake of a
    midlevel trough crossing the Great Lakes, a surface cold front will
    move southward across KS/OK today, eventually stalling by tonight
    across southeast OK and northwest TX. There will be sufficient
    cross-Rockies flow aloft for lee cyclogenesis across eastern NM and
    adjacent west central TX, which will maintain southerly low-level
    flow and northward advection of a modifying western Gulf air mass
    into the frontal zone by mid-late afternoon. Strong surface heating
    along the west edge of the returning moisture will result in a
    sharpening dryline by late afternoon, with a dryline/front triple
    point likely just off the Caprock. Isolated thunderstorm
    development will be most probable near the triple point after 21z,
    and convection will subsequently move southeastward before weakening
    by late evening. The storm environment will be characterized by
    moderate buoyancy (MLCAPE of 1500-2000 J/kg), steep midlevel lapse
    rates near 9 C/km, and sufficient deep-layer shear for supercells.
    Isolated very large hail of 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be the
    main threat, along with a few 55-65 mph outflow gusts.

    ...Northern IL/southeast WI/Lower MI late this afternoon/evening...
    Only minor changes to the MRGL risk area in lower MI. A midlevel
    trough over the upper MS Valley this morning will continue
    east-southeastward over the Great Lakes by Wednesday morning. An
    associated surface trough will likewise move southeastward, and this
    trough will be preceded by a band of rain with minimal buoyancy.
    Behind the rain band, surface heating with steepening low-level
    lapse rates and cooling midlevel temperatures will support weak
    surface-based buoyancy just ahead of a secondary frontal surge.
    Some low-topped convection will be possible in this zone late this
    afternoon through late evening from northern IL/southeast WI into
    lower MI. The storms could pose a marginal hail/wind threat.

    ..Thompson/Kerr.. 04/23/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Apr 24 09:16:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 241246
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 241245

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0745 AM CDT Wed Apr 24 2024

    Valid 241300Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS EVENING
    ACROSS WEST CENTRAL TX...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated large hail and damaging winds will be possible this evening
    across west central Texas.

    ...West central TX this evening...
    A midlevel shortwave trough off the southern CA coast will move
    inland over southern AZ by the end of the period. Downstream,
    shortwave ridging will persist over the Plains, though some increase
    in westerly flow over the Rockies will contribute to lee troughing
    across eastern CO/NM. The lee trough will maintain southerly
    low-level flow and a gradual increase in low-level moisture to the
    south of a warm front that will move slowly northward across OK and
    the TX Panhandle. The moistening (boundary-layer dewpoints of 64-70
    F and 100 mb mean mixing ratios of 12-14 g/kg) will occur beneath a
    warm elevated mixed layer with midlevel lapse rates of 8-9 C/km,
    which will drive large buoyancy (MLCAPE > 2000 J/kg) within a capped
    warm sector.

    The potential exception to this is along the developing dryline
    across west central TX where surface heating/mixing could be deep
    enough to remove convective inhibition, and isolated thunderstorm
    development will be possible by this afternoon/evening. Confidence
    in storm development is modest, but the environment with large
    buoyancy, steep lapse rates and effective bulk shear greater than 40
    kt will conditionally favor supercells capable of producing isolated
    very large hail up to 2.5 inches in diameter and severe outflow
    gusts of 60-70 mph. There will be an increase in low-level shear
    this evening and low-level moisture will be greater compared to
    yesterday, so an isolated tornado will also be possible in a narrow
    time window this evening before inhibition increases and storms
    weaken.

    ...OK into KS through tonight...
    Elevated thunderstorms are ongoing over western OK in a zone of
    low-midlevel warm advection and weak buoyancy likely rooted near 700
    mb. Some of this convection could persist today while spreading
    eastward, with a low-end hail threat. Additional elevated storms
    are expected to form overnight from northeast OK into KS with
    strengthening warm advection and increasing low-level moisture. A
    couple of storms could produce isolated large hail the last few
    hours of the forecast period.

    ..Thompson/Kerr.. 04/24/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Apr 24 15:46:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 241938
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 241937

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0237 PM CDT Wed Apr 24 2024

    Valid 242000Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE TEXAS
    SOUTH PLAINS INTO THE PERMIAN BASIN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated large hail and severe gusts will be possible this evening
    from the Texas South Plains into the Permian Basin.

    ...20Z Update...

    ...TX South Plains into Permian Basin...
    Forecast outlined in the previous discussion (appended below)
    remains valid. Isolated thunderstorms still appear possible within
    the destabilizing air mass from the TX South Plains into the Permian
    Basin. Moderate buoyancy (i.e. MLCAPE from 2000 to 2500 J/kg) and
    vertical shear (i.e. 0-6 km bulk shear from 40-50 kt) support the
    potential for supercells within any sustained/mature convection.
    Primary risk with any supercells would be large to very large hail
    up to 2.5" in diameter and strong gusts up 70 mph. Tornado risk
    still appears low, although non-zero given the increasing low-level
    moisture and shear expected this evening.

    ...OK into Central/Eastern KS...
    Thunderstorms are expected to develop tonight from central OK into
    central and eastern KS as warm-air advection increases throughout
    the warm sector. A few stronger storms capable of marginally severe
    hail around 1" in diameter are possible through Thursday morning.

    ..Mosier.. 04/24/2024

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1120 AM CDT Wed Apr 24 2024/

    ...West central TX this evening...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a midlevel low/shortwave
    trough west of the southern CA/Baja California coasts and it will
    move into the lower CO Valley by tomorrow morning. A mid-level
    ridge situated over the southern Rockies will gradually move east
    over the southern High Plains today. A lee trough will become more
    pronounced throughout the day and act to maintain southerly
    low-level flow across much of TX south of a warm front. The warm
    front initially analyzed this morning near the Red River will slowly
    move northward. Late morning surface observations over the Permian Basin/Concho Valley indicate low to mid 60s dewpoints. The 12z MAF
    raob showed a 7.9 deg C/km 700-500 mb lapse rate, indicative of an
    elevated mixed layer.

    Weak forcing for ascent at best is expected beneath the mid-level
    shortwave ridge, thereby limiting potential storm coverage. Despite
    the associated forcing/capping concerns, convective inhibition will
    erode considerably by 21-00z. Uncertainty remains regarding storm
    development, but additional heating this afternoon --perhaps delayed
    a bit due to considerable low cloud cover-- will result in moderate
    buoyancy (2000-2500 J/kg MLCAPE). Relatively weak but veering winds
    in the low levels beneath 65-kt westerly 250-mb flow will support a
    conditional threat for supercells. Deeper mixing over the Permian
    Basin may be enough to overcome and lead to a couple of storms by
    late afternoon/early evening along the dryline. Isolated very large
    hail up to 2.5 inches in diameter and severe outflow gusts of 60-70
    mph are possible. There will be an increase in low-level shear this
    evening and low-level moisture will be greater compared to
    yesterday, so an isolated tornado will also be possible in a narrow
    time window this evening before inhibition increases and storms
    weaken.

    ...OK into KS through tonight...
    Elevated thunderstorms near the OK/KS border late this morning are
    likely the result of low-midlevel warm advection and weak buoyancy
    rooted near 700 mb. Some of this convection could persist this
    afternoon but it is uncertain whether intensification will occur
    with this activity and whether a marginal hail threat develops. The
    more probable risk for elevated storms will occur tonight coincident
    with strengthening warm advection and increasing low-level moisture.

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Apr 29 08:04:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 291254
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 291252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Mon Apr 29 2024

    Valid 291300Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH LATE
    AFTERNOON ACROSS THE LOWER MS VALLEY...SOUTH TX...AND SOUTHEAST
    LOWER MI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Marginally severe wind gusts and hail will be possible today across
    south Texas, the lower Mississippi Valley and southeast Lower
    Michigan.

    ...Lower MS Valley/Gulf coast today...
    A midlevel shortwave trough over northwest TX/western OK will
    progress eastward to the lower MS Valley by early tonight. This
    wave is preceded by a large MCS now over southern LA and the
    adjacent northwest Gulf of Mexico. Outflow with this convection
    will continue moving southeastward through day, with some additional
    storm development possible into southeast LA/southern MS on the
    eastern flank of the MCS today. Surface heating in cloud breaks,
    lingering midlevel lapse rates at or above 7 C/km, and
    boundary-layer dewpoints of 68-72 F will contribute to moderate
    buoyancy and the potential for strong updrafts along the leading
    edge of the MCS. Vertical shear will not be particularly strong,
    but the stronger storms will be capable of producing isolated
    downburst wind damage through this afternoon.

    Farther north, the residual effects of prior and ongoing convection
    will be reduced lapse rates and low-level moisture, which along with
    lingering clouds will tend to limit buoyancy. Thunderstorm
    development will be still be possible this afternoon/evening from AR
    into western TN/KY along and in advance of a weak surface front and
    the midlevel trough approaching from OK. However, severe storms are
    not expected as a result of both weak buoyancy and relatively weak
    vertical shear.

    ...South TX this afternoon...
    A weak front will drift southward into south TX by this afternoon,
    providing a potential focus for isolated thunderstorm development.
    Rich moisture, steep midlevel lapse rates and modest deep-layer
    vertical shear (straight hodographs) could support isolated large
    hail/wind damage if storms do form.

    ...Lower MI this afternoon...
    A midlevel trough will continue northeastward from the upper MS
    Valley to the upper Great Lakes, while an associated/weak surface
    cyclone and cold front move across WI/MI this afternoon through
    tonight. Southeast Lower MI will be located within the warm sector
    and could have an opportunity for some surface heating/
    destabilization just east of the weakening rain band from IN into
    western Lower MI. MLCAPE up to 500 J/kg, steepening low-level lapse
    rates and 50 kt midlevel flow support a low-end threat for wind
    damage this afternoon.

    ..Thompson/Leitman.. 04/29/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu May 2 08:12:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 021247
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 021246

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0746 AM CDT Thu May 02 2024

    Valid 021300Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF NORTHWEST...NORTH-CENTRAL AND CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to severe thunderstorms will be possible today from parts of
    the Upper Midwest to the southern Plains. The greatest potential
    appears to be over parts of northwest, north-central and central
    Texas, where large to very large hail, severe gusts and a couple
    tornadoes are possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a complex cyclone -- now over southern SK and
    eastern MT -- is forecast to move slowly and erratically eastward
    stride the international border, orbited by several shortwaves/
    vorticity lobes. The most influential of those perturbations is
    apparent in moisture-channel imagery over eastern WY to northwestern
    CO. This feature is forecast to strengthen and pivot to the
    central/eastern Dakotas by 00Z, then across MN to northern WI and
    western Lake Superior around 2Z tomorrow. Meanwhile, broad west-
    southwest to southwest flow in mid/upper levels -- with mainly
    convectively augmented/modified embedded perturbations -- will cover
    the central/southern Plains States. MCVs are evident over western
    IA, central OK and southeast TX. These should move across the
    Mississippi Valley this afternoon/evening, toward the Upper Great
    Lakes, Ohio Valley and Tennessee Valley, respectively.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low near STJ, with cold front
    across northeastern to south-central KS, the northern/western TX
    Panhandle, and north-central NM. A dryline was drawn over the Llano
    Estacado near the TX/NM line, southward into the western Big Bend
    region. By 00Z, the low should reach western WI, with cold front
    over northern IL, central MO, southeastern KS, central/southwestern
    OK, to a weak low over west-central TX. The eastward-mixing dryline
    will be overtaken by the cold front from north-south, with a 00Z
    position from the southern low southward near DRT. By 12Z, the cold
    front should reach the northeastern IN/northwestern OH region,
    extending southwestward to near a PAH-LIT-DAL line, then as a
    stationary to warm front west-northwestward to central NM.

    ...Southern Plains to western Gulf Coast...
    A large area of precip and embedded areas of thunderstorms is moving
    eastward across eastern OK, northeast/east TX, and western LA,
    anchored by some strong thunderstorm clusters in the southeast
    TX/southwestern LA area. Isolated, marginally severe hail and/or
    gusts may occur for a few more hours.

    Behind that activity, an outflow boundary extends across south-
    central TX, the Hill Country and Concho Valley regions, to the
    Permian Basin. Northward-directed warm/moist advection and theta-e
    recovery will occur today over west-central/northwest TX east of the
    dryline, before being intercepted by the cold front over the
    northwest TX/southwestern OK region this afternoon. Farther
    northeast over most of OK, severe potential will be more isolated
    and conditional near the front, given the presence of partially
    modified MCS-outflow air instead of a relatively undisturbed Gulf
    boundary layer.

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop near the
    dryline and along the front this afternoon, with the most favorable
    parameter space, greatest low-level convergence, and densest
    convective concentration for severe potential being in and near the
    "slight" area. The northern rim of the residual outflow boundary
    will diffuse and move into this region as well, providing a
    potential low-level vorticity source that may help to offset some
    flow weaknesses aloft in terms of supporting supercell organization.
    30-40 kt effective-shear magnitudes are possible. Forecast soundings
    reasonably indicate modest low-level flow supporting nearly straight
    hodographs with both left- and right-moving cells possible. Strong
    lapse rates -- generally 7.5 to 8 deg C from surface through 400 mb
    -- and mid/upper 60s F dewpoints, will support a plume of 3000-4500
    J/kg MLCAPE over much of northwest, west-central and south-central/
    southwest TX ahead of the dryline. Large to very large hail is the
    greatest concern, though storm-scale processes and boundary
    interactions may favor a tornado threat as well. Upscale
    aggregation of some of this convection is possible, increasing the
    severe-gust potential for at least a few hours into this evening and
    tonight.

    ...Midwest...
    A band of initial convection is crossing portions of IA and
    northwestern MO, ahead of the surface cold front. As this activity
    moves eastward into weakly destabilizing parts of IL/WI/northern MO
    through the day, some intensification may occur, resulting in
    isolated damaging gusts and marginally severe hail from the
    strongest segments. Behind this activity and along/ahead of the
    cold front, modest destabilization (from warm advection and limited
    insolation) will occur, supporting isolated to widely scattered
    afternoon thunderstorm development along the front, and additional
    risk of gusts/hail near severe limits. Favorable deep shear
    (effective-shear magnitudes around 40-50 kt) will spread over the
    area. However, limited instability is expected, with modest deep-
    layer lapse rates and trajectories from convectively processed
    source regions, keeping MLCAPE generally in the 500-1000 J/kg range
    in a narrow prefrontal corridor. Activity should weaken in the
    evening as it moves into a more-stable airmass.

    ..Edwards/Leitman.. 05/02/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun May 5 08:34:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 051251
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 051250

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0750 AM CDT Sun May 05 2024

    Valid 051300Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    SOUTH TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are possible across parts
    of South Texas today. Isolated locally severe thunderstorms are
    also possible across the Mid-South and upper Ohio Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    A substantial synoptic-scale trough has moved inland over the
    Pacific Coast States and NV, anchored by a cyclone now centered near
    the NV/OR border. The 500-mb low should move erratically eastward
    through the period, reaching southern WY by 12Z tomorrow, with a
    strong shortwave trough southward over western CO and NM.
    Associated height falls will shift eastward through the
    Intermountain West, Rockies, and eventually High Plains. As that
    occurs, a convectively reinforced, southern-stream perturbation --
    apparent in moisture-channel imagery from western OK to central/
    southeast TX -- will move eastward to the lower Mississippi Valley.
    An embedded MCV, initially evident over southern OK, should move
    northeastward toward the Ozarks through 00Z. Another MCV may be
    located over northeast TX, and should move over AR today.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a weak low over northwestern OH,
    near a frontal triple point, with warm front arching across eastern
    OH, western WV and eastern KY. This front represents the western
    rim of a cold-damming airmass over the central Appalachians, and
    will be slow to erode from the west as the cold front catches up
    today. The cold front extended from the low across portions of northern/western KY to northern AR, to a frontal-wave low over
    northeastern OK, related to the northern MCV. The front then
    extended across eastern OK, and north-central/southwest TX. The
    trailing part of the cold front is expected to lose definition
    amidst:
    1. A vast field of convective outflow air already in place across
    much of central/north/east TX, OK and AR, as well as
    2. Intensifying low-level warm advection on both sides late in the
    period, contributing to frontolysis.

    ...South TX to Mid-South/lower Mississippi Valley...
    A dissipating convective complex is moving eastward across portions
    of LA, followed by a still-robust but mostly non-severe line of
    thunderstorms over southeast TX. The trailing line may produce
    isolated gusts near severe limits for a few more hours, but should
    move into an airmass modified by the leading activity. Meanwhile,
    the boundary layer farther north -- ahead of a belt of precip and
    embedded thunderstorms now over eastern OK and the Arklatex --
    should destabilize diabatically through the afternoon. That, along
    with favorable low-level moisture (surface dewpoints generally in
    the mid/upper 60s F), should offset modest mid/upper-level lapse
    rates enough to support peak MLCAPE in the 1000-1500 J/kg range over
    much of the outlook area. Scattered thunderstorms are expected --
    perhaps in the form of intensification along the northeastward-
    shifted leading edge of the current convection. With modest
    low-level and deep shear, severe potential should remain marginal
    and isolated, in the form of gusts and hail. Mesobeta-scale
    mass-response effects ahead of the MCVs might help organization over
    parts of the Mid-South region later today.

    Farther southwest, the aggregate outflow boundary from the morning
    complexes as analyzed from near HOU-COT and into northern Coahuila.
    This boundary should stall, then drift northward over south-central
    TX and the adjoining Rio Grande Valley today. The boundary should
    focus additional thunderstorm development from midday through the
    afternoon, some of which may become severe multicells or supercells
    with large hail, damaging gusts and at least marginal tornado
    potential. Though flow beneath the 700-mb level should be modest
    (generally 5-10 kt), two factors will favor severe potential:
    1. Backed flow near the boundary, with maximized low-level
    vorticity, augmentation of weak ambient shear, and favorable
    storm-relative low-level winds on the mesoscale.
    2. Favorable buoyancy, with MLCAPE commonly 2000-3000 J/kg along
    and south of the boundary, will be fostered by strong diurnal
    heating, rich low-level moisture (70s F surface dewpoints) and weak
    CINH.

    In the absence of notable mid/upper support behind the shortwave
    trough, convection may diminish rapidly through the evening, as the
    boundary layer stabilizes from both nocturnal cooling and spreading
    outflow air.

    ...Upper Ohio Valley vicinity...
    Episodes of widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected
    to move roughly eastward across this outlook area today, with
    isolated damaging (but mainly subsevere) gusts possible.
    Activity will occur as weak MLCINH is breached by diabatic heating
    and frontal lift. In the pocket of favorable boundary-layer air
    between the warm and cold fronts, 60s F surface dewpoints should
    contribute to MLCAPE in the 1000-1500 J/kg range. Glancing
    influences of a northern-stream trough -- passing north of the area
    from the Upper Great Lakes across northeastern ON and adjoining QC
    -- will include somewhat tightened height gradients and enhanced
    mid/upper winds. However, low-level flow will remain weak and
    veered to southwesterly, with weak vertical shear in the lowest 500
    mb. Mode therefore should be multicellular, with convection
    weakening considerably as low-level instability decreases near and
    after sunset.

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

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri May 10 09:27:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 101231
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 101230

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0730 AM CDT Fri May 10 2024

    Valid 101300Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN
    FLORIDA AND SOUTHEAST GEORGIA...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    SOUTHEAST STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms capable of primarily damaging winds will
    continue early today across northern Florida and far south Georgia.
    A few severe storms capable of producing damaging winds and hail are
    also expected across the Carolinas.

    ...Southern Georgia/northern Florida...
    A well-organized and fast-moving squall line, which had included
    embedded bowing segments and periodic mesovortices, will continue east-southeastward this morning, favoring the
    prior-outflow-reinforced instability gradient near the
    Georgia/Florida border. Damaging winds, along with some QLCS-related
    tornado risk, will remain a distinct concern prior to the MCS moving
    offshore.

    The most prominent severe risk should be with the early day MCS, but
    some redevelopment will be possible, immediately on the MCS
    southwestern flank, as well as into the afternoon with some
    potential recovery ahead of the cold front. This could occur across
    southeast Alabama/southwest Georgia and the Florida Panhandle.
    Deep-layer shear will remain conditionally sufficient for organized
    convection, and a couple stronger cells/clusters will be possible,
    with a threat of isolated hail and damaging gusts.

    ...Carolinas...
    With the early-day MCS to the south expected to move quickly
    offshore during the morning, there will be some opportunity for a
    corridor of moderate destabilization across part of the Carolinas in
    advance of the cold front. The favorably timed shortwave trough
    approaching from the northwest will support thunderstorm development
    along the front, with rather strong deep-layer flow/shear supportive
    of storm organization. A couple of supercells and/or small bowing
    segments will be possible, including risks of large hail and
    damaging wind gusts.

    ...South-central Texas/Edwards Plateau...
    To the north of a stalled front, at least isolated elevated
    convection may develop this afternoon into early evening,
    particularly across the Edwards Plateau and in closer proximity to
    the Rio Grande. The intensity of any such convection remains
    uncertain, but elevated buoyancy may be sufficient to support a few
    severe storms with large hail as the most probable risk.

    ...Upper Midwest/Mississippi Valley...
    Low-topped convection is expected to develop across parts of
    Minnesota and Wisconsin this afternoon, in association with the
    shortwave trough moving southeastward across the region. Instability
    will be quite weak due to limited moisture, but relatively deep
    mixing and steep low-level lapse rates could support isolated
    gusty/damaging winds with the strongest convection this afternoon.

    ..Guyer/Broyles.. 05/10/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun May 12 15:49:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 121952
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 121950

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0250 PM CDT Sun May 12 2024

    Valid 122000Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH TONIGHT
    FROM SOUTHEAST TX TO SOUTHWEST MS...AND THIS EVENING ACROSS THE
    EDWARDS PLATEAU OF TX...AS WELL AS NORTHEAST WI/SOUTHERN U.P. OF
    MI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Large hail, locally damaging winds, and a couple tornadoes are
    possible from southeast Texas into Louisiana and southwest
    Mississippi through tonight. Isolated very large hail will be
    possible this evening across the Edwards Plateau of Texas. Damaging
    winds and large hail will be possible this evening across northeast
    Wisconsin and the southern Upper Peninsula of Michigan.

    ...20z Update...

    No changes were needed at 20z to the existing outlook.

    ...East TX/LA/MS...
    Scattered severe thunderstorm activity is ongoing along and south of
    the warm front into eastern Texas and Louisiana, with hail reports
    up to 2 inches. Additional thunderstorm activity is expected to
    develop through the late afternoon/evening with further severe
    potential continuing late into the period. See MCD#759 for more
    information.

    ...Edwards Plateau in TX this afternoon/evening...
    Air mass recovery has been slow across the region near the Edwards
    Plateau in Texas with persistent mid-level cloud cover limiting
    daytime heating. CAM solutions are spread on potential for a
    supercell or two to develop through the evening. RAP forecast
    soundings indicate a conditional threat for very large hail and a
    tornado, given strong deep layer shear and elongated hodographs with
    increasing mid-level flow. Given the conditional potential for large
    hail, the Slight Risk was maintained with this outlook.

    A Slight Risk continues across WI/MI this afternoon through the
    evening. High-based storms with damaging wind and hail will be
    possible.

    ..Thornton/Jewell.. 05/12/2024

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1127 AM CDT Sun May 12 2024/

    ...East TX/LA/MS through early Monday morning...
    A midlevel trough will move slowly eastward from CO/NM to
    KS/OK/northwest TX through tonight, with only a weak surface
    reflection of the midlevel trough across OK/KS. Farther south, a
    warm front will make slow progress northward into southeast TX and
    southern LA, though the position of the surface front will be
    modulated by the effects of ongoing/slightly elevated convection
    moving toward east TX. This early convection will pose a continued
    threat for occasional large hail and damaging outflow gusts into
    early afternoon.

    By mid afternoon and through late evening, the potential for
    near-surface-based storms will increase along the warm front in
    southeast TX/southwest LA where low-level shear/hodograph curvature
    will be sufficient for supercells with a few tornadoes. There is
    some potential for a larger storm cluster to evolve from the warm
    frontal storms by this evening, and storms could persist through the overnight/early morning hours as far east as MS.

    ...Edwards Plateau in TX this afternoon/evening...
    A couple of supercells will be possible later this afternoon/evening
    near the front/dryline triple point roughly in the vicinity of San
    Angelo. MLCAPE > 2500 J/kg, steep midlevel lapse rates and long
    hodographs will favor isolated very large hail (up to 2.5 inches in
    diameter) as the main threat for a few hours into this evening.

    ...WI/MI this afternoon through early tonight...
    The southeast fringe of the midlevel height falls and a surface cold
    front will help focus thunderstorm development after about 21z, and
    storms will spread southeastward through late evening/early
    overnight. Afternoon surface temperatures of 75-80 F and dewpoints
    of 45-52 F in WI will drive steep low-level lapse rates and SBCAPE
    of 500-1000 J/kg, which combined with modest deep-layer shear will
    support the potential for high-based storms capable of producing
    damaging winds of 60-70 mph and large hail of 1-1.5 inches in
    diameter. The convection will likely become elevated over Lower MI
    by late evening/early tonight with some continued potential for
    isolated large hail.

    ...Extreme southwest KS/southeast CO/OK Panhandle this afternoon...
    Cloud breaks will allow surface heating and steepening low-level
    lapse rates in the vicinity of a weak surface cyclone across extreme
    southeast CO. Deep-layer shear will be weak close to the midlevel
    trough, but sufficient buoyancy/minimal inhibition and a vertical
    vorticity source will support the potential for a few landspouts
    mid-late afternoon.

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue May 14 08:32:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 141253
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 141252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Tue May 14 2024

    Valid 141300Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    SOUTHEAST STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible today over parts of central and
    northern Florida and southeast Georgia, with damaging gusts and a
    tornado or two possible. Severe storms may also occur across
    portions of the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys into the Carolina
    Piedmont, as well as the central Rockies/High Plains and parts of
    west Texas.

    ...Northern/central Florida and southern Georgia...
    A well-organized quasi-linear MCS will continue across far southeast
    Georgia toward southern South Carolina this morning, with at least a
    localized severe risk possible. Additional development may occur
    along the southwestward-trailing outflow that should modify during
    the day, while other storms ongoing over the Gulf of Mexico may also
    reach the central Florida Peninsula. With moderate destabilization
    (2000-3000 J/kg MLCAPE) and steep lapse rates (reference 12z
    observed soundings) along/south of the effective boundary, modest
    low-level hodograph curvature and some elongation suggests that
    embedded bowing structures and mesovortices could develop,
    accompanied by a damaging gust and tornado risk. For additional
    short-term details, see Mesoscale Discussion 780.

    ...Ohio/Tennessee Valleys to the Carolinas...
    Deep-layer moisture will advect northward ahead of a meandering
    surface low, beneath a nearly uncapped troposphere. As such, diurnal
    heating needs only to boost surface temperatures into the lower 70s
    F to initiate convection. These temperatures, along with low to mid
    60s F dewpoints, will support around 1000 J/kg SBCAPE by afternoon.
    Flow aloft is generally not expected to be overly strong, with
    slightly curved and short hodographs likely resulting in mainly
    pulse multicellular storms, although some supercells are possible
    across the Tennessee Valley toward southern Appalachians. Damaging
    gusts and hail will be the main threats, though a brief tornado or
    two could occur.

    ...Central Rockies into the Central High Plains...
    The approach of a low-amplitude mid-level trough, and diurnal
    heating of an uncapped boundary layer, will support scattered to
    numerous thunderstorms during the afternoon and evening hours. A
    deep and dry boundary layer should become established by afternoon
    peak heating, resulting in high-based pulse/multicell storms
    capable of producing isolated severe gusts (given 7-9 C/km low and
    mid-level lapse rates). A couple instances of severe hail may also
    accompany storms over the central High Plains, where low-level
    moisture is slightly more favorable.

    ...West/northwest Texas...
    A narrow corridor of thunderstorm potential exists ahead of a
    diffuse dryline over western Texas by afternoon peak heating, where
    the dryline circulation may be strong enough to assist in the
    initiation of isolated thunderstorms amid minimal CINH. Low-level
    moisture will be meager, with mid 80s F surface temperatures and low
    50s F dewpoints contributing to over 30 F spreads, so any storms
    that develop will be high based. If/where storms develop, somewhat
    elongated hodographs suggest that supercells would be the dominant
    mode of convection, accompanied by an isolated severe wind/hail
    risk.

    ...Northern New England...
    An adequately unstable environment on the southern fringe of
    stronger westerlies aloft could support a few strong to locally
    severe storms this afternoon, potentially spanning parts of northern
    New York and Vermont/New Hampshire into nearby Maine.

    ..Guyer/Dean.. 05/14/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri May 17 09:27:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 171300
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 171258

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0758 AM CDT Fri May 17 2024

    Valid 171300Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE SOUTHEAST...AND PARTS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms may impact parts of the central into eastern
    Gulf Coast states and portions of the northern Great Plains this
    afternoon through tonight.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a progressive, split-flow pattern will shift
    eastward across the CONUS. In the northern stream, a complex trough
    over western Canada and the U.S Pacific Northwest should evolve
    gradually to a closed cyclone over central parts of AB and SK by the
    end of the period. A basal perturbation -- evident in moisture-
    channel imagery over WA -- will move eastward to western ND by 12Z
    tomorrow. This feature will be preceded by 9-12 hours along a
    similar path, by a weaker (yet still influential) shortwave trough
    now over the northern Rockies. This perturbation should reach
    western ND at or shortly before 00Z.

    The main pattern split occurs around the northwest side of a
    separate shortwave trough -- extending initially from the Mid-South west-southwestward across the Red River region of southern OK/north
    TX, then southwestward over the Big Bend region. This trough should
    shed its northeastern portion, lose some positive tilt, and reach
    near a LIT-TXK-ALI line by 12Z. A strong belt of west-southwesterly
    mid/upper winds will extend from the northwestern Gulf and east TX
    across much of the Southeast. This flow field will host numerous
    small-scale vorticity maxima (some convectively induced/magnified).

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a wavy, quasistationary frontal
    zone extending from just off the SC coast across central FL, to the northeastern Gulf, where it has been overtaken by an MCS and
    accompanying outflow extending to just off the MS coastline. The
    front was evident again from a weak low near ARA southwestward over
    the mid/upper TX coastal waters to between MFE-LRD. The western
    segment of this boundary should move southeastward through the
    remainder of deep south TX by mid/late afternoon. Meanwhile, the front-reinforcing outflow boundary from the MCS should move
    northward to northeastward and inland today, gradually becoming more
    diffuse amidst a broad, ambient, low-level theta-e advection regime.

    ...Southeastern CONUS...
    Ongoing convection capable of isolated severe potential includes:
    1. A long-lived MCS/bow echo moving east-southeastward from the
    northeastern Gulf/Apalachee Bay region across coastal northwestern
    FL, mainly moving over relatively stable surface air along and north
    of the front. This complex may penetrate strong to isolated severe
    gusts to the surface the next 1-2 hours before weakening. See SPC
    mesoscale discussion 813 for near-term details.
    2. Isolated to scattered thunderstorms, elevated atop the cold pool
    from the northeastern Gulf complex, with potential for isolated
    severe hail for a few more hours.

    Thunderstorms in the expanding warm sector, and along the front,
    should pose a risk for a few tornadoes, along with large hail and
    severe gusts, this afternoon into tonight. The main uncertainty at
    this time is coverage, and by which preferred mechanism the greatest
    lift will occur (related concepts). Warm-frontal passage and
    diurnal heating will combine to destabilize the airmass inland from southwest-northeast today, with upper 60s to mid 70s F surface
    dewpoints. This will yield MLCAPE in the 2000-3500 J/kg range,
    beneath 45-60 kt effective-shear magnitudes, once surface-based
    parcels are attained. A more-focused area of severe potential may
    develop within the lengthy corridor outlooked, particularly near the inland-shifting baroclinic zone where low-level shear should be
    maximized. However, mesoscale uncertainties are still too large to
    introduce greater unconditional severe probabilities at this time.

    ...Northern Plains...
    Scattered, high-based thunderstorms are expected to develop this
    afternoon over the Bighorns and perhaps farther northward/
    northeastward over the Plains of southeastern MT. Activity then
    should sweep east-northeastward across the northern Great Plains
    into the eastern Dakotas and perhaps northwestern MN tonight before
    weakening. Along that swath, one or more clusters of cold-pool-
    driven convection are possible, offering severe gusts.

    A deep, well-mixed subcloud layer will support locally intense
    downdrafts, which may also include downward momentum transfer from
    strong midlevel winds, and which should be the most common in and
    near the 15%/"slight" probabilities. Surface dewpoints initially
    analyzed in the 40s to low 50s across the region should lower to the
    mid/upper 30s and 40s today, as diurnal heating and mixing reduce boundary-layer moisture content. Nonetheless, steep low/middle-
    level lapse rates will be fostered by the approaching shortwave
    perturbation and surface heating. Meanwhile, remaining moisture
    will support surface-based buoyancy across much of the area, with
    MLCAPE 200-700 J/kg being common. At least loosely organized cold
    pools should drive this activity across a broad swath of the Dakotas
    before weakening tonight over or near the Red River of the North.

    ...South TX...
    Ongoing areas of thunderstorms over south TX in the SAT-CRP-LRD
    triangle, and approaching deep south TX from adjoining MX, are
    moving generally east-northeastward across this region. Activity
    will be capable of isolated, episodic large hail through midday,
    amid favorable deep shear and elevated buoyancy, before shifting
    east of the area.

    ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/17/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat May 18 09:05:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 181258
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 181257

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0757 AM CDT Sat May 18 2024

    Valid 181300Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF
    NORTHERN FLORIDA AND THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHERN ATLANTIC COAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The greatest severe-thunderstorm potential today appears to be from
    the Florida Panhandle eastward to the southern Atlantic Coast, with
    damaging gusts the main concern.

    ...Synopsis...
    Distinct northern- and southern-stream features over nearly opposite
    parts of the CONUS will continue to exert the greatest influence on severe-thunderstorm potential. In the North, a well-developed,
    zonal to cyclonic mid/upper-level jet core was evident from the
    coastal Northwest to the northern Plains. Some amplification in
    that belt is likely overnight, as a shortwave trough digs
    southeastward across the Pacific Northwest.

    Downstream, a compact but strong shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over western ND and southeastern SK --
    should move east-northeastward to southern MB and northern MN by
    00Z, forming a closed 500-mb low over the Lake Winnipeg vicinity.
    The attached trough should eject northeastward to northwestern ON by
    12Z tomorrow. The associated surface cold front -- drawn at 11Z
    over eastern MN to near FSD, EAR, GLD and PUB -- should reach Lake
    Superior, northern WI, central IA, and south-central KS by 00Z,
    stalling across southwestern KS into eastern CO. By 12Z, the front
    should reach northern Lower MI, northern to west-central IL, and
    northern MO, while moving northward as a warm front near the I-70
    corridor in KS.

    Meanwhile, a positively tilted mid/upper-level shortwave trough --
    with several associated vorticity maxima -- was evident in
    moisture-channel imagery from KY across the Mid-South to
    south-central TX. The main vorticity lobe -- now over the
    northeastern AR/western TN area -- should shift eastward to middle
    TN by 00Z, with trough southwestward to TX shelf waters of the Gulf.
    By 12Z, the trough should extend from the western Carolinas across
    southern AL. The associated surface low -- analyzed at 11Z near MEM
    -- should move eastward today and devolve into a weak trough. An outflow-reinforced marine front was analyzed over shelf waters off
    the middle Texas Coast to just southeast of the Mississippi River
    mouth to near PNS, then across southern parts of GA and SC. This
    boundary should drift eastward over the north-central Gulf Coast
    region and across GA.

    ...Southeast...
    Scattered thunderstorms in clusters -- including occasional/embedded
    supercells -- have been persistent this morning just offshore from
    the LA/MS/AL coastline to near the western FL Panhandle, reinforcing
    the marine/outflow boundary on the southern margins of that
    convection. That, and persistent rainfall north of the boundary
    across southeastern LA to the AL Gulf Coast, have led to decreasing unconditional severe potential over those areas.

    Instead, the greatest threat today should be with the eastern/inland
    extent of the loosely organized Gulf convective plume, which extends
    along and north of the boundary over the FL Panhandle and southern
    GA. Damaging wind will be the main concern, with a tornado or two
    possible, and isolated large hail. This region should continue to
    exhibit the greatest low-level moisture/instability through the day
    as the convection undergoes a net eastward shift, with surface
    dewpoints commonly in the 70s F, areas of cloud-tempered diurnal
    heating, weak MLCINH and MLCAPE reaching the 2000-2500 J/kg range.
    Deep shear will favor organized convection, with effective-shear
    vectors continuing to be commonly in the 40-50-kt range -- albeit
    aligned with a substantial component parallel to the main swath of
    convective lift. As such, mode should remain somewhat messy,
    clustered to linear, with some embedded supercell/bow structures
    possible.

    Elsewhere, less-organized convection (mainly due to weaker shear)
    should occur near the peninsular FL Atlantic Coast, and ahead of the
    midlevel vorticity lobe and surface low/trough, from the Mid-South
    across the Tennessee Valley. Isolated damaging gusts and marginally
    severe hail will be possible.

    ...Midwest...
    Thunderstorms should develop from mid/late afternoon into early
    evening along the cold front -- with coverage diminishing from
    scattered across the Lake Superior and WI/northeastern IA regions to
    widely scattered or isolated from southern IA to portions of KS.
    Damaging gusts will be the main concern, though any sustained,
    relatively discrete cell may rotate and produce locally large hail
    as well.

    Development should occur later over the MO/KS segment than farther
    north, due to the presence of capping related to an EML. The
    strongest flow aloft and deep shear should remain behind the surface
    front, with effective-shear magnitudes generally ranging from around
    45-50 kt over the MN Arrowhead to less than 30 kt over southeastern
    KS. Low/middle-level lapse rates and boundary-layer moisture also
    should increase with southward extent, but the opposite will be true
    for deep-layer lift/forcing. A narrow corridor of favorable MLCAPE
    should develop today ahead of the front, ranging from around 1000
    J/kg either side of western Lake Superior to 2000 J/kg over east-
    central KS. These offsetting factors and the probable quick
    evolution to quasi-linear mode in northern areas -- combined with a
    narrow east-west and temporal window for the most vigorous
    convection before nocturnal stabilization contribute to weakening --
    support keeping unconditional probabilities at marginal levels for
    this update.

    ...Central High Plains...
    Widely scattered, high-based, somewhat skeletal thunderstorms are
    expected to develop over the mountains and foothills of central/
    south-central CO this afternoon near the front, and move
    east-northeastward over the adjoining High Plains from late
    afternoon into parts of tonight. The main concern will be isolated strong-severe downbursts. Activity will be supported initially by
    diurnal heating of higher terrain, with marginal but adequate
    moisture to support convection at those altitudes. While strong
    gusts are possible in the mountains, the activity should move atop a
    deep, well-mixed subcloud layer over the downshear central High
    Plains. That deep boundary layer will be characterized by nearly
    dry-adiabatic lapse rates, and enough moisture to support 200-500
    J/kg MLCAPE. Eastward extent of the threat is uncertain, but in
    general, should diminish overnight as nocturnal stabilizing of the
    near-surface profile proceeds.

    ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/18/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat May 18 13:08:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 181631
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 181629

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1129 AM CDT Sat May 18 2024

    Valid 181630Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    NORTH FLORIDA AND SOUTHERN GEORGIA...AND PARTS OF THE WESTERN GREAT
    LAKES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The greatest severe-thunderstorm potential today appears to be from
    the Florida Panhandle eastward to the southern Atlantic Coast, and
    portions of the western Great Lakes region.

    ...North FL/South GA...
    A persistent band of widespread showers and thunderstorms extends
    from the FL Panhandle into southern GA. This band will sag
    southward through the day, with occasional intensification along the
    leading edge as daytime heating destabilizes the upstream
    environment. Locally gusty/damaging winds appear to be the main
    threat.

    ...FL East Coast...
    Strong heating is occurring along the FL peninsula, where hot/humid
    conditions will be present this afternoon. Westerly low-level flow
    will focus a rather strong sea-breeze circulation, with most CAM
    solutions suggesting scattered thunderstorm development. It is
    uncertain whether the activity will be along the immediate
    coastline, or offshore. However, sufficient vertical shear and CAPE
    profiles indicate a risk of supercells capable of large hail and
    perhaps a tornado/waterspout or two.


    ...Western Great Lakes into Central Plains...
    A surface cold front will extend from western WI into parts of
    IA/MO/KS by mid-afternoon. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to
    form along the front from the MN Arrowhead southward into western
    WI, with more isolated convection from there southward into the
    Plains states. Forecast soundings in MI/WI/Upper MI show favorable
    vertical shear profiles for a few supercell structures capable of
    hail and damaging wind gusts. Therefore have added a SLGT risk area
    for that scenario. From IA south, relatively weak winds in the
    lowest 6km and a deep sub-cloud layer suggest outflow dominant
    storms with a more marginal severe threat.

    ...CO/Western KS...
    Model guidance and water vapor imagery show a plume of mid-level
    moisture spreading into central CO. This should result in a cluster
    of thunderstorms over the mountains by mid-afternoon, spreading
    eastward into the Plains this evening. Inverted-v sounding profiles
    and favorable westerly flow aloft will promote gusty/damaging wind
    potential in some of this activity.

    ...MS/AL into the Carolinas...
    A relatively moist and unstable air mass is in place today across
    the TN Valley into the Carolinas. Little cap and pockets of daytime
    heating will lead to scattered afternoon thunderstorms throughout
    the region - with some potential for locally gusty/damaging wind
    gusts. Areas of slightly greater focus for concern of strong storms
    are 1) Ahead of the MCV currently over northern MS, and 2) an axis
    from northern AL into central NC along the northern edge of slightly
    stronger winds aloft.

    ..Hart/Jewell.. 05/18/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun May 19 08:45:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 191300
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 191258

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0758 AM CDT Sun May 19 2024

    Valid 191300Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PORTIONS OF
    KANSAS...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF EAST-CENTRAL/SOUTHEASTERN FLORIDA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    An organized swath of severe thunderstorm wind (potential derecho)
    is expected mainly across parts of Kansas this afternoon and
    evening, possibly extending into northern Oklahoma. Gusts of 75-100
    mph are possible, along with large hail and a few tornadoes.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad fetch of westerly to southwesterly flow will cover most of
    the central CONUS. This will persist downstream from a synoptic-
    scale trough over the Pacific Northwest that should amplify into the
    Great Basin region through the period. The downstream flow field
    contains several embedded shortwaves, including a convectively
    generated perturbation now over parts of KS/NE. This feature should
    eject northeastward over the upper Mississippi Valley this evening,
    and away from the main threat area. However, an upstream shortwave
    trough -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the Four Corners
    region -- will move east-northeastward and influence convective
    potential over the central Plains this afternoon and evening.

    Elsewhere aloft, a persistent trough was evident across portions of
    VA, the Carolinas, GA, and AL, with cyclonic flow downstream over
    the southern Atlantic Coast and as far south as most of the FL
    Peninsula. This trough should reach the NC/SC/GA coastlines and
    northwestern FL by 00Z, and south FL by 12Z tomorrow.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a cold front from northeastern ON
    across Lower MI, western IL, west-central MO and east-central KS,
    where it is being overtaken by an outflow boundary arching
    southwestward across south-central KS to the OK Panhandle. The
    outflow boundary is expected to stall in the next few hours, then
    shift northward over southern and central KS through the day. A
    dryline extended from eastern CO across the western TX Panhandle to
    near LBB, MAF and northern Coahuila. The dryline should mix
    eastward slightly today, reaching near the KS/CO line and eastern TX
    Panhandle by mid/late afternoon. Elsewhere, a weak cold front was
    drawn from a low offshore from NC southwestward over northern FL,
    and should move slowly southward into central FL today.

    ...Central Plains...
    Thunderstorms are expected to develop during mid/late afternoon
    behind the dryline over the eastern Raton Mesa region, as well as
    along the dryline itself, and move east-northeastward to eastward
    into increasing moisture and instability. As they do, some of the
    activity should aggregate into clusters as smaller-scale outflows
    combine and enlarge. With supportive internal feedback of an
    organizing cold pool, associated forced ascent at the front and
    rear-inflow jet, and supportive midlevel winds for downward momentum
    transfer, as well as the residual and diurnally destabilized outflow
    boundary, the overall meso-alpha-scale pattern appears quite
    suitable for an organized, potentially significant-severe
    convective-wind swath to result. The most probable corridor for
    such growth still appears to be across KS in and near the "moderate
    risk" corridor, driven by wind probabilities.

    Initially separate dryline development over the northeastern TX
    Panhandle and northwestern OK may blend into (or even get undercut
    by outflow from) the broader event as well, after a few hours'
    discrete time to its south, with a threat of large hail, locally
    severe gusts and perhaps a tornado or two. Other afternoon
    development, along the dryline, in the mountains of northern CO and southeastern WY, and over the Black Hills, may move east-
    northeastward across a narrow moist sector and produce severe gusts
    and hail into parts of the adjoining High Plains of western NE and
    the Dakotas.

    Near and behind the KS-to-Panhandles dryline segment, the storm-
    initiation environment will be characterized by increasing
    large-scale ascent and upper divergence ahead of the ejecting Four
    Corners shortwave trough, as well as strong diurnal heating, mixing
    and deepening of the boundary layer. Superposition of these effects
    will lead to nearly 9 deg C/km lapse rates throughout the lower/
    middle troposphere, supporting 2000-3000 J/kg MLCAPE just east of
    the dryline. A deep subcloud layer conducive to strong-severe
    downdrafts will be available to storms over western KS from the
    beginning, and should support growth/merger of resultant outflows
    before activity moves into greater moisture. Forced ascent of the
    moist boundary layer should help to sustain the forward-propagating
    complex into strengthening nocturnal MLCINH at least across eastern
    KS, and perhaps into parts of the lower Missouri Valley, before it
    weakens tonight.

    ...FL...
    Scattered thunderstorms should develop this afternoon near the I-95
    corridor and roughly between MIA and the Space Coast, along and
    south of a weak cold front. Organized multicells and a few
    supercells are possible, offering large hail and damaging to locally
    severe gusts before they move offshore. An active Atlantic
    sea-breeze pattern will be augmented by mid/upper support preceding
    the trough aloft. Strong diurnal heating, a deep troposphere and
    rich low-level moisture (with dewpoints commonly in the 70s F and
    16.5-18.5 g/kg mean mixing ratios) will support 2000-3000 J/kg peak
    MLCAPE. Though weak near-surface winds will limit hodograph size,
    30-45 kt effective-shear magnitudes and potential boundary
    interactions will support storm organization, including supercell
    potential.

    ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/19/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon May 27 11:00:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 271300
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 271259

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0759 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024

    Valid 271300Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER MUCH OF THE
    ATLANTIC SEABOARD AND NORTH/CENTRAL TX...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the lower
    Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, and Southeast. More isolated severe
    thunderstorms are possible this afternoon and evening across much of
    central and east Texas, as well as southwest Oklahoma and the
    mid/upper Mississippi Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a messy synoptic-scale trough -- accompanied by
    several northern- and southern-stream shortwaves and vorticity
    maxima -- will proceed eastward across ON, the upper Great Lakes,
    and the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys through the period. A northern-
    stream perturbation -- initially extending from Lower MI across N --
    should pivot over Lake Huron and the upper Ohio Valley/lower Great
    Lakes today. The southern part should reach central/eastern PA and
    central NY by 00Z. Meanwhile, a strong upstream perturbation -- now
    evident in moisture-channel imagery over the Dakotas -- should move southeastward to southern MN and IA by 00Z, then portions of IN/OH
    around the end of the period. In the southern stream, a positively
    tiled shortwave trough -- containing a string of vorticity maxima
    (some convectively induced) -- will move eastward over the
    southeastern CONUS.

    At the surface, a well-occluded low was apparent at 11Z over
    northern Lake Michigan, with occluded/cold front arching across
    Lower MI, OH, the Ozarks, and north-central to west-central TX. The
    front was preceded over much of the Appalachians, Southeast and
    Mid-South by extensive convective outflow. By 00Z, the front should
    reach western/central NY, the central/southern Appalachians, and
    central LA, becoming a stationary to slow-moving warm front over north-central/northwest TX into northern NM. A dryline -- now
    located near a DYS-SJT-SOA line and into northern Coahuila -- should
    move only slightly eastward today while becoming more sharply
    defined as moisture returns northward, to the south of the frontal
    zone.

    ...Atlantic Seaboard to Southeast...
    Ongoing complexes of strong-severe thunderstorms over portions of AL
    and GA may produce continued damaging wind -- along with isolated
    large hail and/or a tornado -- while moving into a favorably moist
    and slowly diurnally destabilizing airmass in their path over GA.
    Meanwhile, initially subsevere northeastern parts of the original
    MCS that crossed the southern Appalachians also may re-intensify
    over the remainder of the morning into midday. See SPC Severe
    Thunderstorm Watches 331-332 and related mesoscale discussions for
    near-term details.

    Northern parts of this activity -- or additional thunderstorms
    developing along the front of the residual pressure and theta-e
    perturbations from activity that crossed the Appalachians overnight
    -- may result in widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms in
    clusters through at least midday over parts of the Carolinas, and
    perhaps into southern VA. Meanwhile, isolated to scattered
    strong-severe thunderstorms are expected to develop along/ahead of
    the front during midday and through the afternoon from the
    Mid-Atlantic into parts of upstate NY. Overall convective coverage
    may increase northward into stronger large-scale lift and
    frontal/prefrontal convergence, though low-level moisture will
    generally decrease, along with diurnal heating and midlevel lapse
    rates.

    Surface dewpoints should range from the low/mid 70s across GA and
    the Carolinas Piedmont/coastal plain (recovering behind last
    evening's MCS) to the 60s over most of the rest of the outlook
    corridor. Enough veering with height in the boundary layer and
    related hodograph curvature exist in forecast soundings --
    especially from eastern NC northward -- to support effective SRH in
    the 150-300 J/kg range, with supercell potential and some tornado
    threat apparent. Effective-shear magnitudes of 35-45 kt should be
    common, contributing to potential for both supercells and organized
    multicells in lines or clusters.

    ...Southern Plains...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible from north west TX southeastward across parts of LA and southern MS. Damaging gusts
    and large hail are the greatest concerns. Within that corridor,
    however, a conditional potential exists for isolated supercells
    offering large to very large/destructive hail, especially over
    north-central and parts of central TX. Given the large buoyancy
    forecast, and favorable deep shear, along with weak MLCINH and
    regionally maximized convergence expected with a surface low near
    the front/dryline intersection, confidence has increased enough to
    introduce unconditional significant-hail probabilities, upon which
    the "slight" area is based.

    Strong diurnal heating and decreasing EML-related capping with
    eastward extent will result in progressively greater convective
    potential and denser coverage along/ahead of the front this
    afternoon from northwest TX to the central Gulf Coast States.
    Surface dewpoints commonly in the 70s F and steep midlevel lapse
    rates will support a field of 4000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE over central/
    north TX south of the front, decreasing to a still favorable 2500-
    3500 J/kg over southern MS. Veering of winds with height, and a
    lengthy hodograph structure well-suited for hail production in any
    sustained supercells -- are expected in north-central TX. Coverage
    concerns linger, considering that height rises are forecast across
    this region through the period, behind the synoptic trough.

    ..Edwards/Goss.. 05/27/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon May 27 13:16:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 271647
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 271645

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1145 AM CDT Mon May 27 2024

    Valid 271630Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE EASTERN
    STATES AND PARTS OF TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the lower
    Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, and Southeast States. More isolated
    severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon and evening across
    much of central and east Texas, as well as southwest Oklahoma and
    the mid/upper Mississippi Valley.

    ...Eastern States/Southeast...
    An initial ongoing focus for severe potential is across Georgia near
    an outflow boundary and in the wake of an MCV across the Carolinas
    Piedmont as of midday. Regional WSR-88D VWPs are sampling
    supercell-favorable wind profiles across this region, with
    additional storm development/intensification as the air mass modifies/destabilizes across Georgia/South Carolina/southeast
    Alabama. Another favored zone of severe storm development, including supercells, may occur across eastern North Carolina/southeast
    Virginia this afternoon near, or in the immediate wake of, the MCV,
    in the presence of a very moist and strongly unstable boundary
    layer.

    Farther north, a broad north-south zone of severe thunderstorm
    potential exists near, or more so in the immediate lee of, the
    Appalachians. For additional details, see Mesoscale Discussion 1013.
    Sufficient deep-layer shear and buoyancy will support potential for
    both supercells and organized multicells in lines or clusters.
    Damaging winds are expected to be the most common risks, but large
    hail is also possible, along the potential for a couple of tornadoes regionally.

    ...Southern Plains including North/Central Texas...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorm development is possible across a
    broad part of North/central Texas by mid/late afternoon. Large hail
    and damaging winds gusts are the greatest concerns in the presence
    of large buoyancy and supercell-favorable deep-layer shear. The most
    probable area for potentially intense deep convection will be near
    the stalled/slow-moving front and east of the dryline, including a
    corridor across North Texas/Big Country into central Texas including
    the Concho Valley and Hill Country vicinity. Surface dewpoints
    commonly in the 70s F and steep mid-level lapse rates will support
    4000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE. A few small clusters could evolve by evening.
    Later tonight, additional elevated/potentially severe storms will
    probably form across western/southern Oklahoma and western North
    Texas to the north of the surface front.

    ...Midwest including Iowa/Illinois...
    A clipper-type shortwave trough over southern Minnesota and northern
    Iowa this morning will continue southeastward today toward the Great
    Lakes. Low-level moisture (50s F surface dewpoints) and overall
    buoyancy will be limited in the wake of the primary cold front
    approaching the Appalachians, but adequate moisture in the presence
    of steepening low/mid-level lapse rates could yield some storms
    capable of strong/gusty winds and possibly some hail during the
    mid/late afternoon through early evening.

    ..Guyer/Squitieri.. 05/27/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed May 29 07:37:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 290556
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 290555

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1255 AM CDT Wed May 29 2024

    Valid 291200Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN AND CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong storms posing a risk for severe hail and wind
    appear likely across the northern and central High Plains late this
    afternoon and evening. Isolated strong storms will also be possible
    over parts of the southern Plains to lower Mississippi Valley, into
    the middle Rio Grande Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    Early morning satellite imagery shows a pair of shortwave troughs
    within the northern stream, one moving southeastward across the
    Upper Midwest and another progressing eastward through the Pacific
    Northwest. Full-latitude shortwave ridging exists between these two
    features, extending from northern Mexico into central Saskatchewan.

    Eastern shortwave trough is forecast to pivot more eastward as it
    moves into the OH Valley before then continuing eastward throughout
    the day through the northern Mid-Atlantic States. Thunderstorm
    development is anticipated ahead of this system from the middle OH
    Valley through the northern Mid-Atlantic and southern New England. A
    damaging gust or two is possible with these storms, but a
    predominantly multicellular mode and weak vertical shear is expected
    to limit the overall severe coverage.

    Farther west, the Pacific Northwest shortwave is expected to
    continue eastward across the northern Rockies into the northern
    Plains. As it does, lee troughing will sharpen across the northern
    High Plains, with eventual cyclogenesis anticipated. The resultant
    surface low is then forecast to track northeastward across eastern
    MT and western ND late Wednesday night/early Thursday morning.
    Thunderstorms are anticipated ahead of this shortwave and attendant
    surface low as well as down the lee trough across the central and
    southern High Plains.

    ...Northern Rockies into the Northern High Plains...
    Afternoon thunderstorm development is anticipated ahead of the
    approaching shortwave trough from southwest MT into
    northwest/north-central WY and southeast MT. In this region, strong boundary-layer mixing and increasing mid-level moisture will
    contribute to airmass destabilization ahead of the approaching wave.
    Buoyancy will be modest, but the high-based character of the storms
    could still result in strong outflow capable of producing damaging
    gusts.

    Afternoon thunderstorm development is anticipated ahead of the
    shortwave trough as well, where strong heating, moderate low-level
    moisture and low-level convergence will support convective
    initiation. A relatively narrow axis of destabilization is
    anticipated across the western Dakotas, where a storm could become
    strong enough to produce hail and/or damaging gusts. The eastern
    extent of the severe threat will be limited by diminishing buoyancy
    into the central Dakotas.

    ...Central/Southern High Plains...
    Strong heating and low-level moisture advection will support airmass destabilization across the central and southern High Plains.
    Persistent low-level convergence coupled with glancing large-scale
    ascent is expected to result in convective initiation by the late afternoon/early evening. Highest coverage is expected across the
    central High Plains, with weakening large-scale ascent with southern
    extent likely limiting coverage. Large hail is possible with initial development, but outflow-dominant storm structures are likely, with
    damaging gusts as the primary risk.

    ...Central/Southeast TX into Lower MS Valley...
    Thunderstorms may still be ongoing across central TX this morning,
    supported by persistent warm-air advection across remnant outflow.
    Given the weak large-scale ascent and potential presence of a
    convectively generated vorticity maximum, the evolution of these
    early morning storms is uncertain. Some guidance suggests there is
    potential for an MCS to develop as the vorticity maximum moves into
    the moist airmass across central TX. Other guidance shows
    development along the northeast and southern periphery of the
    vorticity maximum, but with little linear organization. Modest
    westerly flow aloft atop southeasterly surface winds along with
    moderate instability will favor hail and areas of strong gusts with
    any mature convection. However, the uncertainty on convective
    evolution and resulting coverage precludes upgrading probabilities
    across the region with this outlook.

    ..Mosier/Barnes.. 05/29/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri May 31 09:30:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 311250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 311248

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0748 AM CDT Fri May 31 2024

    Valid 311300Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH THIS
    EVENING ACROSS THE CENTRAL/SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...FROM SOUTHWEST TX
    TO THE TX COAST...AND ACROSS THE ARK-LA-MISS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few severe storms with large hail and damaging winds will be
    possible this afternoon/evening across the central/southern High
    Plains, from southwest Texas to the Texas coast, and across the
    Ark-La-Miss.

    ...Central/southeast TX to the Ark-La-Miss through this evening...
    An MCS that formed overnight in central TX continues to move
    southeastward toward the upper and middle TX coastal plain, with
    some continuing threat for at least isolated damaging winds and some
    hail (mainly west end of the MCS). Other convection has formed
    farther northwest atop the trailing cold pool, and these storms may
    also pose an isolated large hail threat. Once the convection moves
    off the upper and middle TX coast later this morning, a large
    portion of TX to the north of the ongoing storms will have been
    stabilized by convective overturning. Thus, have opted to remove
    some of the SLGT risk area across east TX.

    Farther east, lingering low-level moisture, pockets of surface
    heating later today, and the approach of remnant MCVs and a midlevel
    trough from the Red River Valley may support some uptick in storm coverage/intensity this afternoon from northern LA into southeastern
    AR. Potentially moderate buoyancy (assuming sufficient surface
    heating) and modest vertical shear could support a few
    semi-organized clusters and/or weak supercells capable of producing
    isolated damaging winds/large hail, and perhaps a tornado or two.

    Farther west, there will be some potential for additional storm
    development this afternoon/evening along the outflow boundary
    trailing westward into the Edwards Plateau and Trans-Pecos. Any
    storms that form in this corridor could become supercells capable of
    produce isolated large hail in an environment with steep midlevel
    lapse rates, moderate-strong buoyancy, and effective bulk shear in
    excess of 40 kt.

    ...Central/southern High Plains through tonight...
    In the wake of overnight convection, clouds and weak northerly
    low-level flow are present across northeast CO. A weak upslope
    regime will become established during the day, and cloud breaks will
    allow pockets of surface heating (stronger farther south toward
    southeast CO). Potentially moderate buoyancy (MLCAPE of 1000-1500
    J/kg) and sufficiently long/straight hodographs will support
    supercells capable of producing large hail, while damaging winds
    will also be possible with any upscale growth into small clusters.
    A couple of storm clusters could persist into the overnight hours
    into western KS and the TX Panhandle in response to a weak low-level
    jet and associated warm advection.

    ..Thompson/Grams.. 05/31/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Jun 1 09:54:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 011241
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 011240

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0740 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024

    Valid 011300Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON
    INTO TONIGHT FROM WESTERN NE TO WEST TX...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected to
    develop across the central and southern High Plains region,
    including portions of the Big Bend of Texas, this afternoon. This
    activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into
    the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail,
    and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks.

    ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight...
    Several clusters of thunderstorms are ongoing this morning across
    western NE, near the KS/OK border, and along the NM/TX border. Weak
    low-level warm advection and/or remnant MCVs appear to be driving
    this convection, though each of the clusters are likely to weaken
    later this morning. In the wake of this morning convection, a
    surface front will persist across western NE, with weak lee
    troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to
    modest westerly midlevel flow. Scattered thunderstorms are expected
    to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and
    immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move
    eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight.

    The environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells
    immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs
    (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and
    MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size
    (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be
    possible. Farther north, a few supercells may also form across
    eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in
    diameter will be possible. Upscale growth into a storm cluster or
    two is also expected later this evening into tonight from southwest
    NE into western KS and the TX Panhandle, in response to a nocturnal
    low-level jet and a related increase in low-level warm advection.
    Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat
    should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-75 mph with the
    upscale growth.

    ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon...
    Scattered thunderstorm development is expected today along a stalled
    front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. Regional
    12z soundings revealed strong buoyancy along and south of the
    boundary, with moderately strong westerly flow above the 500 mb
    pressure level. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak
    supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce
    isolated large hail and wind damage. This area may need to be
    monitored for a little higher wind/hail probabilities this
    afternoon.

    ...MS/AL/TN area today...
    A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move
    slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of
    different storm clusters will be possible today near and just east
    of the midlevel trough where the surface warm sector across
    MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional
    VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm
    advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer
    dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of
    surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include
    embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief
    tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage.

    ..Thompson/Grams.. 06/01/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Jun 3 08:46:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 031257
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 031256

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0756 AM CDT Mon Jun 03 2024

    Valid 031300Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH TONIGHT
    FOR OK/NORTH TX EASTWARD TO THE ARK-LA-MISS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from much of the
    Mississippi Valley into the Ozark Plateau and southern Plains today.
    A more concentrated area of severe thunderstorm risk may become
    focused across southwest and southern Oklahoma this evening into
    early tonight.

    ...Southern Plains to the lower MS Valley through tonight...
    As has been the case for the past several nights across the Great
    Plains, nocturnal convection has persisted into the morning in a few
    different clusters. The most substantial of these has been an MCS
    with a history of 60-80 mph measured gusts earlier this morning
    across southwest KS. This MCS has weakened more recently, but some
    form of the convection should continue east-southeastward through
    the morning toward central OK, along the north edge of the MUCAPE up
    to 3000 J/kg. Confidence in the details of the MCS evolution is
    low, though there is some potential for the storms to potentially
    reach the Ark-La-Tex and the western half of AR by this evening, and
    perhaps as far east as the Ark-La-Miss region early tonight before
    the storms weaken.

    Outflow trailing southwestward from these morning storms will likely
    provide a mesoscale focus for supercell development this afternoon
    along the stalling boundary in the vicinity of southwest OK border.
    Here, rich low-level moisture (boundary-layer dewpoints in the
    low-mid 70s) and surface heating will drive MLCAPE to near 5000 J/kg
    with weakening convective inhibition after peak surface heating. At
    least isolated thunderstorm development is expected late this
    afternoon/evening near the outflow/dryline intersection (close to
    the southwest OK/southeast TX Panhandle border), and storms will
    subsequently move southeastward along the stalled boundary. Despite
    rather modest flow aloft, an enhanced easterly component to the
    low-level flow near the outflow boundary will contribute to
    sufficient hodograph length/curvature for right-moving supercells.
    The extreme buoyancy, sufficiently low LCL heights and some
    enhancement to low-level shear along the boundary will favor the
    potential for a couple of tornadoes, in addition to isolated very
    large hail (up to 3 inches in diameter) and damaging gusts. These
    evening storms, or additional storms associated with warm advection,
    will be possible tonight across southern and central OK.

    ...Southern WI and vicinity this afternoon/evening...
    A remnant MCV over IA will move northeastward over WI this
    afternoon, atop a subtle surface front/trough and differential
    heating zone. As surface temperatures warm to 75-80 F in cloud
    breaks and boundary-layer dewpoints increase to 65-70 F, moderate
    buoyancy (MLCAPE near 1500 J/kg) will develop in the warm sector
    from eastern IA/northwest IL into southern WI. Despite some
    localized enhancement to vertical shear with the remnant MCV,
    deep-layer vertical shear will generally remain weak (primarily
    supporting multicell clusters and low-end supercell structures).
    Thus, expect a few clusters of storms capable of producing
    occasional wind damage and isolated large hail of 1-1.5 inches in
    diameter for a few hours this afternoon/evening.

    ..Thompson/Grams.. 06/03/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Jun 4 08:22:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 041252
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 041251

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0751 AM CDT Tue Jun 04 2024

    Valid 041300Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH TONIGHT
    FROM THE LOWER MS VALLEY TO OK...THEN NORTHWARD ACROSS EASTERN
    KS...IA AND MN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong-severe storms with wind damage and large hail will
    be possible this afternoon/evening from the middle Missouri Valley
    to the upper Mississippi Valley. An ongoing storm cluster near the
    Arklatex could persist through the day with some damaging-wind
    threat, and storms will be capable of producing isolated very large
    hail and severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph this evening into tonight
    across Oklahoma.

    ...Southern Plains to lower MS Valley through tonight...
    Another in a series of overnight MCSs is moving southeastward near
    the Arklatex, though the bowing system appears to have weakened
    prior to sunrise. The MCS is moving into an area overturned
    yesterday across LA/AR, with the primary moisture/buoyancy feed into
    the MCS from the south-southwest from the unstable warm sector in
    TX. There will still be some potential for eventual intensification
    of the storms as the low levels warm and moisten during the day, and
    the stronger embedded storms could produce damaging winds.

    Outflow from the morning storms will reinforce a composite outflow
    boundary, though the outflow is already somewhat diffuse with west/northwestward extent. It appears that the outflow air mass
    will modify through the day across OK during the day. There will be
    the potential for isolated thunderstorm development later this
    afternoon along the west edge of the richer moisture (near the
    western OK/TX border) where MLCAPE could exceed 5000 J/kg with only
    small convective inhibition. However, forcing for ascent will be
    rather nebulous and storm initiation/coverage are both in question.
    If storms form, there will be just enough vertical shear for
    supercells capable of producing isolated very large hail, and
    perhaps an isolated tornado. Confidence is greater in renewed
    thunderstorm development across KS this afternoon and into OK late
    this evening into early tonight, as a weak surface cold front and
    associated midlevel trough will move southeastward and impinge on
    the very moist/unstable warm sector. Very large buoyancy and nearly
    dry adiabatic lapse rates across OK will support large/tall storms
    capable of producing isolated very large hail initially, and an
    increase in the threat for damaging winds (60-80 mph) as storms grow
    upscale into another MCS tonight.

    ...Mid MO to upper MS Valleys this afternoon/evening...
    A midlevel shortwave trough and associated cold front will move
    eastward from NE/Dakotas to eastern KS/IA and WI by the end of the
    period. The richest low-level moisture will remain farther south,
    but surface heating in pre-frontal cloud breaks and boundary-layer
    dewpoints in the 60s will contribute to MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg.
    Vertical shear will be relatively weak in the warm sector which will
    primarily support multicell clusters and line segments capable of
    producing occasional wind damage and marginally severe hail.

    ...MO/IL today...
    A midlevel low over west central MO this morning will move
    northeastward toward central/northern IL by this evening. Lingering
    clouds will tend to slow surface heating, though cloud breaks could
    allow modest destabilization and support a few strong thunderstorm
    clusters capable of producing isolated strong/damaging outflow gusts
    and marginally severe hail.

    ..Thompson/Grams.. 06/04/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Jun 5 08:23:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 051252
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 051250

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0750 AM CDT Wed Jun 05 2024

    Valid 051300Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS
    AFTERNOON/EVENING FOR MN/WI...LOWER MI/IN/OH...NORTHERN
    VA/MD...SOUTHERN AND EASTERN ME...AND FROM SOUTH CENTRAL TX TO
    SOUTHERN MS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong storms are possible across portions of the Upper Midwest,
    Great Lakes, Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, and Texas Coastal Plain to the
    southern Mississippi.

    ...MN/WI to the Mid-Atlantic this afternoon/evening...
    Gradual pattern amplification is underway, with rising heights over
    the Rockies and a deepening, downstream trough from MB to the upper
    Great Lakes. A primary shortwave trough will dig southeastward from
    ND to WI by tonight, accompanied by cool midlevel temperatures and
    steep lapse rates below the 500 mb pressure level. Surface heating
    and lingering boundary-layer moisture will contribute to
    weak-moderate buoyancy in an environment with sufficient westerly
    deep-layer shear/hodograph length for scattered, low-topped cells to
    produce isolated wind damage and marginally severe hail this
    afternoon across MN/WI.

    Farther east, a lead shortwave trough will move generally eastward
    from IA/WI toward Lower MI and northwest OH by this afternoon. An
    associated, weak surface trough/cold front will accompany the
    midlevel trough into the OH Valley, which will help focus
    thunderstorm development this afternoon. Pockets of surface heating
    will boost afternoon temperatures to near 80 F with boundary-layer
    dewpoints in the mid-upper 60s, which will support MLCAPE up to 1000
    J/kg. However, deep-layer vertical shear will remain rather modest
    (effective bulk shear 20-30 kt) along with poor midlevel lapse rates
    around 6 C/km, which suggests that isolated wind damage with
    multicell clusters will be the main threat.

    Remnant, convectively enhanced midlevel troughs will move
    east-northeastward from WV and AL, coincident with the diurnal
    heating cycle near and east of the Appalachians. Widely scattered
    storm clusters will be possible this afternoon from GA into the
    western Carolinas, but poor lapse rates and weak vertical shear will
    limit any severe threat. Though lapse rates will be similarly poor
    into the Mid-Atlantic, there will be a zone of stronger low-level shear/hodograph curvature across northern VA/MD in advance of the
    MCV approaching from WV. Here, a few weakly rotating storms could
    produce isolated wind damage and a brief/weak tornado.

    ...TX/LA today...
    An overnight MCS continues to move southeastward into east TX and
    LA, though weak vertical shear has led to a cold pool dominated
    system with the deeper convection trailing well north of gust front.
    This MCS will likely continue to the northwest Gulf coast by late
    morning and offshore by early afternoon. There will be some
    potential for isolated strong/damaging outflow gusts, especially if
    there is any temporary/diurnal strengthening of the storms.
    However, the overall environment and convective structure suggest
    that any wind threat should remain marginal. A few storms may
    develop farther west this afternoon/evening along the trailing
    outflow boundary in the area around DRT. Large CAPE/steep lapse
    rates will support both strong updrafts and downdrafts, though weak
    vertical shear will generally limit storm longevity and the
    magnitude of any hail/wind threat.

    ...ME/NH this afternoon...
    Downstream of shortwave ridging in the midlevels, a weak northwest
    flow regime will persist today over northern New England. Lingering
    low-level moisture, surface heating in cloud breaks southeast of the
    higher terrain, and very subtle midlevel vorticity maxima will
    support a few thunderstorms this afternoon across southern/eastern
    ME and part of NH. MLCAPE of 1000-1500 J/kg and effective bulk
    shear near 25 kt (with longer hodographs aloft) will be sufficient
    for semi-organized storms capable of producing isolated wind damage
    and marginally severe hail for a few hours this afternoon.

    ..Thompson/Grams.. 06/05/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Jun 6 08:38:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 061216
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 061214

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0714 AM CDT Thu Jun 06 2024

    Valid 061300Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS
    AFTERNOON/EVENING ACROSS WESTERN OK AND THE EASTERN TX PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Damaging gusts of 60-70 mph will be possible this afternoon/evening
    across western Oklahoma and the eastern Texas Panhandle. Isolated
    wind damage will be possible this afternoon from eastern New York
    into the Carolinas, and isolated wind damage/hail may also occur
    across the central/east central Florida peninsula.

    ...TX Panhandle/western OK this afternoon/evening...
    In the wake of a midlevel low over the upper Great Lakes, a weak
    surface cold front will drift southward from KS into northern OK and
    the TX/OK Panhandles by later this afternoon/evening. Weak lee
    cyclogenesis across eastern NM will induce southerly low-level flow
    and northward moisture advection across TX/OK to the south of the
    front. Strong surface heating and the increase in low-level
    moisture will contribute to moderate buoyancy by mid-late afternoon
    (MLCAPE >1500 J/kg), in an environment of steep low-level lapse
    rates/deep mixing. Low-level convergence/ascent along the front
    should focus thunderstorm development by mid-late afternoon from
    northwest OK into the TX Panhandle, and storms will subsequently
    spread southward through the evening. Moderate buoyancy, inverted-V
    profiles and northwesterly effective bulk shear of 35-40 kt will
    favor a mix of multicell clusters and high-based supercells capable
    of producing severe outflow gusts (mainly 60-70 mph) and isolated
    large hail (1-1.5 inch diameter).

    ...East central FL this afternoon...
    The Atlantic coast sea breeze will likely be favored this afternoon
    for thunderstorm development, within a weak background westerly flow
    regime. Strong surface heating across the central peninsula,
    boundary-layer dewpoints in the 70s, and midlevel lapse rates near 7
    C/km will result in MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg with minimal convective
    inhibition. Seasonally cool midlevel temperatures (-8 to -10 C at
    500 mb) and the large buoyancy will support some threat for isolated
    large hail (1-1.5 inches in diameter) where vertical shear is
    slightly enhanced by the sea breeze. The large buoyancy will also
    result in substantial water-loaded downdrafts with the potential for
    isolated wind damage (55-65 mph gusts) in an environment with steep
    low-level lapse rates and DCAPE > 1000 J/kg.

    ...NY into the Carolinas this afternoon/evening...
    A pronounced midlevel trough will progress eastward from the Great
    Lakes to NY/PA by this evening, and it will be accompanied by a
    surface cold front and pre-frontal trough in the lee of the higher
    terrain. Midlevel lapse rates in the warm sector will not be steep,
    but surface heating in cloud breaks and boundary-layer dewpoints of
    65-70 F will support MLCAPE of 1000-1500 J/kg by early-mid
    afternoon, when storm development is expected along the surface
    boundaries. There will be some increase in midlevel flow over the
    surface warm sector this afternoon (30+ kt flow near 500 mb), which
    will favor primarily multicell clusters and line segments capable of
    producing occasional wind damage (50-60 mph gusts).

    Somewhat greater storm coverage is expected in the vicinity of
    eastern NY where forcing for ascent will be more focused, with more
    scattered storms farther south into the Carolinas. Despite weaker
    deep-layer vertical shear with southward extent toward the
    Carolinas, modest enhancement of flow in the 700-500 mb layer (30+
    kt) and steep low-level lapse rates will support isolated downbursts
    with wind damage. Portions of this area will be re-evaluated in
    later outlooks for higher wind probabilities, primarily for
    sufficient cloud breaks and resultant destabilization.

    ..Thompson/Grams.. 06/06/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Jun 9 08:20:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 091208
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 091207

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0707 AM CDT Sun Jun 09 2024

    Valid 091300Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND
    EVENING FROM ARKANSAS INTO PORTIONS OF THE MID SOUTH....

    ...SUMMARY...
    Locally severe storms, capable of producing damaging wind gusts and
    some hail, are possible from the Ozarks vicinity eastward across the
    Tennessee Valley and Southeast. Other isolated severe storms with
    severe gusts and hail will also be possible across portions of the
    central High Plains and southern Plains. Isolated strong to severe
    gusts may also occur over parts of the northern Intermountain region
    and northern High Plains.

    ...AR/Northern MS/West TN/Northwest AL...
    A large but weakening MCS is present this morning over
    central/southern MO. The associated surface outflow boundary
    extends from northwest OK into far southern MO, and should sag only
    slowly southward through the day. A very moist air mass is present
    from the boundary southward across much of AR and into west
    TN/northern MS/northern AL with dewpoints in the upper 60s to lower
    70s. Strong heating in this zone should result in afternoon MLCAPE
    values of 2000-3000 J/kg. Present indication are that scattered
    thunderstorms will develop in vicinity of the remnant boundary over
    northern AR and track southeastward across the SLGT risk area. Low
    level winds are rather weak, but strong west-northwesterly flow
    aloft will promote organized multicell or a few supercell storms
    capable of damaging wind gusts and hail. Activity may remain
    intense into western AL during the evening before weakening in a
    more stable air mass.

    ...Southern and Central High Plains...
    A rather large upper ridge is present today over the southwest
    states, with widespread mid-level moisture evident on water vapor
    imagery under the ridge. Strong heating will result in scattered
    afternoon thunderstorms over the higher terrain of central NM/CO/WY, propagating slowly eastward into the adjacent high Plains during the
    late afternoon. Weak winds aloft will limit organization. However,
    a deeply mixed boundary layer and sufficient CAPE will pose some
    risk of high-based thunderstorms capable of gusty/damaging winds and
    some hail.

    ...Northern Great Basin into MT/WY...
    Scattered high-based afternoon thunderstorms are expected today from
    portions of eastern OR into ID/MT/WY. This region is along the
    southern fringe of stronger anti-cyclonic westerly flow, and is
    characterized by inverted-v thermodynamic profiles. A few of the
    storms will pose a risk of locally gusty/damaging wind and hail
    through the afternoon and evening.

    ..Hart/Bentley.. 06/09/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Jun 10 07:00:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 100545
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 100544

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1244 AM CDT Mon Jun 10 2024

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND ACROSS PARTS OF THE
    SOUTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe storms with large hail and severe wind gusts are
    expected across parts of the central and northern High Plains.
    Scattered strong/severe thunderstorms are also expected across
    portions of the Southeast where hail/wind are possible.

    ...Northern/Central High Plains...

    Well-defined short-wave trough is currently located over eastern
    WA/OR, shifting east in line with late-evening model guidance. This
    feature is forecast to advance into western MT by 12z then shift
    into central MT/northwest WY by 18z before progressing into the
    western Dakotas by early evening. Primary LLJ response will be
    across western ND into southeast SK, though some increase is
    expected into western NE during the evening. Associated surface
    front will surge across much of MT by 18z, arcing back across
    northwest WY. Current thinking is convection will develop along this
    boundary fairly early with NAM sounding for BYG at 18z exhibiting
    negligible CINH and MLCAPE on the order of 1500 J/kg. Big Horn
    Mountains may be a focus for supercell initiation, though additional development is likely east of the mountains along/near the front
    over northeast WY. This activity will spread east toward the Black
    Hills region in response to the progressive short wave. Large hail
    and damaging winds are the main threats, though a brief tornado can
    not be ruled out.

    ...Southeast...

    Seasonally deep upper trough will hold across the eastern US through
    the day1 period. This flow regime will ensure modest-strong 500mb
    northwesterly flow across the southern Appalachians toward coastal
    SC/GA. Latest model guidance suggests strong boundary-layer heating
    will be noted across southern AL/GA where surface temperatures are
    expected to rise into the lower 90s by 19z. This will effectively
    remove inhibition as convective temperatures are breached. Latest
    HREF guidance is very aggressive developing thunderstorms within
    this veered low-level flow along the frontal zone. Strong
    surface-6km bulk shear favors supercells and large hail/damaging
    winds are possible. In addition, there is some low risk for a brief
    tornado or two where coastal boundaries are involved.

    ...Southern High Plains...

    Scattered-numerous thunderstorms are expected to develop once again
    across the southern High Plains along the front side of a weak upper
    ridge. Early this morning, a multifaceted complex of storms is
    ongoing from northeast NM, arcing across the TX South Plains into
    the Edwards Plateau. An MCV may evolve from this complex which will
    drift southeast during the day. There is some concern that robust
    convection may ultimately evolve where adequate boundary-layer
    heating occurs. At this time there is a bit too much uncertainty
    regarding the convective debris/remnant MCS activity to introduce a
    SLGT risk, but this may ultimately be warranted in later outlooks.

    ..Darrow/Weinman.. 06/10/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Jun 11 07:51:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 111209
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 111208

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0708 AM CDT Tue Jun 11 2024

    Valid 111300Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND
    EVENING ACROSS PORTIONS OF WEST CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered thunderstorms are possible across portions of Texas
    centered on the Edwards Plateau. Hail and gusty winds are the
    primary threats.

    ...West Central TX...
    Morning radar/satellite imagery shows a slow-moving MCS over western
    north TX, tracking slowly southeastward. This activity is
    associated with a weak upper low and related low-level warm
    advection over the region. An outflow boundary along the southern
    flank of this MCS will likely be the focus for afternoon
    thunderstorm development in a moist and moderately unstable air
    mass. Storms that form will track southeastward across the SLGT
    risk area, posing a risk of damaging wind gusts and some hail.

    ...CO/NM...
    Scattered afternoon high-based thunderstorms are expected to form
    over the mountains and foothills of northern NM/southern CO. These
    storms will be in a deeply mixed air mass, capable of locally gusty
    winds and hail for a few hours before weakening.

    ...Upper MS Valley...
    A surface cold front will sweep eastward across the upper MS Valley
    this afternoon as an upper trough currently over the Dakotas
    approaches the region. Scattered showers and thunderstorms are
    expected to form along/ahead of the front during the peak-heating
    period. The strongest cells may pose a risk of hail and gusty
    winds. But overall the risk is expected to be rather marginal.

    ..Hart/Bentley.. 06/11/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Jun 14 09:07:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 141234
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 141232

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0732 AM CDT Fri Jun 14 2024

    Valid 141300Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE CENTRAL
    PLAINS AND NORTHEAST STATES/NEW ENGLAND...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe storms with large hail and wind gusts of 60-80 mph
    will be possible from mid-afternoon through evening along the Front
    Range to the central Great Plains. Scattered strong storms with
    sporadic damaging winds and isolated hail will also be possible
    across the Northeast States during the afternoon to early evening.

    ...Central Plains including Colorado/Nebraska/Kansas...
    A mid/upper-level low over the Lower Colorado River Valley early
    this morning will continue northeastward, reaching the
    central/southern High Plains by evening. An outflow-reinforced front
    is expected to slowly shift north-northeastward across the central
    High Plains through the day, with low-level southeasterly flow
    maintaining a relatively moisture-rich airmass across the central
    High Plains toward the Front Range.

    Thinking continues to be that at least scattered thunderstorm
    development is expected by mid/late afternoon across parts of
    Colorado/New Mexico including the Front Range and Raton Mesa
    vicinity, influenced by differential heating and the approaching
    shortwave trough. Moderate buoyancy and marginally favorable
    deep-layer shear (30-40 kt) will support large hail potential with
    initial discrete storm development, along with some risk for a brief
    tornado or two.

    A tendency toward more of a clustered mode is expected with time,
    as storm coverage increases. As this occurs, isolated to widely
    scattered wind gusts of 60-80 mph will be possible, especially in
    areas where stronger pre-storm heating/mixing occurs. A loosely
    organized MCS could eventually evolve near/north of the surface
    boundary, which would result in some severe-wind potential spreading
    eastward across Nebraska and western/northern Kansas tonight.

    ...Northern High Plains/northern Rockies...
    Moderate diurnal destabilization will be possible near/east of a
    weak surface low across the northern High Plains, with modest
    instability extending westward across parts of the northern Rockies.
    Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms will be possible by late
    afternoon into the evening, with sufficient deep-layer shear to
    support a few stronger storms capable of producing isolated hail and strong-to-severe wind gusts.

    ...Northeast/Mid-Atlantic States and New England...
    A mid/upper-level trough will move across the Mid-Atlantic and New
    England later today into tonight. Weak to moderate buoyancy will
    develop along/ahead of a cold front, with scattered thunderstorm
    development expected from Pennsylvania into New England, and more
    isolated development possible farther south into parts of the
    central Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic. Moderate deep-layer shear
    will support some storm organization, and few stronger clusters
    and/or marginal supercells will be possible, with an attendant
    threat of locally damaging winds and hail.

    ..Guyer/Leitman.. 06/14/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Jun 17 08:29:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 171241
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 171240

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0740 AM CDT Mon Jun 17 2024

    Valid 171300Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
    NORTHERN/CENTRAL PLAINS TO THE UPPER MIDWEST/UPPER GREAT LAKES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe storms are expected today mainly across
    the Upper Mississippi Valley, and across the central High Plains and
    Northern Plains late this afternoon through tonight, with damaging
    winds and large hail possible.

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley/Upper Great Lakes...
    A modestly organized quasi-linear band of convection continues to
    make a general east-northeastward progression across southeast
    Minnesota into west/northwest Wisconsin around sunrise. While the
    convection has trended less organized and generally less intense, strong/locally severe wind gusts have continued to occur within an
    environment characterized by steep lapse rates and ample elevated
    instability in vicinity of the synoptic front. Evolving MCV
    influences and diurnal destabilization may allow strong/severe
    storms to persist east-northeastward across central/northern
    Wisconsin and perhaps Upper Michigan today, with additional
    redevelopment a possibility this afternoon/early evening along the outflow-reinforced front near the Iowa/Minnesota border vicinity.
    Bouts of damaging winds and severe hail are the primary hazards.

    ...Northern/Central Plains...
    A pronounced mid/upper-level trough over the Pacific Northwest will
    shift east-northeastward over the northern Intermountain region
    today and reach the northern High Plains tonight. Steady surface
    cyclogenesis will occur today across interior Wyoming, and
    subsequently into the central High Plains in vicinity of a southwest/northeast-oriented front.

    Near/south of the front, strong boundary-layer heating is expected
    across the central High Plains of eastern Colorado into northwest
    Kansas and southwest Nebraska. As temperatures warm into the lower
    90s F, convective temperatures will be breached and isolated
    supercells should develop, most probable near/east of the northeast
    Colorado surface low and triple point vicinity including the Colorado/Nebraska/Kansas border region. Forecast soundings exhibit
    ample MLCAPE (2500-4000 J/kg) with steep lapse rates, along with
    favorable shear for sustained rotating updrafts. Very large hail may
    accompany this activity and some tornado threat may also exist.
    These storms are likely to persist east-northeastward and
    potentially cluster/organize to a degree toward central Nebraska
    this evening.

    Farther north, strong dynamic forcing will encourage convection to
    develop across the High Plains of northeast Wyoming and southeast
    Montana immediately ahead of the surging cold front. This activity
    will spread northeast ahead of the shortwave trough into the Dakotas
    during the overnight hours, further aided by a substantial increase
    of a south-southwesterly low-level jet. The severe threat will shift
    into the upper Red River Valley late tonight.

    ...Lower Great Lakes/Upper Ohio River Valley...
    A convective cluster/MCV moving eastward out of southeast Lower
    Michigan early this morning should broadly influence additional
    thunderstorm development into the afternoon, within a moderately to
    strongly unstable environment regionally. Deep layer shear will be
    weak (generally 25 kt or less), but steepening low-level lapse rates
    and a moist/unstable air mass could allow for some stronger
    pulse-type storms capable of localized wind damage this afternoon.

    ..Guyer/Leitman.. 06/17/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Jun 18 08:17:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 181247
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 181245

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0745 AM CDT Tue Jun 18 2024

    Valid 181300Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe storms are expected this afternoon into
    evening over parts of the Upper Mississippi Valley southwestward
    into the central High Plains.

    ...Upper Midwest/Middle Missouri Valley/Central Plains...
    In the short term, a moderately organized quasi-linear segment over
    far northeast Minnesota/Arrowhead could pose a localized severe risk
    this morning, although overall severe potential has waned in the
    predawn hours and this downward intensity trend should generally
    continue as it encounters a more stable air mass downstream.

    Otherwise, a prominent mid/upper-level trough over the northern High
    Plains early today will continue an east-northeastward progression
    over the Dakotas/northern Minnesota through tonight. While weak
    mid-level height falls will extend along this corridor early, much
    of the CONUS will actually experience neutral-weak height rises as
    the eastern CONUS anticyclone dominates and builds west into the
    Ohio Valley. This evolution will result in a notable surface low
    tracking from eastern South Dakota, across northern Minnesota into
    Ontario by mid-afternoon. Building surface pressures over the Plains
    will force a cold front southeastward, and this boundary will serve
    as the focus for potentially strong/severe convection by late
    afternoon.

    The strongest mid-level flow and deep-layer shear will be noted
    across the upper Mississippi Valley, but adequate shear will extend
    the length of the front into the central High Plains where a few
    supercells are expected to develop, including west-central/southwest
    Kansas, and potentially toward the Colorado/Oklahoma/Kansas border
    region. The primary risk for organized and more intense updrafts
    will be during the late afternoon through early evening hours when
    instability will be maximized. Large hail and damaging winds are the
    primary risks.

    ...Upper Ohio Valley to upstate New York/northern New England... Water-vapor/regional radar imagery reflect multiple widely dispersed thunderstorm clusters and MCVs regionally early today, occurring on
    the western/northern periphery of a prominent upper ridge centered
    over the Mid-Atlantic States and Carolinas. Surface heating will
    contribute to ample destabilization across a broad portion of the
    upper Ohio River Valley into upstate New York and northern New
    England. Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms will once again
    develop and increase into the afternoon, influenced in some areas by
    the aforementioned MCVs, with localized downbursts/strong wind gusts
    regionally possible through the diurnal heating cycle.

    ...Lower/Middle Texas Coast...
    Low-level easterly winds should strengthen tonight toward the coast
    in relation to Potential Tropical Cyclone One. Current thinking is
    that mini-supercell-conducive ingredients will remain focused
    offshore through tonight, but this scenario will be reevaluated in
    subsequent outlooks.

    ..Guyer/Leitman.. 06/18/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Jun 19 08:52:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 191244
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 191242

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0742 AM CDT Wed Jun 19 2024

    Valid 191300Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...SOUTH/SOUTHEAST TEXAS...AND MIDWEST TO NEW
    ENGLAND...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Locally strong wind gusts and hail may occur with storms over the
    southern High Plains, with a couple of strong gusts also possible
    across parts of the Midwest and from the Lower Great Lakes into New
    England. A brief tornado or two may occur across south Texas through
    tonight.

    ...Synopsis...
    Dominant East Coast upper ridge is forecast to build west into the
    Middle Mississippi Valley later today as the primary belt of
    westerlies retreats north of the international border. This westward
    expansion will encourage the tropical system over the western Gulf
    basin to move into northeast Mexico, considerably south of the Rio
    Grande Valley.

    ...Southern High Plains...
    As convection persists while generally diminishing in overall
    intensity across the Oklahoma/Texas Panhandles and northwest
    Oklahoma this morning, outflows will contribute to additional
    moistening with westward extend across far west/northwest Texas into
    eastern New Mexico. This is where potentially severe thunderstorm
    development is expected around mid/late afternoon across the Raton
    Mesa vicinity southward across east-central/southeast New Mexico.
    Instances of large hail and severe-caliber wind gusts will be
    possible.

    ...Lower Great Lakes to northern New England...
    While upper ridging will dominate this region, scattered convection
    will once again develop from portions of the Ohio Valley
    northeastward into New England, as surface temperatures warm through
    the mid 80s to near 90 F. Convective temperatures will be breached
    and thunderstorms should develop within a seasonally moist
    environment with PW values in excess of 1.75 inches. Gusty winds are
    the primary concern with this convection occurring in a weakly
    sheared environment.

    ...South/southeast Texas...
    Low-level shear will increase especially this afternoon into tonight
    along the Texas Coast and inland across south Texas, along the
    northern fringe of the western Gulf basin tropical system. Reference
    NHC for the latest details on Potential Tropical Cyclone One, as
    this feature may evolve into a tropical cyclone before it moves
    inland south of the lower Rio Grande Valley. While this system will
    remain at low latitudes, 850mb flow is expected to increase across
    south Texas such that sustained updrafts will likely rotate. High PW
    and strong low-level shear favors some risk for a tornado or two.

    ...Northern Missouri/eastern Iowa to southern Wisconsin...
    To the east-northeast of lingering early morning convection across
    northeast Kansas/northwest Missouri, cloud cover should generally
    diminish today near the outflow augmented
    southwest/northeast-oriented synoptic front across the region.
    Potentially aided by an MCV, thunderstorms should redevelop and
    intensify this afternoon as the boundary layer destabilizes, with as
    much as 30 kt of effective shear maximized immediately near the
    synoptic front. Isolated instances of localized wind damage could
    occur.

    ..Guyer/Leitman.. 06/19/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Jun 20 08:34:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 201250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 201249

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0749 AM CDT Thu Jun 20 2024

    Valid 201300Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    NORTH-CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS AND NORTHEAST/NEW ENGLAND...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Storms may produce scattered damaging wind gusts over parts of the
    Northeast and New England mainly this afternoon. Scattered severe
    storms are also expected over parts of the north-central High
    Plains.

    ...Northeast States/New England...
    The prominent upper anticyclone currently centered over the middle
    Atlantic will gradually build westward across the CONUS today, while
    some flattening of the ridge will occur over the Northeast and
    especially New England. The stronger mid-level westerlies will be
    located closer to the international border and across eastern
    Canada, with weaker winds aloft over the lower Great Lakes into
    southern New England. A surface cold front will advance south into
    northern Maine, extending westward into southern lower Michigan by
    midday, with subsequent southeastward movement expected across the
    Northeast through early evening.

    This boundary will serve as the focus for intensifying convection
    later today as surface temperatures quickly soar through the 80s
    into the lower 90 F, with a weak mid-level impulse/MCV near Lake
    Ontario this morning being an additional influence. While deep-layer
    shear will not be particularly strong in most areas, PW values are
    seasonally moist with 1.5-2 inches expected, contributing to upwards
    of 2000-3000 MLCAPE this afternoon particularly across upstate New
    York and interior New England/southern Maine. Damaging winds will be
    possible with the strongest storms this afternoon.

    ...North-Central Plains...
    Weak mid-level height rises will occur over the central Plains
    through tonight, with a belt of moderately strong west-southwesterly
    flow aloft, and few embedded disturbances, from Utah/Wyoming toward
    the Dakotas and Upper Midwest. Surface cyclogenesis, focused across
    northeast Colorado later today, will contribute to a
    north-northwestward flux of low-level moisture across the central
    High Plains/eastern Wyoming and Black Hills vicinity.

    Initial thunderstorm development/intensification will occur over the
    mountains toward southeast Wyoming/Colorado Front Range by
    mid-afternoon, with subsequent development into the nearby High
    Plains this evening, in areas near/north of the surface low/triple
    point and east/northeastward-extending front. Initial storm mode
    should be supercellular and large hail is expected.

    Aided by an early evening strengthening of a southerly low-level
    jet, storms will likely consolidate and grow upscale into a possible
    MCS within the warm-advection zone focused across western/northern
    Nebraska and south-central/southern South Dakota. Severe wind gusts
    could materialize along the leading edge of the MCS.

    ...Central Rockies/Four Corners Area...
    While not overly moist regionally, a west-northwestward flux of
    moisture and a moderately strong belt of southwesterly mid-level
    flow will contribute to sustained thunderstorms, particularly from mid-afternoon through early evening. Some of these may produce
    severe-caliber downbursts.

    ...South Texas...
    Supercell/brief tornado related to Tropical Storm Alberto is
    expected to continue to diminish this morning as it moves inland and
    weakens over northeast Mexico.

    ...Central/eastern Montana...
    A weak mid-level disturbance, moderately strong flow aloft, and an
    adequately moist boundary layer may contribute to some
    strong/locally severe storms late this afternoon and early evening,
    with hail/gusty winds possible.

    ..Guyer/Leitman.. 06/20/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Jun 21 08:19:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 211253
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 211252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Fri Jun 21 2024

    Valid 211300Z - 221200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE NORTHERN
    HIGH PLAINS TO THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND OVER THE FOUR
    CORNERS REGION...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe storms are expected from parts of the
    northern High Plains into the upper Mississippi Valley, mainly this
    afternoon and evening. Scattered strong/severe thunderstorms are
    also possible across the Four Corners vicinity. A few strong storms
    may occur from parts of the lower Great Lakes to southern New
    England.

    ...Northern High Plains...
    A shortwave trough will shift eastward from the Canadian Rockies
    toward Saskatchewan, with southeasterly low-level flow deep into
    Montana ahead of this shortwave trough. Relatively strong (40 kt)
    mid-level flow will develop across central Montana as the upper
    ridge flattens. Scattered robust convection should easily develop
    within a flow regime favorable for supercells. Forecast soundings,
    especially for central Montana, exhibit favorable deep-layer shear
    with strong buoyancy and relatively low cloud bases. Scattered
    supercells should evolve by early afternoon then propagate
    southeastward along the instability axis toward
    eastern/south-central Montana through early evening. Very large hail
    and gusty winds are expected along with some tornado risk.

    ...Middle Missouri Valley/Siouxland to Upper Mississippi Valley...
    Scattered thunderstorms persist this morning regionally in vicinity
    of the convectively modified frontal zone. A mid-level impulse over Colorado/southeast Wyoming this morning will reach the Siouxland by
    late afternoon and early evening, all while a south-southwesterly
    low-level jet markedly intensifies after sunset. Strong diurnal
    heating south of the boundary will ease CINH across the warm sector
    and scattered storms are expected to develop and intensify. Updrafts
    may initially develop along the cool side of the boundary but with
    time surface-based storms are expected. Hail, wind, and perhaps a
    couple tornadoes can be expected with supercells occurring near the
    front.

    ...Four Corners Region...
    A seasonally high PW plume will advance into the Four Corners region
    as a low-latitude shortwave trough over southern California/Nevada
    ejects over the Great Basin, strengthening mid-level flow across
    southern Utah into southwestern Colorado. Sustained multicells and
    some supercells should develop along the southern fringe of this
    shortwave trough, where strong shear will support organized
    longer-lived updrafts. Large hail and strong/gusty winds can be
    expected, and some tornado risk may exist as well.

    ...Lower Great Lakes to southern New England...
    Strong boundary-layer heating will once again occur across the lower
    Great Lakes region into portions of southern New England, with a southward-shifting front focusing scattered convection into early/mid-afternoon. Within a moderately unstable environment,
    localized wind damage will be the primary concern with the strongest
    storms his afternoon through around sunset.

    ..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/21/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Jun 22 08:51:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 221208
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 221206

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0706 AM CDT Sat Jun 22 2024

    Valid 221300Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE MIDWEST/GREAT LAKES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon and evening across
    parts of the Midwest and Great Lakes region, including potential for
    damaging winds as well as a risk for tornadoes.

    ...Midwest/Upper Mississippi Valley and Upper Great Lakes...
    Ongoing scattered showers/thunderstorms near/south of the synoptic
    front complicates the later-day scenario to a degree, but
    outflow/air mass modification is expected into the afternoon with
    moderate to locally strong destabilization. This will be also
    coincident with a modestly amplifying shortwave trough/speed max
    over the Upper Mississippi Valley toward the Lake Michigan vicinity.
    This belt of 30-50 kt of west-southwesterly flow in the 850-500 mb
    layer is expected to overspread a destabilizing environment, with
    stronger insolation/destabilization most probable across eastern
    Iowa into northern Illinois by mid/late afternoon.

    Surface-based severe storm development including supercells will
    become probable by mid/late afternoon in vicinity of the modestly
    deepening surface low and triple point, including parts of northeast/east-central Iowa into far southern Wisconsin and northern
    Illinois. These storms will pose a tornado risk aside from more
    probable wind damage, which will increase as storms progress
    southeastward and also potentially expand southwestward somewhat
    along the southeastward-moving cold front this evening.

    ...Northern Mid-Atlantic States/Northeast...
    Deep-layer wind fields and shear are likely to remain weak, but
    moderately large CAPE (in excess of 2000 J/kg) may once again
    develop within weak surface troughing, along and southwest of the
    remnant surface frontal zone. It appears that this will become
    supportive of scattered strong thunderstorms with the potential to
    produce damaging wind gusts and possibly a few instances of hail.

    ...Northern Plains...
    Stronger mid/upper forcing for ascent and mid-level cooling are
    likely to remain north of the international border through and
    beyond peak daytime heating, but isolated severe storms could
    develop mainly across North Dakota by this evening, accompanied by a
    risk for marginally severe hail and/or wind.

    ...Southern Arizona...
    A few pulse-type strong/locally severe storms may occur this
    afternoon through early evening within a relatively moist and
    moderately environment across parts of south-central/southeast
    Arizona, with downbursts/strong wind gusts as the primary risk.

    ...Eastern Utah/western Colorado...
    While not expected to be nearly as active as Friday, a few strong
    storms could occur regionally, with strong wind gusts/some hail
    possible on a very isolated basis.

    ..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/22/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Jun 24 08:29:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 241302
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 241300

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0800 AM CDT Mon Jun 24 2024

    Valid 241300Z - 251200Z

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

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected over parts of the Upper
    Midwest this afternoon into tonight. Storms will be capable of large
    hail, and a cluster potentially capable of destructive wind gusts
    could develop over parts of Minnesota into Wisconsin.

    ...Upper Midwest...
    A mid-level trough will continue to transition eastward and modestly
    amplify over the Canadian Prairies, with southern-peripheral height
    falls and strengthening westerlies from North Dakota/northern
    Minnesota toward the Upper Great Lakes through tonight. In this same
    corridor, a weak MCV may be evolving this morning over eastern North Dakota/northwest Minnesota, while these scattered thunderstorms will
    probably also influence and somewhat hinder the effective
    north-northeastward of a warm front later today across Minnesota and
    Wisconsin.

    A very moist (low 70s F dewpoints) and unstable air mass will
    otherwise develop northeastward regionally in tandem with the warm
    front as surface cyclogenesis occurs across the Siouxland and
    southern Minnesota through evening. Upwards of 3000-5000 J/kg MLCAPE
    is expected within the warm sector, with very warm mid-level
    temperatures associated with the elevated mixed-layer plume likely
    limiting warm sector development away from (south of) the immediate
    triple point and cold front/warm front vicinity.

    Multiple convective scenarios are possible late this afternoon
    through tonight. For one, as the air mass recovers from the early
    day storms, widely scattered surface-based thunderstorms may develop
    by late afternoon near the eastward-advancing cold front within the
    relatively narrow warm sector from far eastern North Dakota into northern/western Minnesota. Any storms that do develop will likely
    organize into supercells given strong wind profiles and the large
    buoyancy. Large to very large hail, damaging winds and perhaps a
    tornado would be possible with any supercells, especially with
    storms in proximity to the warm front.

    Additionally, on the southern fringe of the early scattered early
    day convection (and related cloud cover) from eastern North Dakota
    into northern Minnesota, storms may form near an effective triple point/differential heating reinforced warm front. Such initial
    development could occur across south-central/southeast Minnesota,
    with robust instability/seasonally strong shear potentially
    supportive of an initial mode of intense supercells, with subsequent
    upscale growth in an MCS with heightened damaging wind potential.

    Additional mostly elevated storms could form tonight from eastern
    Minnesota into northern/central Wisconsin, on the immediate cool
    side of the surface baroclinic gradient as a nocturnally
    increasingly low-level jet heightens isentropic ascent. These storms
    may also pose a large hail and damaging wind risk through the
    overnight.

    An upgrade to Enhanced Risk (Level 3/5) may be warranted pending
    morning observational/guidance trends, potentially including a
    corridor across south-central/southern Minnesota and west/southwest
    Wisconsin, where a semi-focused swath of potentially significant
    damaging winds appears plausible.

    ...Central Plains and Black Hills...
    Very warm surface temperatures are expected ahead of the weakening
    cold front across central Nebraska and northern Kansas. At least
    isolated high-based storms are expected to develop within a
    hot/deeply mixed boundary layer environment. With generally weak
    mid-level flow across the region, storms may quickly become outflow
    dominant, but steep low/mid-tropospheric lapse rates will support
    isolated severe wind gusts. The strongest updrafts may also be
    capable of producing some hail.

    Other potentially severe storms will also be possible over the Black Hills/northeast Wyoming with weak low-level upslope flow in the
    post-frontal environment. Modest low-level moisture and only
    glancing upper-level support suggest storm coverage will remain
    isolated, although severe hail/strong winds will be possible.

    ...Carolinas and far southeast Virginia...
    At the base of departing east coast trough, subtle height falls atop
    a warm and unstable air mass will support scattered afternoon
    thunderstorms across much of the eastern Carolinas and far southeast
    Virginia along a weak surface cold front. Enhanced flow aloft and
    surface convergence near the front should be sufficient for
    transient storm organization into multicell clusters or a weak
    supercell. Steepening low-level lapse rates and the high PWAT air
    mass will favor heavily water and hail-loaded downdrafts capable of
    isolated damaging gusts. Storms should begin to move offshore by
    early evening ending the severe risk.

    ..Guyer/Mosier.. 06/24/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Jun 25 07:34:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 250602
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 250601

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0101 AM CDT Tue Jun 25 2024

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL PLAINS...MIDWEST AND MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the central/southern Great Plains and Midwest late this afternoon and
    evening. Damaging wind gusts, large hail, and a tornado or two may
    are possible.

    ...Central Plains and Midwest...
    A complex and highly uncertain forecast scenario is likely to evolve
    today, as the remnants of one or more convective clusters interacts
    with a broadly moist and unstable air mass over the Midwest and
    central Plains. Early in the period, an MCS may be ongoing across
    parts of the southern Great Lakes and OH Valley. Near the eastern
    extent of the buoyancy plume reintensification of the eastern most convection/remnants thereof appears unlikely through the morning
    across the mid to upper OH Valley.

    Farther west across IL and IN, any ongoing storms or remnant
    outflow, should continue south and may reintensify/reinvigorate over
    the mid MS Valley by mid morning. While mid-level flow decreases
    with southern extent, moderate buoyancy may sustain a risk for
    damaging gusts with a loosely organized cluster/MCS, potentially as
    far south as the lower OH/Mid MS Valley this evening.

    A greater focus for severe convection appears likely to evolve along
    the slow-moving synoptic cold front drifting south across the
    central Plains. Strong heating along the front ahead of a subtle
    shortwave trough will allow for isolated storm development this
    afternoon. Model soundings show enhanced mid and upper-level shear
    profiles, along with steep mid-level lapse rates. Supercells may
    evolve with an initial risk for large hail, given MLCAPE of
    4000-5000 J/kg and the discrete mode. A brief tornado or two may
    also be possible with enhanced vertical voritcity and low-level
    shear near the front.

    With time, mostly front-parallel flow will favor upscale growth into
    clusters and potentially an MCS over eastern NE and IA. With
    plentiful MLCAPE (2000-3000 J/Kg) in place over the region, damaging
    winds will remain possible as storms track east/southeast into the
    eastern central Plains and the mid MS Valley. The exact
    eastern/southern extent of any severe risk remains quite uncertain,
    given the tendency for storms to outrun the stronger upper-level
    support. Still, a few CAM members suggest a coherent line of storms
    will continue overnight reaching southern MO/IL and eastern KS
    before the start of the Day2 period.

    ...KS OK and the TX Panhandle...
    On the northern fringes of the subtropical ridge over the southern
    third of the CONUS, robust diurnal heating should support very hot
    daytime temperatures along and east of dryline from west-central KS,
    into northwest OK and the TX Panhandle. As the western portion of
    the ridge intensifies, flow aloft should gradually veer to
    northwesterly as a weak mid-level perturbation traverses the
    periphery of the ridge and moves out of the central Rockies. Weak
    ascent should overlap with near-convective surface temps in the low
    100s F during the later afternoon, supporting isolated to widely
    scattered thunderstorm development along and east of the dryline.
    Moderate buoyancy within the well-mixed but moist surface air mass,
    along with enhanced mid and upper-level flow, will favor a mixed
    mode of high-based multicell clusters and perhaps transient
    supercells capable of damaging gusts and isolated hail. The
    longevity of these storms is somewhat questionable, given the
    tendency for weakening upper-level support and warming mid-level
    temperature to the south, but at least an isolated severe risk may
    persist into parts of central OK/KS into the early evening.

    ...Dakotas and western MN...
    Behind the main synoptic front, daytime heating over residual
    boundary-layer moisture should support the development of moderate
    buoyancy ahead of a second weaker cold front moving out of southern
    Canada. A shortwave trough over the northern Rockies is forecast to
    intensify as it moves southeast into the Plains. Modest forcing for
    ascent coupled with weak low-level warm advection may support
    isolated storm development late in the afternoon, eventually moving
    into the eastern Dakotas and western MN by early evening. Relatively
    long and straight hodographs suggest the potential for a few
    elevated supercells with a risk for isolated large hail.

    ..Lyons/Barnes.. 06/25/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Jun 26 09:18:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 261255
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 261253

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0753 AM CDT Wed Jun 26 2024

    Valid 261300Z - 271200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE OHIO
    VALLEY INTO NORTHERN MID ATLANTIC...ACROSS PARTS OF THE OZARK
    PLATEAU INTO LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...AND TO THE LEE OF THE FRONT
    RANGE AND SANGRE DE CRISTO MOUNTAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Clusters of thunderstorms accompanied by potentially damaging wind
    gusts are possible today into tonight from the Ohio Valley into
    northern Mid Atlantic, across parts of the Ozark Plateau into lower
    Mississippi Valley, and to the lee of the Front Range and Sangre de
    Cristo Mountains.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong mid/upper-level high over NM is expected to weaken somewhat
    and get shunted southward by a series of low-amplitude shortwave troughs/vorticity maxima crossing the Four Corners region and
    central Rockies. This will occur as a strong synoptic trough --
    apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the northeastern Pacific
    between 130W-135W -- approaches the Northwest Coast. The trough
    should move ashore WA/BC around 06Z, accompanied by a broad, closed
    cyclone centered over or near Vancouver Island. By 12Z, the 500-mb
    low should reach south-central BC, with trough southward to northern
    CA. In response to these developments, the downstream synoptic ridge
    over the northern/central Rockies also will weaken and shift
    eastward over the adjacent High Plains.

    Farther downstream, northwest flow aloft will prevail over most of
    the Plains States and Mississippi Valley. A shortwave trough and
    MCV -- related to an ongoing convective complex moving into the
    northern Ozarks region -- should pivot southeastward to the southern Appalachians and Tennessee Valley regions by 12Z tomorrow. A
    northern-stream shortwave trough -- initially located over MN --
    will cross the Upper Great Lakes today, reaching southern/eastern ON
    and Lake Erie by 00Z. This feature may be preceded by an MCV now
    evident near the Wabash River Valley and moving northeastward. By
    12Z, the combined perturbation should reach ME and coastal southern
    New England.

    The surface chart at 11Z showed a cold front from southern QC across
    Lake Huron, central Lower MI, southern WI, southern IA, northwestern
    MO, southwestern KS and southeastern CO. This front is (and will
    remain) preceded across much of its length west of the Mississippi
    River by convective outflows. By 00Z, the front should reach
    northern NY, western PA, parts of OH and western KY, northern AR and
    central OK, becoming a quasistationary to warm front from there over
    the northern TX Panhandle into southern CO. By 12Z, the front
    should extend from coastal MA across NJ, VA, TN, AR, OK, to central
    CO.

    ...Ozarks/Mid-South to lower Mississippi Valley...
    An extensive area of convection is apparent over the northern/
    western Ozarks region into northeastern OK, with ragged reflectivity
    and satellite presentation, but strong surface pressure/theta-e
    deficits, and lingering areas of enhanced rear inflow above the
    surface. Occasional damaging to severe gusts are possible with this
    activity as it proceeds southward through eastern OK and AR into the
    afternoon. See SPC Severe Thunderstorm Watch 463 and accompanying
    mesoscale discussions for latest near-term guidance.

    Some re-intensification or new development associated with this
    convectively generated perturbation may occur as associated
    low-level forcing impinges on a diurnally heating/destabilizing and
    very moist air mass it its path. Any such activity will pose a
    threat for strong-severe gusts across at least parts of AR and
    eastern OK, and the ArkLaMiss region -- perhaps persisting
    southeastward toward the Gulf Coast. Additional development is
    possible (but still not certain) from late afternoon into tonight,
    near or even just behind the outflow boundary from the morning
    activity over AR and eastern OK. A few convection-allowing model
    solutions that develop a second MCS out of such a regime move it
    southwestward around the ridge toward east or even parts of
    north-central TX, which is a reasonable (albeit conditional)
    potential, given the ambient flow and high-theta-e potential inflow
    airmass along such a track. The marginal unconditional outlook, and
    to some extent the slight risk, have been expanded in that direction
    on such a convective contingency. Should confidence further
    increase in later outlooks, so would unconditional probabilities.

    ...Upper Ohio Valley to northern Mid-Atlantic...
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected by mid/late afternoon over a
    broad swath of the Ohio Valley region into the central Appalachians, shifting/expanding eastward across the northern Mid-Atlantic region
    with time this evening. Scattered damaging gusts are expected, some
    of which may be severe in magnitude (50+ kt).

    Activity is expected to develop amidst weak MLCINH along/ahead of
    the surface cold front, as well as near prefrontal surface trough(s)
    and outflow/differential-heating boundaries. Development will be
    supported by strengthening large-scale ascent ahead of the shortwave
    trough and ejecting MCV, which should increase poor antecedent
    midlevel lapse rates somewhat. Low-level lapse rates will be
    steepened by daytime heating. That, along with favorable moisture
    with 60s F surface dewpoints being common, will contribute to a
    field of 500-1200 J/kg peak/preconvective MLCAPE across the outlook
    area. Though low-level shear will be limited by near unidirectional
    deep-layer flow and lack of stronger boundary-layer winds, deep
    shear will increase enough ahead of the trough aloft to support
    organized convective bands and clusters offering localized
    strong-severe wind swaths, as well as pulse severe from
    predominantly multicellular structures.

    ...Central/southern High Plains...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop by late
    this afternoon, and continuing into early evening, along the eastern
    rim of the higher terrain from southeastern WY to northeastern NM.

    Difluent northwest flow and weak large-scale lift in mid/upper
    levels will prevail by the afternoon convective period, ahead of the
    central Rockies/Four Corners perturbations. This should help to
    maintain steep lapse rates in the overlying EML, while diurnal
    heating/mixing strongly destabilize a deepening boundary layer.
    Orographic and thermal lift will initiate the convection, which
    should move eastward to southeastward over the High Plains, offering
    sporadic severe gusts and large hail. Though modest low/middle-
    level flow is expected area-wide, considerable veering of winds with
    height will yield favorable deep shear for organized multicells,
    and, in about the northern half of the area, isolated supercells.
    Forecast soundings suggest effective-shear magnitudes varying from
    less than 20 kt across the CAO/DHT region (where hot, very deep
    subcloud layers are expected) to about 45-50 kt near BFF (still
    well-mixed thermally), along with surface dewpoints remaining
    generally in the 50s F even through the mixing cycle. This should
    support wind/hail potential with the most vigorous cells, until
    activity moves into nocturnally cooling lower elevations and weakens
    tonight.

    ...Southern ID to northern Rockies...
    Widely scattered thunderstorm development is anticipated this
    afternoon, as increasing large-scale ascent and mid/upper flow
    preceding the mid/upper-level trough superimpose a well-heated,
    deeply mixed boundary layer over and near the Snake River Plain of
    southern ID. Some of this activity may carry over from the isolated dry-thunderstorm areas of southeastern OR forecast in the SPC fire-
    weather outlook. Convection will encounter increasing moisture/
    buoyancy as it moves northeastward, but should remain over favorably high-DCAPE, strongly mixed subcloud layers with inverted-v
    thermodynamic profiles, beneath around 200-800 J/kg MLCAPE. This
    will support localized strong-severe wind potential, until moving
    past higher mountains and into evening diabatic
    cooling/destabilization.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 06/26/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Jun 28 09:52:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 281248
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 281247

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0747 AM CDT Fri Jun 28 2024

    Valid 281300Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL PLAINS INTO PARTS OF THE MIDDLE AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI
    VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Large hail, damaging wind and a few tornadoes will be possible from
    parts of the central Plains into parts of the Middle and Upper
    Mississippi Valley today and tonight.

    ...Synopsis...
    The main mid/upper-level perturbation influencing convective
    potential this period is a strong shortwave trough accompanying a
    small cyclone now centered over southwestern SK. The cyclone is
    expected to open up today, with a 00Z trough position from
    southwestern MB southwestward across northern/western ND to
    northeastern WY. The trough should accelerate eastward across the
    remainder of the Dakotas and MN overnight, reaching WI and Lake
    Superior by 12Z tomorrow. This will occur as a closely following
    shortwave digs southeastward across southern MB toward northwestern
    MN. The subtropical ridge will build across the Southeast, southern
    Plains and into parts of the Desert Southwest. Despite rising
    absolute height values, this will yield a tightening height gradient
    across the central Great Plains between the ridge and the
    northern-stream trough.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a low over eastern ND, with cold
    front extending across eastern SD, central NE, northwestern KS, and east-central CO. A surface trough was drawn from a cold-frontal
    intersection over central NE south-southwestward to the southern
    High Plains. The low should cross the Boundary Waters region of the
    MN/ON border this afternoon through 00Z, when the cold front should
    extend to southern MN, southeastern NE, through a weak frontal-wave
    low over central/north-central KS, to southwestern KS, becoming a
    diffuse warm front over eastern CO. By 12Z, the low should reach
    that portion of ON northeast of Lake Superior, with cold front to
    eastern Upper MI, Lake Michigan, southeastern WI, then near a line
    from DVN-MKC-ICT-DHT.

    ...Central Plains to Mississippi Valley...
    This severe-risk area is a composite of two separate potential
    convective episodes, with the western (second) potentially lasting
    long enough and far enough east to overlap into the hours-earlier
    starting region of the first.

    1. Lower Missouri Valley, eastern NE/northern KS eastward:
    An extensive area of clouds and precip, with isolated to widely
    scattered, embedded, non-severe thunderstorms, was apparent in radar
    composites and satellite imagery from astern MN and WI across parts
    of IA, northern/western MO and eastern KS. Although this will delay substantial diurnal heating across much of the mid/upper Mississippi
    and lower Missouri Valley regions, sufficient destabilization (from
    diabatic heating and warm advection) is expected by midafternoon to
    support surface-based development near the cold front. Favorable
    low-level moisture (dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F) will
    support a prefrontal plume of MLCAPE in the 2000-3500 J/kg range.

    Modest low-level flow will limit ambient hodograph size, but
    sufficient deep shear will exist (effective-shear magnitudes 35-45
    kt) to support both supercells and organized multicells. Backing of
    winds along and just north of the front also will enlarge hodographs
    in a narrow corridor, with vorticity from the boundary potentially
    ingested into favorably positioned updrafts for locally boosted
    tornado potential. Development should be most likely and dense near
    and northeast of the frontal-wave low, south of which low-level lift
    will weaken amid rising heights aloft, and buoyancy will decrease
    toward the OK border. As such, probabilities for this lobe of the
    outlook area have been tightened northward somewhat. Still, upscale coalescence into one or more clusters/lines should occur, with
    severe wind the greatest threat this evening into tonight, and a
    tornado or two possible.

    2. Central High Plains and eastward:
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected this
    afternoon over higher terrain of western/central CO, with additional
    initiation possible on the foothills, Cheyenne Ridge and Palmer
    Divide. This convection will be supported by sustained diurnal
    heating and related weakening of MLCINH, along with moist advection
    and upslope lift by the easterly component of post-frontal flow.
    That moist advection also should offset moisture loss from vertical
    mixing enough to maintain buoyancy, with MLCAPE in the 250-800 J/kg
    range. A deep subcloud mixed layer with steep lapse rates will
    encourage strong-severe downdrafts.

    Though weak, low-level flow will veer with height, leading to long
    hodographs and contributing to effective-shear magnitudes ranging
    from around 30 kt in the southwestern part of the outlook (where
    coverage also is more uncertain but conditional severe potential
    still apparent) to 45-50 kt over and downshear from the Cheyenne
    Ridge. As such, a high-based mix of multicells and supercells is
    possible, offering mainly damaging gusts and large hail (each with
    some significant severe possible). One or more clusters may evolve
    and move eastward to southeastward over KS this evening and
    overnight, with severe gusts the main concern.

    ..Edwards/Kerr.. 06/28/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Jun 29 08:04:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 291251
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 291249

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0749 AM CDT Sat Jun 29 2024

    Valid 291300Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE NORTHEAST...AND OVER THE RATON MESA AND NEARBY SOUTH-CENTRAL HIGH
    PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Damaging thunderstorm gusts and a few tornadoes are possible today
    over parts of the Lower Great Lakes to upper Ohio Valley, while
    severe gusts also may be focused this afternoon and evening over the
    Raton Mesa and nearby south-central High Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    Broadly, the upper-air pattern will be characterized by a synoptic
    trough moving ashore from the Pacific and over the West Coast
    States, the downstream ridge moving slowly out of the northern/
    central Rockies onto the adjoining High Plains, and troughing over
    the Great Lakes and vicinity. Meanwhile, strong subtropical ridging
    will prevail across the Southeast, southern Plains, and NM.

    A northern-stream shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel
    imagery over northeastern MN -- will eject east-northeastward today
    and weaken, while effectively replaced by an upstream perturbation
    now over portions of ND/MB. The resulting shortwave trough should
    proceed eastward across the Upper Great Lakes to Lake Huron and
    adjoining parts of ON by 12Z tomorrow. To its south and southeast,
    a belt of strong, cyclonically curved flow will cover the mid/upper
    Ohio Valley and Northeast, with minor embedded perturbations (some
    convectively generated upstream from prior/overnight activity).

    At the surface, the 11Z analysis showed a low over central Lake
    Superior, with cold front across central Upper MI, southern WI,
    southern IA, central KS, and north-central NM. By 00Z, the cold
    front should move to northern IN, central IL, southern MO, northern
    OK, the northern TX Panhandle, and northeastern/central NM. By 12Z,
    the front should extend from western parts of NY/PA across KY, the
    MO Bootheel area, and northern AR, becoming quasistationary over central/western OK, the central TX Panhandle, and east-central NM.
    A prefrontal surface trough should shift eastward from the St.
    Lawrence Valley/Lower Great Lakes across the northern Appalachians
    and northern Mid-Atlantic States through the period.

    ...Northeast/Ohio Valley/Great Lakes...
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form episodically from
    midday through afternoon -- predominantly ahead of the surface cold
    front. Frontal convection over parts of Lower MI also is possible
    this afternoon, with isolated severe hail/gusts. The main severe
    threat, however should be over parts of the Lower Great Lakes/upper
    Ohio Valley into nearly Appalachians.

    With weak capping, activity may form on a variety of foci, near the
    main surface trough, outflow boundaries from morning clouds/precip,
    and over areas of differential heating and orographic lift.
    Activity should organize into one or more lines with embedded
    supercells and bowing/LEWP segments possible. The main threat will
    be damaging to severe gusts in and near the 15%/"slight" area,
    though any supercells or embedded QLCS vortices also will pose a
    tornado threat.

    Despite weak mid/upper-level lapse rates over most of this region,
    warm-sector moisture will be characterized by mid 60s to lower 70s F
    surface dewpoints. This will combine with pockets of sustained
    surface heating to yield MLCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range.
    Veering and strengthening of winds with height in low levels should
    yield enlarged hodographs below 3 km, with effective SRH in the
    150-250 J/kg range overlapping areas of favorable heating in some
    parts of the upper Ohio Valley area into central PA. Little speed
    shear is apparent from the top of the boundary layer into the
    mid/upper levels, however, limiting deep shear, and storm structure
    may become messy rather quickly. Overall, convection should weaken
    as it approaches the Atlantic Coast this evening, and the foregoing
    inflow layer becomes more stable.

    ...South-central Rockies/High Plains...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are forecast to develop this
    afternoon over higher terrain from the southern Front Range area
    across the Sangre de Cristos and Raton Mesa. This will occur as
    strong heating of higher terrain preferentially erodes MLCINH, in
    the presence of post-frontal upslope flow in low levels, and related
    moisture advection to at least partially offset moisture loss due to
    mixing. The easterly component also should aid storm-relative
    boundary-layer flow and deep shear for activity propagating eastward
    off the elevated terrain, with a mix of multicells and transient
    supercells possible.

    Despite modest low/middle-level wind speeds, forecast soundings
    reasonably depict enough veering with height to yield 35-45-kt
    effective-shear magnitudes, amidst 500-1500 J/kg MLCAPE and steep boundary-layer lapse rates. Some of the resulting convection may
    coalesce into a complex of thunderstorms with a cold pool, in turn
    driving eastward-directed forward propagation near the post-frontal
    moist axis and across parts of southeastern CO, northeastern NM, the
    adjacent Panhandles, and or southwestern KS, with a relatively
    focused threat of severe gusts.

    ...Ozarks/south-central Plains...
    Ongoing, isolated to widely scattered convection over parts of KS/MO
    should weaken/dissipate through the remainder of the morning, but
    may leave behind enough cloud material and (especially in MO)
    outflow to augment frontal baroclinicity for afternoon convective
    initiation. Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms should
    develop on and near the front this afternoon from northern OK and
    extreme southern KS to the Ozarks, in a regime of MLCINH
    substantially removed by modest low-level convergence and strong diurnal/prefrontal heating. Deep mixing south of the front should
    reduce surface dewpoints and buoyancy in the warm sector, but
    adequate moisture (with 60s to low 70s F surface dewpoints) should
    linger in a narrow post-frontal corridor supporting 2000-3000 J/kg
    MLCAPE.

    The net result should be high-based, multicell thunderstorms in
    mostly weak deep shear, with pulse severe in the form of gusts and
    hail. A conditional risk exists for locally significant (65+ kt)
    gusts, given the favorably deep subcloud mixed layer with large
    DCAPE. However, mesoscale foci for denser coverage of such a threat
    still appear too nebulous for a 15% unconditional gust outlook
    within the broader marginal area.

    ..Edwards/Kerr.. 06/29/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Jul 1 07:59:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 011252
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 011250

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0750 AM CDT Mon Jul 01 2024

    Valid 011300Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN/CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms will be possible today across the northern/
    central Plains, especially parts of Nebraska and South Dakota. Areas
    of damaging winds and sporadic hail will be possible, along with a
    few tornadoes.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong mid/upper-level anticyclone centered over north TX is
    forecast to shift east-southeastward over northern LA and weaken
    slightly. This will occur as height falls spread across much of the
    Great Plains States ahead of a synoptic-scale trough, initially
    located from the northern Rockies across the western Great Basin to
    the Sierra Nevada. The trough is expected to progress eastward
    through the period, faster on its north end (thus becoming more
    positively tilted). By 12Z tomorrow, it should extend from Lake
    Winnipeg southwestward across ND, central WY, and UT, to near LAS.

    A series of minor shortwaves and vorticity maxima will be embedded
    in the foregoing southwest flow aloft, and will traverse the
    central/northern Plains today and tonight. That includes small,
    convectively generated/enhanced perturbations embedded in a
    mid/upper-level monsoonal moisture plume, evident in moisture-
    channel imagery from west-central/northwestern MX across AZ, the
    Four Corners region, and most of CO/NE. Farther east, a mid/upper
    trough -- initially from the lower St. Lawrence River region of
    southeastern Canada across Update NY/PA/WV -- will move eastward off
    the Mid-Atlantic and New England Coasts between 00-06Z.

    The surface map at 11Z showed a cold front -- associated with and
    preceding the leading mid/upper trough -- across northeastern/south-
    central BC, northern parts of SC/GA/AL/MS, across central AR. The
    front is forecast to move offshore from all the Atlantic Coast north
    of about SAV by 00Z, then extend from there through a wave over
    central GA to near a line from MOB-BTR-GGG, becoming ill-defined
    farther northwest. Another cold front was drawn from a triple-point
    low over southwestern ND southwestward across central WY and
    northern UT. By 00Z, the latter front should reach the central
    Dakotas, northwestern NE and northwestern CO. A broad area of low
    pressure should slow/stall the front temporarily over northeastern
    CO and south-central/southwestern NE tonight, while it advances to
    the eastern Dakotas and southeastern UT.

    ...Central/northern Plains...
    Scattered thunderstorms may develop this afternoon over a broad area
    of the western Dakotas, and the central High Plains, along/ahead of
    the cold front and near a lee trough/weak dryline over parts of
    southwestern NE and eastern CO. A few strong-severe thunderstorms
    also may form in the post-frontal upslope-flow regime near the
    Bighorns and offer severe hail/gusts eastward toward the western
    Black Hills.

    The most favorable environment for severe will be across parts of southern/central NE near a prominent moist axis, zone of warm
    frontogenesis, and also possibly differential heating (from the
    southern rim of morning clouds/precip). In this regime, backed flow
    and relatively maximized moisture will maximize both kinematic and thermodynamic parameters favorable for supercells. A corridor of
    60s to low 70s F surface dewpoints -- already apparent from eastern
    OK across western KS to western NE -- should shift northeastward
    through the day, eroded on the west side by heating/mixing (as per
    modifying the 12Z DDC RAOB) but reinforced father east through moist
    advection. That moisture, and strong diurnal heating, will support
    a narrow plume of MLCAPE around 2000-3000 J/kg. Locally large
    hodographs are expected in the backed surface winds, yielding
    effective SRH in the 250-450 J/kg range. Supercells with all severe
    hazards (including a few tornadoes and large hail) will be possible
    in that regime, especially with relatively discrete storms.
    Significant (2+ inch diameter) hail cannot be ruled out, but that
    threat may be mitigated somewhat by relatively warm temperatures
    aloft in the monsoonal moist plume.

    Upscale growth of early convection into lines an clusters is
    possible, both in the southern NE regime wherever activity becomes outflow-dominant before encountering the moisture plume, and farther
    north as a possible frontal/prefrontal QLCS. The most sustained
    potential for upscale evolution appears to be with the central/
    southern NE activity shifting tonight into eastern NE, western IA
    and the Siouxland region, where inflow-layer moisture and
    instability should be greatest. As such, the potential for
    cold-pool-aided convective-gust enhancement remains represented by a significant-wind area inside the broader 15% unconditional wind
    line. If confidence increases in a specific MCS corridor, that
    probability may need to be raised in a succeeding outlook.

    ...Southeast...
    Widely scattered to scattered, multicellular thunderstorms are
    expected this afternoon between the frontal zone over GA/SC/AL on
    the north, and on the south, sea-breeze and differential-heating
    boundaries. The most intense cells will be capable of water-loaded
    downbursts near severe limits. A very moisture-rich boundary layer
    will persist across the region, with surface dewpoints commonly in
    the low/mid 70s F and PW near 2 inches. Strong surface heating will
    offset modest mid/upper-level lapse rates enough to yield MLCAPE in
    the 2000-3000 J/kg. Low/middle-level flow and shear should be weak,
    though a belt of strong northerly to northeasterly winds in upper
    levels (near anvil level) may aid in storm organization. Severe
    potential should be isolated and pulse in nature, with short-lived,
    localized clustering possible, and should wane after sunset.

    ..Edwards/Kerr.. 07/01/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Jul 1 14:23:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 011632
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 011630

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1130 AM CDT Mon Jul 01 2024

    Valid 011630Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE NORTHERN/CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms should occur this afternoon and tonight across
    parts of the northern/central Plains, especially portions of
    Nebraska and the Dakotas. Scattered severe/damaging winds, large
    hail, and a few tornadoes all appear possible.

    ...Northern/Central Plains...
    A notable upper trough across the northern Rockies will advance
    eastward today over the northern/central Plains. Related low-level
    mass response will encourage multiple surface lows to slowly deepen
    across the northern/central High Plains. An occluded/cold front will
    move eastward across the western/central Dakotas through this
    evening, while a warm front attempts to lift northward across
    northern KS into NE. Current expectations are for robust convection
    to develop along both the front in the western Dakotas, and the
    higher terrain of WY/CO as large-scale ascent associated with the
    upper trough overspreads the warm sector. Low-level moisture will
    remain more limited with northward extent into the Dakotas. But,
    sufficient instability in a narrow corridor, along with strong
    deep-layer shear, is still anticipated. Initial supercells over
    western ND/SD should pose a threat for large hail, before convection
    quickly grows upscale into a bowing cluster towards central ND/SD
    with a greater threat for severe/damaging winds. With sufficient
    ambient near-surface vorticity along the front, a brief tornado or
    two also appears possible with initially more cellular development.
    This activity should weaken with eastward extent tonight as it
    encounters much weaker instability towards the MN border.

    Initially high-based convection over central CO may pose an isolated
    threat for severe wind gusts as it moves into eastern CO/western KS
    and encounters a very well mixed boundary layer. The Marginal Risk
    has been expanded westward and southward a bit in CO to account for
    this potential. Otherwise, thunderstorms should eventually develop
    and strengthen by late this afternoon along/east of a surface low
    centered over northeast CO. Deep-layer shear will be strong enough
    to support supercells, but convective mode may quickly become messy
    as activity moves eastward along/near the northward-advancing warm
    front in NE. Large hail may occur with any sustained supercell, and
    sufficient low-level shear will be present along/near the warm front
    to support a threat for a few tornadoes. Even so, a more
    clustery/linear mode may become dominant fairly soon after initial
    development. This would support a greater threat for severe/damaging
    winds, and perhaps isolated gusts up to about 75 mph. Regardless of
    continued uncertainty over what the dominant convective mode will
    be, the severe threat will likely persist into eastern NE/western IA
    this evening and tonight before thunderstorms eventually weaken.

    ...Southeast...
    Scattered to numerous thunderstorms should develop this afternoon
    along and south of a cold front draped east to west across parts of
    the Southeast. Although mid-level flow and related deep-layer shear
    will remain modest, steepened low-level lapse rates though daytime
    heating and plentiful low-level moisture will easily support
    moderate to strong instability. Occasional strong to damaging winds
    may occur with the more robust cores and loosely organized clusters
    as they move generally southward through the early evening before
    eventually weakening.

    ..Gleason/Thornton.. 07/01/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Jul 3 07:14:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 030552
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 030550

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1250 AM CDT Wed Jul 03 2024

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE NORTHERN/CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS AND THE OZARKS TO LOWER OH VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the
    northern to central High Plains and from the Ozarks to Lower Ohio
    Valley, mainly from late afternoon to mid-evening. The most
    favorable corridor for isolated very large hail and significant
    severe wind gusts is centered on the central High Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    A shortwave trough over the southern Canadian Rockies will dig
    southeast across the northern Rockies before reaching the
    north-central High Plains by early Thursday. As this occurs, a lee
    surface trough will sharpen over the High Plains. A convectively
    modified cold front will shift east-southeast into the Lower Great
    Lakes to the Ozarks. This front will remain quasi-stationary into
    the southern TX Panhandle, with the most prominent temperature
    gradient from here through northern OK owing to pronounced
    differential heating across OK to KS.

    ...Central to northern High Plains...
    To the north of the southern Great Plains baroclinic zone,
    predominantly southeasterly low-level flow will attempt to advect
    richer moisture from southern/eastern KS. However, most 00Z models
    suggest increasing widespread convection from the TX/OK Panhandle
    into KS this morning amid low-level warm theta-e advection. This
    overturning will likely slow the northwestward moisture return. In
    addition, pervasive cloudiness will limit boundary-layer
    destabilization over the lower plains. These factors yield a
    probable confined plume of appreciable buoyancy and uncertainty over
    the amplitude of the peak buoyancy over the central High Plains.

    Scattered thunderstorms will likely develop along the lee trough
    towards late afternoon, seemingly most probable from northeast CO to
    south of the Black Hills. An additional area/round of storms should
    also form farther northwest into northeast WY, ahead of the
    mid-level DCVA attendant to the approaching shortwave trough.
    Relatively modest low-level flow in conjunction with moderate to
    strong speed shear above 700 mb will yield moderate hodograph
    elongation. This should support widely spaced supercells capable of
    large to very large hail, and perhaps a couple tornadoes. Broken
    upscale growth with amalgamating convective outflows will probably
    occur during the early to mid-evening, which should yield a threat
    for isolated wind gusts of 70-80 mph. With potential for convection
    to spread relatively quickly into a cooler downstream boundary
    layer, confidence is too low to warrant a level 3-ENH threat this
    cycle.

    ...Ozarks to the Lower OH Valley...
    Scattered thunderstorms will be possible along the weaker portion of
    the frontal zone during the latter half of the afternoon, aided in
    part by remnant MCVs from ongoing/forecast convection this morning.
    Along the fringe of modest mid-level southwesterlies, roughly
    parallel to the weak front, multicell clustering is anticipated. A
    threat for strong to localized severe gusts may be sufficient for
    potentially scattered wind damage.

    ..Grams/Squitieri.. 07/03/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Jul 4 08:13:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 041253
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 041252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Thu Jul 04 2024

    Valid 041300Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...AND LOWER OHIO VALLEY TO SOUTHERN
    PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms will be possible across parts of the upper
    Mississippi Valley, and lower Ohio Valley to southern Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, strengthening ridging over the Pacific Coast
    will result in height rises over much of the Northwest, while the
    subtropical ridge weakens slightly across the Gulf Coast States and
    GA. Broadly cyclonic flow still will prevail from the northern
    Rockies across the central/northern Plains and Great Lakes. Within
    that flow, a well-developed shortwave trough is evident in moisture-
    channel imagery from the Dakotas to northeastern CO, preceded
    closely by a smaller but convectively augmented perturbation over
    parts of IA, northwestern MO and eastern KS. As these features
    pivot through the broader cyclonic flow today, the leading
    perturbation's MCV should move across northern parts of IL/IN/OH and
    perhaps extreme southern Lower MI. The trailing, stronger trough
    should extend from central MN to central NE by 00Z, then cross the
    remainder of MN/NE and much of IA overnight with an at least
    intermittently closed 500-mb low.

    At the surface, the 11Z analysis showed a frontal-wave low over
    southwestern IA, with some possible augmentation from wake effects
    related to an area od precip/convection to the east and southeast.
    A wavy cold front, with several weak lows attached, was drawn from
    there across eastern/southern KS, the TX Panhandle, and north-
    central NM, preceded by outflow boundaries from northern OK across
    southern MO. By 00Z, the cold front should reach northwestern IL,
    central MO, southwestern OK, and central NM, with diffuse warm front
    over central parts of IL/IN/OH near or north of a convective
    boundary. By 12Z, the cold front should reach northwestern IN,
    southern IL, southern MO, southeastern OK, north-central/northwest
    TX, and southern NM.

    ...Southern Plains to lower Ohio Valley...
    Multiple rounds of convection are expected across this corridor
    today, contributing to the overall severe potential, without sharp
    demarcation between the three main regimes numbered below. The
    outlook has been expanded northeastward up the Ohio Valley in
    deference to an increased severe threat related both directly and
    indirectly to MCV-aided convection.

    1. Ahead of the MCV and accompanying perturbation, a broad area of
    clouds and precip is apparent from central/northern MO across
    southern/central IL and extending into southern IN. The southern
    rim of this precip area contains scattered, initially non-severe
    thunderstorms, utilizing a broad warm-advection/moisture-transport
    plume with parcels isentropically lifted to an LFC. All this
    activity will continue to shift eastward through the remainder of
    the morning, helping to reinforce the ambient baroclinic zone across
    the area, which in turn should help to focus later/afternoon
    development. Meanwhile, some of the morning activity may encounter
    a diurnally destabilizing boundary layer with weakening MLCINH, more
    purely surface-based effective-inflow parcels, and rich boundary-
    layer moisture. The associated outflow/differential-heating
    boundary may shift somewhat northward today over southern/central
    parts of IL/IN before the leading perturbation passes, and also, can
    act to back low-level flow and enlarge hodographs, in a moisture-
    rich, low-LCL environment. As such, some supercell/tornado
    potential has become evident, with damaging gusts and isolated large
    hail also possible.

    2. Closely following that regime, and perhaps blending with the
    western part of it, a round of widely scattered to scattered
    thunderstorms is expected along/ahead of the front from central/
    southern MO to the lower Ohio Valley this afternoon into evening, as large-scale ascent from the stronger/trailing shortwave trough
    overspreads a still very moist air mass. Strong insolation and
    surface dewpoints in the low/mid 70s F will offset modest mid/upper-
    level lapse rates to yield MLCAPE in the 1500-2500 J/kg range south
    of the front and outflow boundary. While warm-sector surface flow
    will be weak, and more veered than on the boundary, sufficient
    deep/speed shear still should be present for a blend of multicells
    and at least transient supercells, with some clustering/bowing of
    convection possible as well. Damaging to severe gusts will be the
    main threats with this activity, though a tornado and isolated large
    hail may occur.

    3. Vertical shear generally will weaken with westward extent near
    and ahead of the front, but substantially hotter surface conditions
    will contribute to very steep boundary-layer lapse rates and
    "inverted-v" thermodynamic profiles in the subcloud layer. A plume
    of 2000-2500 J/kg MLCAPE is expected over northern OK, decreasing
    southwestward across northwest TX into drier and still more deeply
    well-mixed conditions. As such, severe downdrafts and isolated
    large hail will be possible, with greatest potential concentration
    of the gust threat in the OK to southeast KS corridor. Activity
    forming in this regime also may persist and move/merge into the MO
    environment from late afternoon into evening.

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley region...
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop as early as midday,
    and continue through the afternoon, east through southeast of the
    developing mid/upper low and primary vorticity maximum. Some of
    this convection will become supercells, capable of large hail and
    damaging gusts, with clustering or line segments also possible.

    The most favorable low-level parameter space for that convection to
    become severe still appears to be across southern MN, northern IA
    and western WI, where residual moisture north of the optimal warm
    sector still will support surface dewpoints in the mid 60s F, amid
    pockets of favorable diurnal heating and low-level warm advection
    behind the morning cloud/precip plume. Large-scale ascent will
    occur in relation to midlevel DCVA preceding the trough aloft, and
    the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved, 250-300-mb speed max.
    Though low-level flow should be modest, favorable deep shear
    (effective-shear magnitudes in the 45-55-kt range) will support
    organized convection for several hours. Overall, this activity
    should diminish through the evening as nocturnal cooling and
    expansive outflow air collectively stabilize the boundary layer.

    ..Edwards/Kerr.. 07/04/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Jul 5 08:32:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 051254
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 051252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Fri Jul 05 2024

    Valid 051300Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER OHIO VALLEY INTO THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms will be possible midday into the
    afternoon across parts of the upper Ohio Valley into the central and
    southern Appalachians. Damaging gusts 50-65 mph will be the primary
    severe hazard.

    ...Synopsis...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a mid-level shortwave trough
    and associated low moving east across the mid to upper MS Valley and
    into the western Great Lakes. A belt of strong southwesterly 500-mb
    flow (50-60 kt) will move through the base of the trough from the
    lower MO Valley east-northeastward through IN/OH and into the Lower
    Great Lakes through early evening. Upstream of this disturbance, a
    lower amplitude shortwave trough will move southeastward from AB
    into MT during the day.

    ...Eastern Great Lakes/Ohio Valley/Southern and Central
    Appalachians...
    A convectively augmented lead disturbance over the lower OH Valley
    will continue to progress eastward today ahead of a larger-scale
    trough forecast to pivot east across the OH Valley. An ongoing
    squall line from southern IN to the AL/TN border, will move east
    into a very moist and destabilizing airmass. Surface analysis shows
    a reservoir of lower to mid 70s deg F dewpoints from north-central
    AL north-northeastward through the central Appalachians and OH River
    vicinity. A belt of stronger mid-level southwesterly flow will
    likely remain north of the OH River, but some enhancement to 2-6 km
    flow (reference Memphis, Paducah, Fort Campbell, and Evansville
    WSR-88D VADs) will likely spread downstream across TN/KY and into
    southern OH and WV. Visible-satellite imagery denotes strong
    heating will occur ahead of the MCS, thereby contributing to upwards
    of 1500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE by early afternoon (2400 J/kg MLCAPE per
    Nashville 12 UTC raob). Organized multicells (via the MCS) will be
    capable of scattered 50-65 mph gusts and wind damage. Farther south
    into the southern Appalachians and Carolinas/VA Piedmont, weaker
    flow but very moist/unstable conditions later today will support
    scattered thunderstorms and an isolated risk for damaging gusts with
    the stronger wet microbursts.

    Farther north, more uncertainty and potentially lower strong/severe
    storm coverage will extend from Lower MI across the southern/Lower
    Great Lakes into PA and west-central New York. A hail threat
    may also develop in parts of Lower Michigan, ahead of the
    upper-level trough, where mid-level temperatures will be cooler
    which will aid in steeper mid-level lapse rates. Localized damaging
    gusts will be the main severe risk.

    ...Eastern New Mexico...
    Southwestern periphery of stronger mid-level northwesterly flow will
    glance the southern High Plains in between a mid-level anticyclone
    centered near the northern CA coast and the larger-scale trough over
    the Midwest. Strong heating and moist upslope flow (dewpoints near
    60 F) will contribute to initially isolated storms preferentially
    developing over the higher terrain by early to mid afternoon. Model
    guidance shows MLCAPE peaking in the 1500 to 2000 J/kg range, with
    0-6 km shear around 30 kt. Some organization of storms is possible,
    mainly via multicells and perhaps transient supercell structures.
    Isolated severe gusts/hail may accompany the stronger thunderstorms.

    ...MT...
    Aforementioned mid-level impulse will move into central/eastern MT
    this afternoon/evening. Strong heating amidst 40s dewpoints will
    yield weak buoyancy (500-1000 J/kg MLCAPE) but steep lapse rates. A
    few stronger storms may be capable of locally severe gusts for a few
    hours late this afternoon before this activity subsides later this
    evening.

    ..Smith/Bentley.. 07/05/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Jul 6 09:11:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 061228
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 061227

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0727 AM CDT Sat Jul 06 2024

    Valid 061300Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over portions of the
    central Great Plains this afternoon into this evening. Large to
    very large hail and severe gusts are the primary hazards.

    ...Great Plains/Upper Midwest...
    A mid-level disturbance, embedded within a belt of cyclonic
    mid-level flow centered over the Upper Midwest, will move
    southeastward from the western Dakotas/WY into eastern SD/NE today.
    At the surface, a weak area of low pressure will migrate slowly
    eastward from northeast CO into NE as a cold front pushes southeast
    across the central High Plains. By afternoon, several pockets of
    moderate instability will likely be in place from western Kansas
    northeastward into central and eastern Nebraska. Convection is
    first expected to develop to the north of the surface low in
    north-central Nebraska, with cell coverage gradually expanding
    southwestward into western Kansas. Several clusters of storms are
    expected to persist into the early to mid evening along the
    instability corridor from west-central Kansas into central eastern
    Nebraska.

    Relatively steep 700-500 mb lapse rates from 7 to 8 C/km and a wind
    profile supporting storm organization, will potentially favor a
    couple of supercells capable of large to very large hail.
    Relatively quick upscale growth into one or two linear clusters is
    expected towards early evening. Severe gusts will likely become
    more prevalent during this evolution towards more outflow-dominant
    storms.

    Further west, isolated thunderstorms will also be possible behind
    the front from the central High Plains northeastward into southern
    South Dakota. In this area, lower surface dewpoints and weaker
    instability should keep any severe threat marginal. A marginal
    severe threat is also expected to develop southward across parts of
    the southern High Plains. If confidence can increase on the development/placement of a linear cluster across northwest TX by
    early this evening, a focused area of perhaps locally greater threat
    for severe gusts may occur over parts of the South Plains/Caprock
    vicinity in TX. Nonetheless, weaker large-scale ascent in the
    southern High Plains should limit overall storm coverage/intensity.

    ...Northeast...
    The 06/00z MPAS-HT-NSSL model run seemed to reasonably depict storm
    development earlier this morning over southeast NY moving into CT.
    In wake of this activity as it moves northeast and dissipates later
    this morning, isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are
    forecast to develop from the lower Hudson Valley into upstate NY and
    farther northeast into southern ME. A mid-level vorticity lobe over southwestern ON and near Lake Erie this morning, will move northeast
    into the St. Lawrence Valley later today. Ample deep-layer shear
    and moderate buoyancy will support organized cells despite weak
    large-scale forcing for ascent. Localized 50-60 mph gusts capable
    of wind damage are possible with the stronger storms this afternoon
    into the early evening.

    ..Smith/Bentley.. 07/06/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Jul 7 08:58:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 071253
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 071251

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0751 AM CDT Sun Jul 07 2024

    Valid 071300Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE MIDDLE TEXAS COAST INTO FAR
    SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few tornadoes will be possible along the middle to upper Texas
    Coast into southwest Louisiana as Tropical Cyclone Beryl approaches
    the coast and makes landfall later tonight. Scattered severe
    thunderstorms are possible across parts of Oklahoma into northern
    and northwestern portions of Texas.

    ...Central and Southern Plains...
    An extensive cluster of showers and thunderstorms early this morning
    and related stabilizing effects have pushed southward into central
    OK. Outflow associated with this early day convection will likely
    serve as a focus for additional storm development later today.
    Water-vapor imagery shows broad, cyclonic mid-level flow with a
    trough moving southeast from the Dakotas/northern High Plains. This
    mid-level trough will move into the central High Plains late in the
    period as the northern part of the trough shifts east into the Upper
    Midwest. Along the periphery of the residual outflow, appreciable destabilization is expected with mid 60s to lower 70s surface
    dewpoints contributing to moderate to strong instability over the
    southern Great Plains. At the surface, a cold front will advance
    southward across the central Plains. Scattered to numerous
    thunderstorms are forecast to develop during the afternoon into the
    evening. Severe gusts and large hail will be the primary hazards
    with the stronger storms as this activity likely grows upscale into
    one or two linear clusters this evening.

    ...Middle to Upper Texas Coast...
    Tropical Cyclone Beryl and its outer envelope of strong low-level
    flow, will continue to approach the TX coast through much of the
    period before making landfall tonight. The outer convective bands
    within the northern and northeast portions of the larger system will
    overspread the TX coast beginning by late morning and eventually
    into southwest LA. Coincident with the strengthening lower
    tropospheric flow, low-level shear (i.e., enlarging hodographs) will
    increase across the middle to upper Texas Coast into southwest LA.
    Embedded supercells within the convective bands and transient
    rotating updrafts will pose an isolated risk for tornadoes perhaps
    beginning as early as this afternoon. This tornado risk will likely
    increase into the evening and tonight as Beryl moves over the shelf
    waters and approaches the coast tonight.

    ...IA into northern WI...
    An ill-defined surface pattern will feature a weak front/surface
    trough moving east from the eastern Dakotas and the NE Sandhills
    into the IA/MN vicinity later today. East of this wind shift, a
    relatively moist airmass will destabilize in proximity to a
    positively tilted mid-level trough over the Upper Midwest into the
    central High Plains. A belt of moderate mid-level flow will move
    through the base of the trough over portions of NE eastward into IA.
    With no expected appreciable moisture advection through peak
    heating, surface dewpoints will likely remain in the upper 50s to
    lower 60s north, to the lower to mid 60s south. Model forecast
    soundings show generally moderate buoyancy (1000-2500 J/kg MLCAPE).
    Despite the diurnal destabilization, the modest large-scale forcing
    for ascent will likely limit storm coverage/intensity. A localized
    risk for a strong storm or two may materialize, but uncertainty
    remains high precluding the introduction of low-severe probabilities
    this outlook update.

    ..Smith/Bentley.. 07/07/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Jul 7 18:25:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 072000
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 071958

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0258 PM CDT Sun Jul 07 2024

    Valid 072000Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    MIDDLE/UPPER TEXAS COAST/FAR SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA...SOUTHERN
    PLAINS...AND EASTERN COLORADO/FAR NORTHEAST NEW MEXICO...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few tornadoes will be possible along the middle to upper Texas
    Coast into southwest Louisiana as Tropical Cyclone Beryl approaches
    the coast and makes landfall later tonight. Scattered severe
    thunderstorms are also expected across eastern Colorado, northeast
    New Mexico, and parts of the southern Plains.

    ...20Z Update...
    The Marginal and Slight Risks have been expanded southwestward
    across western portions of the TX South Plains, where cumulus is
    increasing this afternoon, and somewhat favorable instability and
    deep-layer shear are already in place. Uncertainty remains rather
    high regarding the potential for redevelopment across parts of
    Oklahoma later this afternoon into the evening, in the wake of
    substantial antecedent convection and outflow. However, relatively
    strong heating is underway across parts of southwest/south-central
    OK, and a few strong to severe storms remain possible by early
    evening. No changes have been made to the Oklahoma portion of the
    Slight Risk.

    No changes have been made to the other Slight Risks. Scattered
    strong to severe storms are still expected from the CO Front Range
    into eastern CO/northeast NM. Also, for parts of the middle/upper TX
    Coast into far southwest LA, the tornado threat is expected to
    increase late tonight into early Monday morning, as Tropical Cyclone
    Beryl approaches the coast. See the previous discussion below for
    more details regarding these areas.

    ..Dean.. 07/07/2024

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1155 AM CDT Sun Jul 07 2024/

    ...Middle to Upper Texas Coast...
    Tropical Cyclone Beryl and its outer envelope of strong low-level
    flow, will continue to approach the Texas coast through much of the
    period before making landfall tonight. Reference NHC for the latest
    forecast details. Coincident with the expected strengthening of
    lower tropospheric flow, low-level shear (i.e., enlarging
    hodographs) will increase across the middle to upper Texas Coast
    into southwest Louisiana through tonight, with embedded supercells
    within the convective bands and transient rotating updrafts
    potentially posing an isolated risk for tornadoes, especially into
    tonight.

    ...Eastern Colorado/Front Range and far northeast New Mexico...
    Low stratus persists at midday across east-central/southeast
    Colorado toward the Raton Mesa vicinity, but more aggressive
    clearing is occurring across northern Colorado. A belt of cyclonic
    flow aloft will continue to overspread the region with some cooling
    aloft, while low-level moisture and upslope flow both increase
    through late today. Storms should develop near the foothills/I-25
    later this afternoon and evening, likely with a bit
    later-than-typical time frame for strong/severe thunderstorm
    development. Moderate instability and strong shear will support
    supercells capable of large hail, with some stronger wind gusts also
    a possibility. Potentially severe storms may continue especially
    across southeast Colorado/northeast New Mexico much of the night.

    ...Southern Plains including Oklahoma and North Texas/Panhandle...
    A semi-organized cluster of storms has evolved across east-central/south-central Oklahoma and may persist eastward early
    this afternoon with a localized severe risk. Trailing outflow and a
    residual surface cold pool are considerable factors in its wake,
    although modification is likely into the afternoon. Storms may
    redevelop as this occurs, potentially including parts of the Texas Panhandle/Texas south Plains into western/southern Oklahoma and the
    Red River vicinity, with isolated severe storms possible later this
    afternoon through early evening.

    ...Iowa/northern Missouri/western Illinois to northern Wisconsin...
    Surface pattern will remain relatively weak and ill-defined, but at
    least widely scattered thunderstorms are expected particularly
    across northern Missouri into Iowa and western Wisconsin near a weak
    surface wave/boundary. Even with some cirrus and some residual early
    day showers, moderate destabilization should occur across the
    region, with development and intensification of storm clusters this
    afternoon in the presence of 20-30 kt effective shear. Isolated
    instances of wind damage is the most probable hazard, but some hail
    could also occur. Some strong storms could occur as far north as
    Wisconsin and perhaps the western Upper Peninsula of Michigan, but
    the overall potential for organized severe storms should remain
    limited.

    ...Southern Appalachians...
    Short-term guidance substantiates the likelihood of scattered
    thunderstorm development this afternoon, with some potential for
    storms to cluster by late afternoon across upstate parts of the
    Carolinas and far northeast Georgia. Mid-level lapse rates will be
    weak with relatively tall/skinny CAPE, but some localized damaging
    downbursts may occur.

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Jul 11 09:23:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 111257
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 111255

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0755 AM CDT Thu Jul 11 2024

    Valid 111300Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF
    SOUTHERN ARIZONA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorm gusts are possible over parts of southern
    Arizona from midafternoon into early evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, the overall pattern will change little through
    the period, with mean ridging in the West, and troughing over the
    Great Lakes and vicinity. The persistent anticyclone will remain
    over the Great Basin, with some deamplification of ridging to its
    north leading to more-zonal flow across the northern tier of states
    from WA-ND. A weak shortwave trough -- apparent in moisture-channel
    imagery over parts of central/eastern MT -- should move slowly east-southeastward across the northern High Plains today amid
    difluent flow. Meanwhile and downstream, a pronounced shortwave
    trough now over parts of WI/IL/IA should eject northeastward over
    the Upper Great Lakes and weaken, while smaller/upstream
    perturbations help to maintain the mean trough. Both the
    low/middle-level remains of TC Beryl, and a closely associated
    shortwave trough of midlatitude origins, should shear northeastward
    across southern QC, the lower St. Lawrence Valley, and northern New
    England, weakening considerably.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low near the NH/QC border with slow-moving, weakening cold front across western New England, the
    coastal Mid-Atlantic/Carolinas, southern GA, and FL Panhandle,
    becoming quasistationary along the northwestern Gulf Coast. This
    front should continue weakening near or just east of its present
    position through the period, over the Northeast, and also weaken
    over the Gulf Coast and southern Atlantic Coast States. Enough
    low-level shear exists over parts of ME today to support a
    conditional supercell potential, but strength/coverage/longevity are
    in question due to weakness of both instability and lift.
    Elsewhere, a lee trough analyzed on that chart over eastern parts of
    MT/WY/CO should remain over the central/northern High Plains today,
    with some eastward drift possible.

    ...AZ...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop
    this afternoon, over the Mogollon Rim and smaller mountain ranges to
    the south. That will occur as strong insolation at those higher
    elevations preferentially removes MLCINH, in the presence of
    generally greater low-level moisture than previous days. Some
    strengthening of flow aloft is expected over this region, around the southeastern rim of the anticyclone. This will support convective
    motion off the Rim (and small mountain ranges to its south), then
    atop well-heated/deeply mixed boundary layers of the desert floor.
    Isolated strong-severe gusts are possible from the relatively early, more-discrete activity.

    With the lower-elevation boundary layers being very deep (surface to
    around 600 mb), but enough moisture maintained through mixing to
    keep surface-based buoyancy (MLCAPE in the 500-1000 J/kg range),
    expect some aggregation of outflows with additional development atop
    those -- especially over southeastern AZ. The net result should be
    both translation and developmental propagation of convection
    southwestward to and across the international border, with swaths of strong-severe gusts possible.

    ...Northern High Plains...
    Isolated to widely scattered, high-based thunderstorms are expected
    to form near the lee trough, where both relatively maximized
    convergence and strong surface heating should contribute to enough
    lift for convective initiation. The main concern up and down the
    corridor should be damaging to severe gusts, given the deeply mixed
    subcloud layer and ample downdraft-acceleration opportunity that
    will afford. Isolated severe hail also may occur, amidst enough
    deep-layer shear for some organized thunderstorms (effective-shear
    magnitudes of 30-40 kt). Lack of greater moisture and buoyancy will
    be a limiting factor for coverage and intensity of convection, which
    should diminish rapidly after dark.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 07/11/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Jul 12 09:35:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 121257
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 121255

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0755 AM CDT Fri Jul 12 2024

    Valid 121300Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE OZARKS
    TO LOWER OHIO VALLEY...AND OVER THE NORTHERN AND CENTRAL GREAT
    PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe wind and hail will be possible this afternoon from
    the Ozarks to lower Ohio Valley, and over the northern and central
    Great Plains from late afternoon into tonight.

    ...Synopsis...
    Deamplification of the northern-stream pattern is forecast in mid/
    upper levels, as a persistent trough over the Great Lakes and
    vicinity moves eastward and weakens substantially. A height
    weakness will continue to extend from that area southwestward across
    the mid Mississippi Valley, Arklatex, and south TX, with several embedded/slow-moving vorticity lobes. Meanwhile, a broad area of
    difluent, zonal to northwesterly flow should continue over the
    central/northern Plains region, northeast of a prominent anticyclone
    shifting slowly eastward across the Great Basin and Four Corners
    regions.

    At the surface, the 1Z analysis showed weak lows over northeastern
    MT and southwestern SD, along a quasistationary to slow-moving warm
    front drawn from southern AB to western SD, central/southeastern NE,
    central MO, and southern IL. The slightly better-defined MT low
    should move slowly eastward to northwestern ND by early evening,
    while the frontal zone to its southeast drifts eastward and
    northward over central SD, eastern NE, northeastern KS, and central/
    northern MO. A lee trough -- initially drawn from western SD to
    eastern CO and the TX Panhandle -- should meander erratically near
    its present position today, with some adjustment by falling
    pressures related to strong surface heating.

    ...Northern/central Plains...
    Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are moving southeastward
    over portions of southeastern SD to central N this morning, in a
    zone of weak DCVA aloft superimposed on a broader area of low-level
    warm/moist advection above the surface. While an isolated,
    marginally severe hail report cannot be ruled out in another couple
    hours, the overall decreasing trend should continue as the LLJ
    likewise weakens through the remainder of the morning.

    Isolated to scattered, high-based thunderstorms are expected to
    develop over western parts of the outlook area near the lee trough
    today, within a broad area of strong diurnal heating. Isolated
    development also may occur farther east near the warm front and
    greater low-level moisture, though weaker lift and stronger MLCINH
    are expected in that corridor than near the lee trough. Activity
    west of the front will move atop a deeply well-mixed boundary layer
    suitable for strong-severe downdrafts. Surface dewpoints mixing
    well down into the 40s to mid 50s will result in decreasing MLCAPE
    as MLCINH also weakens, with around 500-1000 J/kg expected in the
    most-probable area for storm formation. Buoyancy will increase
    eastward as mixing weakens, but capping strengthens, with a corridor
    of 60s F dewpoints and 2000-3000 J/kg MLCAPE along and just east of
    the front. Considerable uncertainty exists how much of the lee-
    trough activity can aggregate cold pools and potentially utilize
    forced ascent eastward into the greater moisture, for longer and
    better organization.

    Outside the lee trough, forcing for convective-scale lift appears
    nebulous and poorly focused across the region, with considerable
    uncertainty remaining on preferred potential corridor(s) for greater
    severe concentration. One possibility is closer to a northern-
    stream mid/upper trough north of the international border, but still
    with uncertainty on the southern extent into the CONUS of any
    resulting MCS. These uncertainties are reflected in a wide range of
    convective distributions and intensities across the various
    convection-allowing guidance, as well as implied from precip fields
    in the deterministic synoptic models and their ensembles. As such,
    a broad marginal area is maintained for this outlook cycle, with
    embedded upgrade(s) possible if mesoscale trends and 12Z/later
    guidance come into clearer focus.

    ...Ozarks to lower Ohio Valley...
    Isolated to widely scattered, non-severe thunderstorms are ongoing
    over parts of southern MO, northwestern AR and extreme eastern OK,
    in a field of low-level WAA and weak DCVA. A related increase in
    convective coverage and intensity is possible farther east and
    southeast across portions of this region as the foregoing boundary
    layer diurnally destabilizes, with marginally severe gusts or hail
    possible in the strongest cells.

    One of the vorticity lobes embedded in the height weakness aloft,
    over eastern KS to central/eastern MO, is being enhanced by an MCV
    from prior/overnight convection now over southwestern MO. This
    feature will move slowly eastward today and may contribute to
    relatively maximized thunderstorm coverage in an increasingly
    unstable airmass from the Ozarks to lower Ohio Valley this
    afternoon. Rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints commonly
    upper 60s to low 70s F) and diurnal heating should offset modest mid/upper-level lapse rates to yield peak MLCAPE in the 2000-3000
    J/kg range. Weak low/middle-level flow and modest shear should
    limit organization enough that severe potential should remain
    isolated and poorly organized.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 07/12/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Jul 13 10:05:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 131259
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 131257

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0757 AM CDT Sat Jul 13 2024

    Valid 131300Z - 141200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN PLAINS INTO THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Multiple clusters of strong to severe thunderstorms are possible
    across portions of the Northern Plains into the Upper Mississippi
    Valley today and tonight.

    ...Synopsis...
    The basic middle/upper-level pattern will change little over the
    CONUS this period, and will feature:
    1. A strong anticyclone centered over the Four Corners region, and
    covering most of the landmass from the Sierra Nevada to the
    south-central High Plains, and MX border to southern parts of ID/WY.

    2. Extensive but fairly weak synoptic troughing from the Great
    Lakes to the mid Mississippi Valley, TX and north-central MX.
    3. A belt of west-northwest to northwest flow across the northern
    Rockies, northern Plains and upper Mississippi Valley, becoming
    weaker and strongly difluent over the Upper Great Lakes and lower
    Missouri Valley.

    A northern-stream shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel
    imagery over southern AB -- should move across southern SK today and
    reach northern MN and adjoining parts of ON overnight. Downstream,
    MCVs and accompanying small, convectively generated/enhanced
    shortwave perturbations are apparent over the ND/MB border, west-central/southwestern MN, and the NE Sandhills. The MN feature
    may be most influential for severe potential, and is expected to
    move southeastward over southern WI through this evening.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over southern MB near
    Winnipeg, with cold front southwestward over central/southwestern ND
    and southeastern MT. A wavy, warm to quasistationary front was
    drawn from the low southeastward across central/southeastern MN to
    central IL. The latter boundary should move little through the
    period, except where shifted/reinforced on the mesoscale by
    convective processes, such as currently across parts of southern MN.
    The cold front should move to northwestern MN and northern SD by
    00Z, decelerating or perhaps stalling over
    southeastern/south/central MT.

    ...North-central CONUS...
    A multi-episode, somewhat conditional, but potentially significant
    severe threat exists across the north-central CONUS through tomorrow
    morning. Although individual severe thunderstorms and a few
    clusters/complexes are possible across the broader swath from MT to
    the Upper Great Lakes, two corridors of greatest convective/severe
    potential are apparent, with some spatial overlap in the middle,
    represented for now by the 15% "slight risk" probabilities. If/as
    confidence increases in especially wind potential with either of
    these, based on succeeding guidance and mesoscale environmental
    trends, more tightly focused/greater probabilities may need to be
    introduced.

    1. Eastern Dakotas to Lake Michigan vicinity:
    An ongoing, arc of convection and precip, with scattered embedded thunderstorms, is moving southeastward across southern MN. This
    complex earlier was responsible for generating the aforementioned
    MCV. That feature may aid in additional development and maintenance
    of thunderstorms later this morning, along either the leading-edge,
    low-level pressure theta-e perturbation of the earlier complex, or
    the trailing outflow/differential-heating boundary. The main
    concern will be severe gusts -- perhaps in an organized swath --
    with isolated large hail possible. Until then, isolated severe
    hail/gusts may occur with the more isolated strong-severe convection
    in the ongoing complex.

    Additional activity may form along or north of the resulting
    boundary almost anytime this afternoon or evening, lending timing
    uncertainty to the onset of any convection that may grow upscale
    into an MCS with primary wind concern. However, the process appears
    probable enough at some point that the corridor of severe
    probabilities should be maintained for now. Rich low-level moisture
    will persist south of the front/outflow in this corridor, with upper
    60s to mid 70s F surface dewpoints common. Combined with diurnal
    heating, this should contribute to afternoon MLCAPE ranging from
    around 3000-4000 J/kg over the eastern Dakotas, southwestern MN and northwestern IA south of the baroclinic zone (where lapse rates will
    be greatest) to around 2000-2500 J/kg in southern WI. Although
    low-level flow and hodographs generally will be weak, boundary-aided enhancements to low-level vorticity and shear may contribute some
    tornado risk.

    2. Northern High Plains to eastern Dakotas:
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop
    close to the MT/SK border, on either or both sides, late this
    afternoon into evening. This activity should move southeastward
    into a substantial post-frontal easterly flow component near the
    surface, aiding both storm-relative winds in the inflow layer and
    low-level shear. In the regime of enhanced mid/upper gradient flow
    between the border shortwave to the east and the Four Corners
    anticyclone, and with near neutral large-scale forcing, deep shear
    should be favorable as well, despite weak absolute speeds in the
    boundary layer.

    As such, high-based supercell and multicell activity is possible
    early amidst 35-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes, and atop a still
    well-mixed boundary layer remaining from diurnal heating. Large
    hail and localized severe/downburst gusts will be possible while
    activity still is relatively discrete. Any upscale aggregation of
    outflow and related forced ascent would move into a progressively
    moister environment with continued steep lapse rates above the
    surface -- all supporting 1500-2500 J/kg MLCAPE and enough remaining
    well-mixed low-level air and related DCAPE to sustain an organized,
    potentially significant wind threat with any forward-propagating
    complex(es) into tonight.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 07/13/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Jul 14 08:03:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 140535
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 140534

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1234 AM CDT Sun Jul 14 2024

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN PLAINS INTO THE UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to severe thunderstorms are expected from the northern Plains
    into the Upper Midwest.

    ...Northern Plains to Upper Midwest...

    Large-scale pattern is not expected to change appreciably during the
    day1 period, though some amplification is possible later in the
    week. Upper high is forecast to remain anchored in the Four Corners
    vicinity while seasonally strong mid-level flow will hold along a
    corridor near the US/Canadian border. Negligible height changes are
    expected during the first half of the period, though a few notable
    short waves will track east-southeast from southern AB/SK into the
    Great Lakes. Each short-wave trough should encourage convective
    development -- some of it will likely be severe.

    Early this morning, a weak MCS was propagating southeast across
    northern IL/southern Lake MI. This activity is supported by a weak
    disturbance and should progress into the southern Great Lakes/OH
    Valley later today. Diurnal heating will contribute to strong
    buoyancy, and robust updrafts may evolve along the leading debris
    field by mid day. Locally severe winds may develop if convection
    reintensifies.

    Of more concern will be convection that develops across the northern
    Plains later in the afternoon. A strong short-wave trough will dig
    southeast across southern AB by 15/00z before translating into
    MB/eastern Dakotas by the end of the period. It appears a weak
    surface low should evolve ahead of this feature over eastern MT
    early, then shift into central SD by peak heating. A
    northwest-southeast corridor of low-level warm advection will extend
    across the Dakotas north of a synoptic boundary that will be draped
    from southern MN-central SD-northeast MT. Strong boundary-layer
    heating will negate CINH across the High Plains such that isolated
    convection should develop by 22z. This activity will mature and grow
    upscale through the evening. Early storm mode should be
    supercellular, then clustering will lead to an MCS that is expected
    to track southeast toward the mid MO Valley. Very steep lapse rates
    will lead to strong buoyancy, and potentially very large hail
    (possibly in excess of 2 inches). Very strong winds (>70mph) may
    also be noted along the leading edge of the surging MCS.

    ..Darrow/Moore.. 07/14/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Jul 16 07:28:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 160548
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 160547

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1247 AM CDT Tue Jul 16 2024

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE OHIO VALLEY AND NORTHEAST AND OVER THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from the central Plains
    across the Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys into the Northeast later
    today. Greater severe-thunderstorm potential is anticipated across
    the central Plains vicinity, and from the Upper Ohio Valley into the
    Northeast.

    ...Upper Ohio Valley to the Northeast...

    Latest model guidance continues to suggest a seasonally strong upper
    trough will dig southeast across MB/ON into the Great Lakes later
    today. This evolution will force southern extent of stronger
    mid-high-level flow to sag south across the mid MS and OH Valley
    region, as well as New England. Of particular note early this
    morning, a well-defined MCS has evolved over the Midwest with the
    leading edge of this complex arcing from southern lower MI-central
    IN-central IL. Remnants of this MCS are expected to serve as the
    focus for renewed robust thunderstorm development early this
    afternoon. Current speed/movement suggests strong/severe
    thunderstorm development will occur over the upper OH Valley as
    temperatures warm into the mid 80s. MCV is currently located over
    southern Lake MI and this feature will track across extreme southern
    ON which should encourage upscale convective growth during the
    afternoon. Damaging winds are the primary concern with this
    convection.

    Somewhat removed from this feature, very warm surface temperatures
    are expected across northern VA, the Delmarva into NJ. Latest
    guidance suggests convective temperatures in the upper 90s will be
    breached by 22z. PW values are fairly high despite the warm
    temperatures, and severe downbursts could be noted with storms that
    evolve along this corridor.

    ...Central Plains...

    Northwesterly mid-level flow is forecast to strengthen a bit across
    the central High Plains as the Great Lakes trough becomes a dominant
    feature in the eastern US. Latest model guidance suggests a surface
    front will settle across southern KS, arcing into southeast CO by
    late afternoon. Strong boundary-layer heating along/south of this
    boundary will allow temperatures to soar above 100F and any CINH
    will easily be removed. High-based convection that evolves near this
    boundary may efficiently generate strong downdrafts.

    Upslope flow across eastern CO favors convection generating off the
    higher terrain which should congeal downstream over the Plains
    during the evening. This activity would then propagate southeast
    toward northwest OK during the overnight hours.

    Models also continue to generate robust convection ahead of a weak
    short-wave trough digging toward NE by late afternoon. A weak
    surface low is forecast to develop in response to the digging short
    wave, and a small corridor of focused low-level convergence is
    expected to aid this development.

    ...Southern MO to southern IN...

    Considerable uncertainty exists regarding convective evolution
    today. While there is confidence in scattered convection developing
    along a pronounced frontal zone at some point, most model guidance
    is notably inconsistent due to varying influences from early-day
    thunderstorms and their effect on air mass destabilization. Some
    consideration was given to increasing severe probabilities along
    this corridor, but confidence in placement/timing of strongest
    convection does not warrant this at this time.

    ..Darrow/Marsh.. 07/16/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Jul 17 09:52:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 171252
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 171251

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0751 AM CDT Wed Jul 17 2024

    Valid 171300Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE MID-ATLANTIC INTO CENTRAL/SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Damaging thunderstorm gusts appear most likely and concentrated
    today over parts of the Mid-Atlantic into central/southern New
    England.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a seasonally high-amplitude pattern will
    dominate the CONUS through the period, with longwave ridging in the
    West and troughing in the East. Anchoring the ridge, a persistent
    anticyclone -- previously over the Four Corners area including NM --
    will reorganize and retrograde slightly westward, becoming centered
    over the Monument Valley region of AZ/UT by the end of the period.
    Meanwhile, a synoptic-scale trough -- apparent in moisture-channel
    imagery from James Bay to southern MN and northern IA -- will pivot
    across the Upper Great Lakes and adjoining states through this
    evening. By 12Z, this trough should extend from central QC to the
    Lower Great Lakes and upper Ohio Valley region.

    A large area of cyclonic flow -- generally weakening with outward
    extent from jet cores over the Great Lakes States and Northeast --
    should cover much of the CONUS east of the Rockies and north of the
    Gulf Coast States. On its southwestern periphery, strong difluence
    will persist over the central/southern High Plains and much of TX.
    Within and beneath that, a prominent MCV was apparent in radar-
    reflectivity composites northwest of OKC. This feature is forecast
    to drift southeastward over central/southeastern OK today, then
    pivot eastward into southern AR overnight.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a cold front from southern QC
    across LAKE Ontario, northwestern OH, central IN, southern IL,
    south-central MO, southeastern KS, northwestern OK, the TX
    Panhandle, and central/southeastern NM. The cold front is, and will
    continue to be, diffused along segments of its extent by
    baroclinicity from outflows of varying sizes. Still, in general, it
    should reach western New England, the Delaware Valley, western VA,
    middle TN, southern AR, to a weak frontal-wave low over north- central/northeast TX by 00Z. By 12Z, the front should extend from
    near Cape Cod to central/eastern VA, north-central MS, and southern
    AR, with a low lingering over northeast TX near or even somewhat
    behind the MCV.

    ...Mid-Atlantic to New England...
    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop
    initially during midday near the cold front, then through the
    afternoon ahead of the cold front (especially over higher terrain
    and near prefrontal troughing in the boundary layer). Convective
    coverage and intensity should increase as this activity moves
    eastward to northeastward across the outlook area, forming a blend
    of discrete storms, clusters and lines. Damaging gusts will be the
    primary hazard, and several gusts above severe limits are possible
    as well.

    As the mid/upper-level synoptic trough approaches, deep-layer
    southwest flow and shear will strengthen over the area, with the
    mean-wind and deep-shear vectors oriented along to slightly
    rightward of the axes of convective forcing. This will support the
    mixed modes, which may include isolate supercell structures as well.
    Overall organization will be aided by 30-40-kt effective-shear
    magnitudes from central PA northeastward, and 20-30 kt farther south
    and southwest. Meanwhile, the greatest buoyancy should reside over
    the coastal Mid-Atlantic amid rich moisture and strong diurnal
    heating. Although midlevel lapse rates are forecast to be very weak
    (near or even less than moist-adiabatic in some layers), ambient
    low-level theta-e and diabatic heating should drive MLCAPE into the
    1000-1500 J/kg range over most of the region, and around 2000 J/kg
    near the coast -- all atop well-mixed subcloud layers supporting
    downdraft accelerations.

    ...Central/southern High Plains...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms -- some quickly evolving
    to outflow-driven, forward-propagating clusters -- should form this
    afternoon over the Sangre de Cristos, Front Range, Laramie Range,
    and attendant foothills/ridges. Damaging to isolated severe gusts
    will be the primary concern, though isolated severe hail also is
    possible.

    Activity should form first over the mountains, where heating of high
    terrain and at least marginal moisture will combine to
    preferentially erode MLCINH. Lee troughing should develop over the
    High Plains late tonight, but before then, a substantial, post-
    frontal upslope/easterly flow component generally will prevail in
    low levels. This will aid in lift and storm-relative boundary-layer
    winds available to convection moving generally southeastward out of
    the higher terrain. An axis of low-level moisture will correspond
    well to a buoyancy axis as well, with peak MLCAPE around 1000-1500
    J/kg in a corridor roughly from the NE Panhandle to western KS by
    21Z, then gradually diminishing as nocturnal cooling occurs and
    outflow impinges on parts of the area from the west. Modest
    midlevel winds and weak shear should exist over most of this area,
    despite strong directional change with height in low/middle levels.
    Steep low/middle-level lapse rates -- near dry adiabatic in the
    boundary layer -- will support strong-severe gust potential in the
    most vigorous cells/clusters.

    ...North TX to central AR...
    Widely scattered to scattered showers and thunderstorms should
    develop over a vast area along and southeast of the front this
    afternoon, southwestward from the outlook in the Atlantic Seaboard
    across the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys, Southeast CONUS, and Mid-South to north/central TX. Most of this activity will be in a weak-shear but moisture-rich setting.

    While isolated, pulse-severe downbursts cannot be ruled out with the
    most intense activity anywhere in those regions, the greatest
    potential concentration of both convection and at least marginal
    severe potential appears to be over parts of north-central/northeast
    TX into central AR, along and either side of the I-30 corridor. A
    combination of lift along the front and prefrontal outflows, with
    enhanced convergence in the MCV's mass response, and strong warm
    sector diurnal heating, will strip away MLCINH this afternoon and
    favor relatively dense development. Additional activity should form
    along both colliding outflow/differential-heating boundaries and the leading-edge/forced-ascent zone of any clusters' cold pools that can
    surge into the high-theta-e preconvective boundary layer. Upper 60s
    to low 70s F surface dewpoints will support MLCAPE in the 2000-3000
    J/kg range (locally higher), with well-mixed subcloud layers despite
    the rich moisture. Weak vertical shear will limit the overall
    organization of the threat.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 07/17/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Jul 18 07:48:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 180552
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 180551

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1251 AM CDT Thu Jul 18 2024

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS EASTERN NORTH
    CAROLINA INTO FAR SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible Thursday
    afternoon across parts of north-central Montana and the central and
    southern High Plains. Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are
    also expected from the southern Appalachians into eastern North
    Carolina.

    ...Synopsis...
    Early-morning surface observations show a diffuse cold front draped
    from the Mid-Atlantic region into the southern Plains. This feature
    is expected to slowly push south over the next 24 hours, as surface
    high pressure builds over the Plains/Midwest in the wake of an eastward-tracking upper wave. A reservoir of upper 60s to low 70s
    dewpoints lies to the south of the cold front, and while mid-level
    lapse rates are fairly modest (based on 00 UTC soundings), diurnal
    heating into the mid 80s should be sufficient to promote
    thunderstorm development along the front by early afternoon.
    Thunderstorm coverage is expected to be somewhat more focused across
    the southern Appalachians into the Carolinas, as ascent associated
    with a weak mid-level perturbation (currently over the mid-MS
    Valley) overspreads the region at peak heating. To the west,
    isolated to scattered thunderstorms appear likely within an upslope
    flow regime along the central Rockies and ahead of a shortwave
    trough over northern Montana.

    ...Carolinas...
    The synoptic cold front is currently forecast to be along the VA/NC
    border by around mid-day. Thunderstorm development along the front
    appears probable by around 18 UTC, as temperatures warm into the low
    80s and ascent from a subtle mid-level impulse overspreads the
    region. Large hail may be an initial concern depending on storm
    coverage along the front, but storm motion and deep-layer shear
    vectors along and/or towards the cool side of the boundary will
    likely promote upscale growth by mid/late afternoon. As this occurs,
    the potential for strong to severe winds will increase downstream
    across eastern NC and far southeast VA. Latest CAM guidance shows
    reasonably good agreement in the development of a squall line, and
    while deep-layer shear will not be overly strong (around 25 knots),
    heating ahead of the line should yield moderate buoyancy with MLCAPE
    reaching up to 2500 J/kg that will promote robust convection capable
    of damaging gusts. The coverage of this threat appears sufficient to
    warrant higher (15%) wind risk probabilities.

    ...Central to southern High Plains...
    Another day of easterly upslope winds along the southern to central
    Rockies is anticipated as a surface high to the east builds. Latest
    upper-air analyses show the east slopes of the Rockies lie on the
    periphery of a plume of relatively steep (7+ C/km) lapse rates. This
    should support isolated to scattered thunderstorm development by mid
    to late afternoon. Adequate deep-layer shear will be in place to
    promote storm organization, including the potential for a supercell
    or two if more discrete storm modes can be realized. However, weak
    low-level storm-relative winds and steep low-level lapse rates will
    likely favor cold-pool driven storm propagation and the development
    of multiple convective clusters with an attendant severe-wind risk.

    ...Montana...
    A shortwave impulse is evident in early-morning water-vapor imagery
    across the Pacific Northwest. This feature is expected to crest the
    apex of a stout upper ridge over the next 24 hours. Advected
    precipitable water imagery shows a diluted plume of monsoonal
    moisture ahead of this wave, which should provide adequate mid-level
    moisture for thunderstorm development by late afternoon. While
    buoyancy will be very modest (around 500 J/kg SBCAPE), 30 knot
    mid-level flow atop easterly low-level winds should provide adequate
    deep-layer wind shear for some storm organization, most likely into
    somewhat cohesive clusters given deep-boundary layer mixing that
    will favor strong cold pool production. Such clusters may be capable
    of strong to severe winds as they push east across north-central MT.

    ..Moore.. 07/18/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Jul 18 09:50:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 181254
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 181252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Thu Jul 18 2024

    Valid 181300Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PORTIONS OF NORTH
    CAROLINA AND EXTREME SOUTHEASTERN VIRGINIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The greatest concentration of damaging gusts today should be over
    portions of North Carolina and extreme southeastern Virginia.

    ...Synopsis...
    The upper-air pattern will remain dominated by mean ridging over the
    West (from AZ-AB and northward to the Arctic) and troughing in the
    East. The large-scale ridge will be anchored by a high slowly
    retrograding westward from the Four Corners toward the southern
    Great Basin. Just upstream from the ridge, a strong shortwave
    trough was apparent over the ID Panhandle and adjoining parts of BC.
    This feature should move slowly eastward through the mean ridge
    today, reaching northwestern MT and southern AB by 00Z, then turning southeastward over central MT tonight.

    A strong cyclone over northern tip of QC will dig southward over
    northern QC through the period, with little movement to the mean
    trough extending southwestward across the lower/mid Mississippi
    Valley. Within the associated cyclonic flow, a positively tilted synoptic-scale trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery from central/southwestern QC across the neck of ON to Lower MI and IN --
    should pivot eastward and become more positively tilted as the
    northern part accelerates. By the end of the period, the trailing
    part of this trough should extend across eastern New England to NJ.
    A subtle, positively tilted perturbation -- now over eastern parts
    of KY/TN -- should move east-northeastward to eastern VA and
    northeastern NC today.

    In between the longwave trough and ridge, northwesterly to northerly
    flow aloft will prevail across the Great Plains, with small/low-
    amplitude shortwaves and vorticity lobes exiting the mean-ridge
    position over the northern Rockies. Difluent upper-level flow will
    extend across most of the Plains States, but should be especially
    prominent from the central High Plains southeastward to the TX Gulf
    Coast.

    Surface analysis at 11Z showed a cold front from southeastern QC
    across the Hudson Valley to central/western VA, middle TN, central
    AR, north-central TX, the TX Permian Basin, and central NM. This
    boundary should move slowly southeastward and southward across the
    Atlantic and Gulf Coast States today, reaching near a line from ORF-SPA-MGM-PIB-SAT by 00Z. The segment of the front from south TX
    to AL should stall overnight, while the remainder drifts east-
    southeastward. A lee trough was drawn from southeastern MT across
    eastern WY/CO/NM just est of the mountains, and should remain near
    its present position through the day.

    ...NC/VA and vicinity...
    Thunderstorms may develop from midday through this afternoon in the
    higher terrain of western NC and southwestern VA, as well as weak
    surface troughing to the east, and the front on the north side of
    the outlook. While at least isolated damaging gusts and large hail
    will be possible over a broad area from the high-terrain genesis
    zone to the Tidewater and northern SC, the greatest concentration
    and organization of convection (and potential for damaging to severe
    gusts) should be over portions of central/eastern NC south of the
    front, and perhaps extreme southeastern VA near the NC border along
    the front.

    Activity will be aided by weak large-scale ascent preceding the
    southern Appalachians shortwave trough, acting in concert with
    string diurnal heating to steepen low/middle level lapse rates. A
    deep summertime troposphere and rich low-level moisture (dewpoints
    commonly in the 70s over and east of the Piedmont) will further
    contribute to favorable buoyancy, with peak MLCAPE reaching the
    2000-3000 J/kg range over the "slight risk" area of greatest
    unconditional severe probabilities. 25-35-kt westerly to
    west-southwesterly flow aloft should encourage storm motion into
    that optimal moisture/CAPE, with upscale aggregation possible into forward-propagating clusters or a squall line. That would maximize damaging-wind potential until activity moves offshore this evening.

    ...Central/southern High Plains...
    Another afternoon of scattered to widely scattered thunderstorm
    development is likely near the lee trough, and over higher terrain
    near the eastern rim of the Rockies. Additional foci may include
    parts of the Cheyenne/Palmer/Raton Mesa ridges, and an
    outflow/differential heating boundary from ongoing/non-severe
    convection over the TX Panhandle/northeastern NM region.
    Thunderstorms should move mainly to the south, with some
    southeastward or even southwestward tracks (for rightward-deviant
    cells) possible. Isolated severe gusts and large hail will be
    possible, with small-scale clustering potentially increasing severe probabilities locally.

    From the lee trough eastward, low-level flow will be weak, but with
    a predominant easterly surface component, helping to maximize both
    low-level lift and (through strong veering with height) deep shear. Effective-shear magnitudes of 35-45 kt and somewhat long, nearly
    straight low-level hodographs are progged east of the lee trough,
    supporting the potential for a blend of multicell and supercell
    modes. However, modest mid/upper winds are forecast, keeping storm
    motion slow outside of areas where cold pool aggregate and
    accelerate storm-translation vectors well past those suggested by
    ambient winds. The corridor of riches low-level moisture will cover
    about the eastern half of the outlook, within which peak/
    preconvective MLCAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg will be possible. However,
    MLCINH also will increase with eastward extent, with time this
    evening, and with lower surface elevation. As such, activity should
    become weaker and more isolated tonight.

    ...Portions of MT...
    Widely scattered to scattered, high-based thunderstorms are expected
    to develop this afternoon over higher terrain of west-central MT, as
    three processes overlap:
    1. Preceding the shortwave trough, large-scale DCVA/ascent/cooling
    aloft over spreads the area;
    2. Diurnal heating preferentially erodes low-level MLCINH over
    higher elevations, and builds deep/well-mixed subcloud layers with
    40s to low 50s F surface dewpoints, beneath around 300-700 J/kg
    MLCAPE;
    3. Modest low-level convergence continues near a lee trough just
    east of the mountains, with weak closed-low development possible at
    the surface over north-central MT.

    As this activity shifts eastward, isolated severe gusts may occur.
    Aggregating outflows may permit an arc of strong/locally severe
    outflow to organize, with convection along or behind the leading
    edge. Lack of more robust moisture/buoyancy should limit the
    overall threat, and contribute to enough stabilization of the
    foregoing boundary layer to weaken the activity during the evening.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 07/18/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Jul 20 10:01:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 201253
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 201252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Sat Jul 20 2024

    Valid 201300Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND CENTRAL TO SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to isolated severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of
    the Southeast and central to southern High Plains, mainly from
    mid-afternoon to evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    The large-scale pattern in mid/upper levels will continue to feature
    longwave troughing over eastern North America, and ridging in the
    West. The latter will be anchored by an anticyclone -- now centered
    over AZ -- that will retrograde slowly northwestward through the
    period. This process -- and a broad field of minor shortwaves and
    vorticity lobes in northerly/northwesterly flow -- will contribute
    to net height falls over much of the central CONUS. A downstream
    shortwave trough was evident in moisture-channel imagery from the
    lower Ohio Valley southwestward across western TN to eastern LA.
    This perturbation should move eastward across the Tennessee Valley
    region through midday, then over parts of GA and the Carolinas
    through this evening.

    The 11Z surface map showed a weak, quasistationary frontal zone from
    southern VA across eastern TN, western MS, central LA, and
    south-central TX. Except where locally reconfigured by convection,
    this frontal zone should remain quasistationary, while gradually
    losing definition. A lee trough -- drawn from western MT to western
    SD and western KS, should remain nearly in place through the day,
    with slight shifts possible in late afternoon toward strongly heated
    areas.

    ...Southeast...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms should form and move
    northeastward over the area this afternoon, as large-scale lift
    ahead of the approaching trough spreads atop a richly moist,
    strongly heated, weakly capped boundary layer. Damaging to isolated
    severe gusts are possible. Some of the activity may aggregate into
    loosely organized clusters that maximize damage potential locally.
    Somewhat enhanced mid/upper flow will contribute to spotty
    effective-shear magnitudes of 30-35 kt, aiding in organization of
    some of this activity. The inflow layer will be characterized by
    surface dewpoints commonly in the low-mid 70s F and favorable lapse
    rates from surface heating beneath a deep troposphere. As such, and
    despite the lack of large mid/upper-level lapse rates, a deeply
    buoyant preconvective profile should take shape, with peak MLCAPE in
    the 2000-3000 J/kg range over the Low Country/coastal plain, and
    1500-2500 J/kg across the Piedmont.

    ...Central/southern High Plains...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this
    afternoon along the Front Range/Sangre de Cristo corridor from
    southeastern WY to NM, as well as over the Raton Mesa, near the lee
    trough, and along leftover outflow/differential-heating boundaries
    from prior overnight/morning convection. Isolated severe gusts and
    hail are possible.

    This activity will be moving into a generally less-buoyant airmass
    than the previous day, thanks to extensive prior convection and
    outflow over much of the region. Nevertheless, sufficient diurnal
    heating and residual boundary-layer moisture are expected to support
    both well-mixed subcloud layers and enough CAPE for deep convection.
    Though outflow-driven forward propagation may contribute to erratic
    storm motions locally, a general southeastward to southward
    translation is forecast, given the ambient midlevel winds. Although
    strong directional shear is expected, forecast soundings indicate
    much of this will be in the form of backing with height instead of
    veering, and with weak low/middle-level winds limiting vertical bulk
    shear. Peak afternoon MLCAPE of 1000-1500 J/kg is possible near an
    irregularly defined moist axis extending from the eastern Panhandles
    and southwestern KS northeastward, and over eastern CO. Buoyancy
    will diminish atop a drier, more deeply mixed layer westward toward
    the mountains. Overall, convection should diminish in coverage and
    intensity throughout the evening.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 07/20/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Jul 20 12:07:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 201615
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 201613

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1113 AM CDT Sat Jul 20 2024

    Valid 201630Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR THE
    SOUTHEAST AND THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to isolated severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of
    the Southeast and central to southern High Plains, mainly from
    mid-afternoon to evening.

    ...Southeast...
    Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level shortwave
    trough moving slowly east across KY/TN/AL towards the southern
    Appalachians. A mid-level anticyclone located over the Gulf Stream
    to the east of the Southeast U.S. will move little during the
    period. Late morning surface analysis indicates a very moist
    airmass resides over the coastal plains of GA/Carolinas with mid 70s
    deg F dewpoints. Ample heating via mostly sunny skies (per visible
    satellite data) east of a line from Macon, GA to Columbia, SC, and
    to the Research Triangle, will result in a moderately unstable
    boundary layer by early to mid afternoon. Forecast soundings show
    PW around 2 to 2.25 inches and moderate effective shear (20-30 kt).
    Scattered thunderstorms will likely develop in several clusters as
    convective temperatures are breached by early afternoon. Given the buoyant/high PW environment, water-loaded downdrafts will accompany
    the stronger thunderstorm cores. Isolated wet microbursts capable
    of 45-60 mph gusts will potentially result in isolated to widely
    scattered wind damage this afternoon and early evening.

    ...Central and southern High Plains...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this
    afternoon along the Front Range/Sangre de Cristo corridor from
    southeastern WY to NM, as well as over the Raton Mesa, near the lee
    trough, and along leftover outflow/differential-heating boundaries
    from prior overnight/morning convection. Isolated severe gusts and
    hail are possible with the stronger storms before this activity
    diminishes by mid to late evening.

    ..Smith/Jirak.. 07/20/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Jul 21 12:15:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 211627
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 211626

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1126 AM CDT Sun Jul 21 2024

    Valid 211630Z - 221200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN ARIZONA...AND FROM SOUTHERN COLORADO TO EASTERN
    NEW MEXICO...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into the
    evening across parts of central and southern Arizona, and from
    southern Colorado to eastern New Mexico.

    ...Synopsis...
    Water-vapor imagery late this morning shows a mid-level disturbance
    moving south-southeast across WY/CO to the east of a mid-level ridge
    located over the Interior West. A mid-level shortwave trough will
    move northward along the Pacific Northwest coast into British
    Columbia by tonight. Farther east, a mid-level trough/low centered
    over the lower MO/mid MS Valleys will meander slowly eastward.

    ...Sangre de Cristos and adjacent escarpment/plains...
    Scattered orographically favored thunderstorm development is
    forecast by early to mid afternoon across the mountains ahead of the aforementioned weak upper disturbance. A seasonably moist airmass
    (reference 12 UTC Albuquerque raob data) is in place across the
    region with considerable cloud breaks and partly sunny skies noted
    in visible-satellite imagery. Strong heating will foster upwards of
    500-1250 J/kg MLCAPE by peak heating. Modest deep-layer shear will
    limit overall convective organization potential, but the stronger
    multicells (becoming numerous in coverage) will likely be capable of
    an isolated hail/wind risk through the early evening before this
    activity dissipates.

    ...AZ...
    A weak PV anomaly was noted in upper-layer water-vapor imagery this
    morning over northern AZ. This upper feature may aid in storm
    development near the Mogollon Rim later this afternoon with
    scattered thunderstorms forecast. A hot and a deeply mixed
    sub-cloud layer in the lower desert will likely support some risk
    for severe gusts via evaporatively cooled downbursts as this
    activity slowly pushes southward late this afternoon through the
    evening. Isolated to widely scattered severe gusts (60-75 mph) are
    possible with the stronger cores and outflow surges.

    ...Central/eastern Oregon into northwest NV...
    Model guidance indicates scattered thunderstorms are forecast to
    develop later this afternoon on the southeast periphery of the
    mid-level shortwave trough glancing the region. Inverted-V profiles
    per forecast soundings suggest gusty winds may accompany the
    stronger downdrafts. The overall severe risk appears too limited in
    time/space to include a 5-percent severe wind highlight.

    ..Smith/Jirak.. 07/21/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Jul 22 08:31:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 221250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 221248

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0748 AM CDT Mon Jul 22 2024

    Valid 221300Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE MID-ATLANTIC REGION...AS WELL AS WESTERN ARIZONA TO THE LOWER
    COLORADO RIVER VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms will be possible today over portions
    of the mid-Atlantic region, as well as western Arizona to the lower
    Colorado River Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    The basic mid/upper-level pattern will continue to feature mean
    ridging over the western CONUS, and broad but mostly weak cyclonic
    flow around a trough extending from the Upper Great Lakes
    southwestward over south TX. However, the northern part of the
    western ridging -- over western Canada and the northern Rockies --
    will break down as:
    1. A large cyclone moves eastward from the Gulf of Alaska, and
    2. A strong shortwave trough in the cyclone's southeastern quadrant
    pivots northeastward from the Pacific across western/northern Wa to
    southern BC this evening and tonight.

    Downstream, broadly difluent and weak, mostly northerly to
    northwesterly flow will cover the central CONUS. A shortwave trough
    -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery moving into northern MN and northeastern ND from Canada -- will pivot eastward across western
    Lake Superior, northern WI and parts of Upper MI today. Isolated to
    scattered showers and multicell thunderstorms may produce small hail
    and strong gusts ahead of this feature, over areas surrounding
    western Lake Superior; however, weak deep-layer flow/shear should
    preclude an organized threat. Meanwhile, another shortwave trough
    -- initially over parts of IL/MO -- should drift eastward over IL,
    while weakening. Weak perturbations apparent over eastern parts of
    KY/TN, and over MS and western TN, will eject northeastward over the
    southern Appalachians.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a wavy, quasistationary frontal zone
    from a weak low near MEM to near SHV, DAL, ABI, PRS and ELP. A warm
    front was drawn from the low across middle/eastern TN, southern WV,
    northern VA, NJ, and Long Island Sound. The warm front should drift
    farther northward in some areas and become stationary in others,
    while the western boundary segment slowly experiences frontolysis
    over the southern Plains to Mid-South.

    ...Portions of VA/NC...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms should form south of the
    front -- near outflow and differential-heating boundaries as well as
    a weak surface trough -- and move east-northeastward to
    northeastward over the outlook area through the afternoon. Once
    ongoing clouds/precip exit the area, diurnal heating/destabilization
    will act in concert with rich low-level moisture (surface dewpoints
    in the 70s F, PW exceeding 2 inches, mean mixing ratios near or
    above 17 g/kg) to offset modest mid/upper-level lapse rates and
    yield favorable buoyancy. MLCAPE around 1500-2500 J/kg should
    become common, with isolated strong/damaging gusts possible in the
    most intense, water-loaded downdrafts. With modest flow but
    well-curved low-level hodographs, and around 35 kt effective-shear
    magnitude ahead of the ejecting weak shortwave trough(s), and
    potential for boundary-storm interactions, a tornado may occur as
    well.

    ...Western AZ/lower Colorado River Valley...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms should form this
    afternoon over the western parts of the higher terrain in north-central/northwestern AZ and migrate southwestward to lower
    desert regions in western parts of the state -- perhaps lasting long
    enough to cross parts of the lower Colorado River Valley. Activity
    should form over well-heated higher elevations with sufficient
    moisture to sustain the most vigorous convection for at least a
    couple hours after it moves southwestward to lower deserts, deeply
    mixed boundary layers with hot surface temperatures and large DCAPE
    will favor isolated severe downbursts. A deep (700-300 mb and
    sometimes higher) layer of modest (5-20 kt) northerly to
    northeasterly flow generally is progged across the region, within
    the mid/upper anticyclone and southeast of the high. This will
    encourage preferential southward to southwestward motion of both
    active convection and resulting outflow pools.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 07/22/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Jul 23 09:09:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 231257
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 231255

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0755 AM CDT Tue Jul 23 2024

    Valid 231300Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    MID-ATLANTIC STATES AND CAROLINAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Today's overall risk for organized severe thunderstorms is expected
    to remain relatively low, but a few severe storms may occur across
    the Mid-Atlantic States/Carolinas.

    ...Mid-Atlantic/Carolinas/Southeast States...
    The air mass over the region will remain very moist with
    Precipitable Water values in excess of 2 inches, contributing to a
    moderately unstable and minimally inhibited boundary layer this
    afternoon. A modest increase in mid-level flow may occur today from
    the southern Appalachians northeast across the mid-Atlantic, but
    low-level winds will remain weak. While locally heavy rainfall will
    be the most common hazard regionally, wet microbursts could cause a
    few instances of localized wind damage this afternoon, with a
    somewhat greater potential across parts of North Carolina and
    Virginia.

    ...Midwest...
    Thunderstorms are expected to redevelop along the northern front
    from southern Wisconsin across Iowa and southern Minnesota this
    afternoon, with the potential for multiple rounds of storms in some
    locations. Moderate buoyancy should be in place near the front,
    however deep-layer shear should generally remain at 25-30 kt (or
    less) for much of the day. Some risk for hail and gusty winds will
    exist with any stronger storm, but will defer any potential
    introduction of low severe probabilities to subsequent outlooks.

    ...Arizona/Lower Colorado River Valley...
    Thunderstorms are expected to develop over the Mogollon Rim of
    Arizona again this afternoon, with relatively weak northeast
    mid-level flow steering storms southwest into the lower elevations.
    Despite very hot temperatures and a deep/well-mixed boundary layer,
    overall confidence that storms will cluster and produce more than
    localized strong/damaging gusts remains too low to introduce severe probabilities.

    ..Guyer.. 07/23/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Jul 24 09:43:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 241300
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 241258

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0758 AM CDT Wed Jul 24 2024

    Valid 241300Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN ARIZONA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms may produce damaging wind
    gusts across southern Arizona, and from parts of Iowa and Illinois
    into Pennsylvania/New York. Other locally strong storms are possible
    in parts of the Northwest, northern Rockies and Mid-Atlantic
    regions.

    ...Arizona...
    A relatively active scenario for thunderstorms is expected later
    today with the potential for thunderstorms/outflows to spread
    generally south-southwestward onto the desert floor by evening. The
    upper-level ridge over the western states will remain centered over
    parts of Nevada/Utah today, with 15-20 kt of northeasterly mid-level
    flow across central/eastern Arizona. This should help steer storms
    onto the desert flow where a moist/deeply mixed boundary layer
    environment will exist, with the potential for severe-caliber wind
    gusts and considerable blowing dust late this afternoon into
    evening.

    ...Midwest including Iowa/Illinois/Indiana...
    The region will be influenced by the western cyclonically curved
    portion of the upper-level trough over the Great Lakes/Ontario, with
    a cold front moving southward across Iowa/Illinois and into
    Indiana/Ohio, with very warm and humid conditions south of the
    front. Some thunderstorms are ongoing this morning across eastern
    Iowa and northern Illinois, but a greater coverage and intensity of
    storms is expected later this afternoon near/south of the front.
    Moderately strong west-northwesterly flow aloft, steep lapse rates,
    and ample buoyancy suggest the potential for strong/isolated severe
    storms capable of damaging winds and some hail.

    ...Northeast including Pennsylvania/New York....
    As a front sags into western New York, modestly enhanced
    southwesterly low-level winds will strengthen warm advection and
    lift over the region. This will likely lead to scattered
    thunderstorms through the afternoon. Forecast soundings show MLCAPE
    values over 1000 J/kg and sufficient deep-layer shear for a few
    organized storm clusters capable of locally gusty/damaging winds.

    ...North Carolina/Virginia...
    Deep west-southwesterly winds will strengthen by this afternoon
    along a corridor from the southern Appalachians into the
    Mid-Atlantic states. This enhanced flow/shear profile will aid in
    helping to organize scattered diurnal thunderstorm development from
    western North Carolina into parts of southern/eastern Virginia.
    Mid-level lapse rates will be poor, but strong heating and high PWAT
    values will promote a risk of a few intense storm clusters capable
    of gusty/damaging winds.

    ...Northwest...
    Relatively fast cyclonic flow aloft will remain over the Pacific
    Northwest states into the northern Great Basin. Mid-level moisture
    will spread eastward and aid in afternoon thunderstorm development
    from Oregon into parts of Idaho/Montana. Forecast soundings show
    weak CAPE, but a few of the stronger cells could produce locally
    gusty/damaging winds.

    ...Coastal Texas/southern Louisiana...
    Aided by the possibility of weak surface low development, some
    guidance suggests that a modest strengthening of low-level flow may
    occur today. However, mid-level winds will remain weak, with inland destabilization expected to be limited. This should minimize the
    potential for anything beyond a few very weak/transient
    mesocyclones.

    ..Guyer/Jewell.. 07/24/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Jul 25 09:04:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 251243
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 251242

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0742 AM CDT Thu Jul 25 2024

    Valid 251300Z - 261200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF MONTANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to locally severe thunderstorms with wind gusts will be
    possible today across Montana and the northern Rockies/Great Basin,
    southern Arizona, and Carolinas/Mid-Atlantic States.

    ...Montana/Northern Rockies to Great Basin...
    A prominent upper-level trough will spread eastward from British
    Columbia toward Alberta/Saskatchewan, with strengthening cyclonic
    westerlies overspreading the northern Rockies/Montana. Scattered
    thunderstorm development is forecast to initiate off the higher
    terrain this afternoon, and in advance of a cold front, across
    central Montana, where a hot and deeply mixed boundary layer may
    become characterized by modest instability. Forecast soundings are
    suggestive of 40-60 F temperature-dew point spreads by peak heating.
    A downward mixing of 30-40+ kt ambient southwesterly to westerly
    flow in the 700-500 mb layer may contribute to severe-caliber wind
    gusts in consolidating outflows, as convection spreads eastward into
    this evening toward eastern Montana and possibly western North
    Dakota.

    Other high-based storms capable of severe-caliber wind gusts could
    occur as far southwest as parts of the Great Basin later this
    afternoon and evening, within an unstable air mass ahead of a front
    across the northern Intermountain region.

    ...Arizona...
    Lingering early day outflow/cloud cover via yesterday's relatively
    active convection should generally abate by afternoon. As the
    boundary layer diurnally warms and destabilizes, thunderstorms are
    again likely to initiate across the Mogollon Rim and adjacent
    mountains of southwest New Mexico this afternoon. Given the position
    and movement of the mid-level high, somewhat stronger (around 15 kt) northeasterly steering flow will remain focused across southeast
    into adjacent portions of central Arizona. Localized severe-caliber
    wind gusts and blowing dust will again be possible this afternoon
    through early/mid-evening as storms progress south-southwestward
    onto the desert floor.

    ...Carolinas/Mid-Atlantic States...
    Cloud cover will likely remain prevalent regionally today with
    showers/some thunderstorms ongoing this morning to the south of the
    primary front that will be shifting south-southeastward across the
    northern and central Appalachians. Near the southern periphery of
    the larger-scale mid-level troughing, a belt of 30-40 kt
    south-southwesterly flow in the 850-500 mb layer may enhance
    convective development within a plume of seasonably high moisture
    content. While lapse rates and overall buoyancy will be modest,
    heavy precipitation loading and downward mixing of momentum may
    contribute to a few strong downdrafts with the possibility of
    locally damaging surface gusts/tree damage this afternoon.

    ...Middle/Upper Texas Coast and Southern Louisiana...
    Extensive showers and some thunderstorms are ongoing along the Texas
    coast early today. Influenced by a weak mid-level disturbance, some
    guidance suggests that a strengthening of low-level winds/shear will
    occur today. However, mid-level winds will remain weak, while the aforementioned convection should considerably limit destabilization
    inland. These factors seem likely to minimize the potential for
    anything beyond a few very weak/transient mesocyclones.

    ..Guyer/Jewell.. 07/25/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Jul 26 09:21:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 261251
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 261249

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0749 AM CDT Fri Jul 26 2024

    Valid 261300Z - 271200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN PLAINS...GREAT BASIN...AND SOUTHWEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms may occur today across the northern
    Plains, Great Basin, and parts of the Southwest.

    ...Northern Plains/Upper Midwest...
    A prominent upper-level trough will continue eastward today over the
    northern Canadian Prairies, with peripheral height falls and a
    strengthening of southwesterly winds aloft across the Dakotas and
    northern Minnesota. This will largely overlie an eastward-shifting
    front, that will be oriented northeast-southwestward across eastern
    North Dakota and roughly bisect South Dakota by late afternoon.

    Beneath a plume of very warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air,
    which will continue to advect northeastward across the northern
    Great Plains through the day, a seasonably moist boundary layer will
    support a narrow corridor of strong buoyancy across the Red River
    Valley vicinity by late afternoon, where forcing for ascent should
    support isolated to widely scattered thunderstorm development by
    early evening. In the presence of at least 30-40 kt deep-layer
    shear, a couple of supercells appear possible to the south of the
    international border, especially across northwest Minnesota, and
    perhaps as far southwest as areas near/west of Grand Forks and
    Fargo.

    Additional severe storms may also develop near/behind the front
    across western/central South Dakota and far eastern Wyoming into
    western Nebraska.

    ...Arizona...
    Cloud cover and outflows will abate across central/southern Arizona
    early today after a couple of relatively active thunderstorm days.
    This will be as the upper ridge over the Southwest further weakens
    and shifts southward. While thunderstorms are expected to
    develop/increase over the Rim this afternoon, and modestly stronger north-northeasterly steering flow may remain across far southeast
    Arizona, a less-active scenario seems likely as far as storms
    reaching the desert floor. While some strong/severe-caliber winds
    could occur, any such potential should remain relatively localized
    with a diminished overall severe risk from prior days.

    ...Great Basin...
    In the wake of a shortwave trough, storm coverage/intensity are not
    expected to be as active as Thursday, but moderate diurnal
    destabilization is expected especially across western/northern Utah,
    with isolated/widely scattered thunderstorm development expected
    this afternoon. A few of these storms could produce
    strong/severe-caliber downbursts. A secondary round, and perhaps
    somewhat greater coverage of storms, may occur tonight across Nevada
    into western/northern Utah, influenced by the eastward transition of
    the mid-level shortwave trough over northern California.

    ..Guyer/Grams.. 07/26/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Jul 27 09:23:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 271245
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 271243

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0743 AM CDT Sat Jul 27 2024

    Valid 271300Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    NORTH DAKOTA AND NORTHERN MINNESOTA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across portions of the
    northern Plains vicinity, including parts of the Dakotas and
    northern Minnesota, mainly this afternoon and evening.

    ...Dakotas and Northern Minnesota...
    Overnight convection has largely diminished in the predawn hours
    across northwest Minnesota. This convectively reinforced instability gradient/frontal segment should shift northward a bit today, with
    the possibility of storm redevelopment in its vicinity this
    afternoon within a moist environment across northern Minnesota. This
    may be influenced by a subtle convectively enhanced mid-level
    impulse or two embedded within moderately strong southwesterlies in
    the base of the upper trough over the Canadian Prairies. Deep-layer
    shear will be sufficient for organized convection. While the extent
    of deep convective development is a bit uncertain, a few supercells
    and/or stronger clusters could develop, with a threat of hail,
    damaging gusts, and perhaps a tornado.

    Farther west, there is the potential for storm development near the
    surface trough/weak cold front across west-central North Dakota into
    western South Dakota during the late afternoon and evening, though
    guidance continues to vary regarding storm coverage within this
    regime. Steep low/mid-level lapse rates, moderate to strong
    buoyancy, and sufficient deep-layer shear will support a threat of
    hail and strong to severe gusts, which could spread into parts of
    the eastern Dakotas this evening.

    ...Northern Great Basin into the central Rockies/High Plains...
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and evening from
    the northern Great Basin into the central Rockies/High Plains, as
    a fairly prominent shortwave trough moves across Wyoming into the central/northern High Plains, and another shortwave trough moves
    from California into northern Nevada and southern Idaho. Multiple outflow-driven clusters could evolve with time, posing a threat of
    at least isolated severe wind gusts. Somewhat stronger instability
    across parts of northeast Colorado/southeast Wyoming into western
    Nebraska could also support some hail potential with the strongest
    storms.

    ..Guyer/Grams.. 07/27/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Jul 28 08:29:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 281246
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 281244

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0744 AM CDT Sun Jul 28 2024

    Valid 281300Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN/CENTRAL PLAINS TO UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are expected across parts
    of the central and northern Plains this afternoon into tonight.

    ...South Dakota/Minnesota...
    At least widely scattered thunderstorm development is expected this
    afternoon initially across parts of western/central South Dakota, in
    areas near/north of the front and in the vicinity of the surface
    low. Mid-level flow of 30-40 kt atop low-level easterlies will
    provide sufficient deep-layer shear for storm organization, and a
    couple of supercells will be possible initially. Hail and isolated
    severe gusts will be a threat with the initial discrete development.
    Outflow consolidation could support development of an
    upscale-growing cluster by early evening, which may accelerate east-southeastward toward southeast South Dakota and the broader
    Siouxland vicinity, with a threat of severe gusts potentially
    exceeding 75 mph.

    Farther northeast across Minnesota, scattered thunderstorms are
    expected to redevelop by late afternoon near the effective front.
    Outside of some residual MCV enhancement, a notable weakness in
    mid-level flow, especially into northern Minnesota, will tend to
    limit deep-layer shear and storm organization across the region.
    That said, moderate buoyancy and a modest enhancement to low-level
    flow could support localized damaging winds, and perhaps an instance
    or two of hail with the strongest updrafts.

    ...Central High Plains...
    While large-scale forcing/ascent will be somewhat weaker with
    southward extent, strong heating and removal of MLCINH will support
    at least isolated storm development from western/central Nebraska
    into western Kansas, and possibly northeast Colorado in vicinity of
    a surface trough. Moderate to strong buoyancy, steep lapse rates,
    and moderate deep-layer shear will support a conditional risk of
    severe storms (potentially including a couple of supercells) with
    any diurnal development in this region. Overall storm coverage
    remains a bit uncertain, but the environment will conditionally
    support potential for both severe wind gusts and hail.

    ...Eastern Nebraska and Iowa/northern Missouri...
    An MCV across east-central Nebraska around sunrise should continue
    slowly eastward and generally weaken today. This MCV, along with a
    modest low-level jet and semi-persistent warm/moist advection, may
    influence intensifying thunderstorm development this afternoon
    within a moderately unstable environment across Iowa/northern
    Missouri. Even if consequential diurnal development does not occur,
    an increasing low-level jet could support increasing storm coverage
    across parts of the region later this evening into the overnight,
    which could be accompanied by a threat for isolated strong/damaging
    gusts and/or hail.

    ...Wyoming/Southern Montana...
    Relatively high-based convection is expected to develop this
    afternoon in advance of a shortwave trough moving eastward out of
    the Pacific Northwest. A couple of stronger outflow-driven
    cells/clusters will be possible, with an attendant threat for
    isolated severe gusts.

    ...Tennessee Valley including portions of MS/AL/TN...
    Rather widespread convection is expected to further increase into
    the afternoon in association with a mid/upper-level trough moving
    northeastward out of the Ozarks vicinity. Somewhat stronger heating
    and mid-level flow along the southern periphery of this trough could
    support a few strong storms including the possibility of localized
    tree damage. However, with generally modest deep-layer shear and
    weak mid-level lapse rates, the potential for any organized or
    sustained severe threat across this region should be limited.

    ..Guyer/Grams.. 07/28/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Jul 29 09:31:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 291259
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 291257

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0757 AM CDT Mon Jul 29 2024

    Valid 291300Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    NORTHERN PLAINS AND THE MIDWEST/LOWER OHIO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe storms are expected across parts of the
    central and northern Plains this afternoon and evening, and also
    across parts of the Midwest and lower Ohio Valley.

    ...Northern/central Plains and Upper Midwest...
    A broad upper trough with multiple embedded shortwaves will again be
    in place across parts of the northern Rockies into the
    central/northern Plains today. Steep mid-level lapse rates and
    strong heating will support moderate to locally strong buoyancy by
    afternoon across parts of the Dakotas into Nebraska. As MLCINH
    decreases through the afternoon, most guidance suggests at least
    widely scattered storm development near a surface trough from the
    western Dakotas into northwest Nebraska.

    Effective shear of 35-45 kt will support some threat for supercells,
    with an attendant threat of large hail (possibly in excess of 2
    inches in diameter) and localized severe wind gusts. With time,
    evolution into one or more outflow driven clusters will be possible,
    with an increasing threat of damaging/severe gusts (potentially in
    excess of 75 mph). Longevity for any of these potential clusters
    into late tonight is uncertain, but some threat for damaging/locally
    severe gusts could spread into parts of Iowa and southern Minnesota
    before a more definitive weakening trend occurs.

    ...Midwest/Lower Ohio Valley to Tennessee Valley/Southeast...
    An MCS has broadened but generally weakened in the pre-dawn hours
    across Illinois, roughly spanning the Chicagoland area to St Louis
    vicinity as of 7am CDT. A relatively complex mesoscale scenario
    exists across the region today largely attributable to the
    disposition/impacts of this MCS. While severe-weather potential is
    apparent across the region, some spatial/temporal uncertainties
    exist regarding the peak/most-focused severe threat later today.
    This potential is highlighted by a seasonally strong belt of
    west-northwesterly winds aloft.

    While the MCS has generally weakened, and may outpace the primary
    reservoir of instability from the west, there is some potential that
    storms intensify this afternoon within a warming/increasingly
    unstable boundary layer across the lower Ohio Valley vicinity
    including Kentucky/southern Indiana. Damaging winds gusts could
    occur.

    Moderately strong westerly low-level flow will otherwise
    aggressively modify the remnant post-MCS outflow/airmass, with storm redevelopment possible by late afternoon into the evening within a warm-advection regime. Strong destabilization should generally focus
    across downstate south-central portions of Illinois/Indiana. Current
    thinking is that severe storm development may occur by late
    afternoon potentially initially including the I-70 vicinity/Wabash
    Valley. Aided by the seasonally strong winds aloft (40 kt effective
    shear), intense supercells are plausible, with attendant risks for
    isolated hail and a tornado or two. It is probable that storms will
    further increase during the evening and continue to pose a severe
    risk as they persist southeastward toward/across the Ohio River.

    ...Delmarva and Mid-Atlantic/Northeast States...
    Strengthening northwesterly mid/upper-level flow will overspread the
    region on the western periphery of a mid-level cyclone moving
    northward across New England today. As the boundary layer warms and
    moderately destabilizes, a few strong storms could develop within
    this regime during the afternoon, with moderate buoyancy and
    effective shear of 30-35 kt supporting the potential for isolated
    damaging gusts and hail.

    ..Guyer/Grams.. 07/29/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Aug 1 07:56:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 010602
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 010600

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Thu Aug 01 2024

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE
    MIDWEST AND OHIO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms will be possible today across parts of the
    Midwest and Ohio Valley, with a threat of damaging winds, isolated
    hail, and a tornado or two.

    ...Synopsis...
    A seasonably deep trough and embedded midlevel cyclone are forecast
    to move east-southeastward across parts of the upper MS Valley/Great
    Lakes today. One or more MCVs may move along the southern/eastern
    periphery of this trough from the mid MS Valley into the OH Valley.
    Farther east, a weak mid/upper-level trough is forecast to move
    eastward through parts of the Mid Atlantic/Northeast early in the
    day. At the surface, an outflow-reinforced cold front will move
    southward and may become nearly stationary somewhere over the
    south-central Great Plains by this afternoon. Other outflow
    boundaries will likely reside somewhere across the mid/upper MS and
    OH Valleys.

    ...Parts of the Midwest/Ohio Valley...
    Uncertainty remains regarding the influence of early morning
    convection and related outflow on the severe potential across parts
    of the Midwest and Ohio Valley. However, potential for organized
    severe storms remains evident, with a threat of damaging wind,
    isolated hail, and possibly a tornado or two. The Slight Risk has
    been expanded across parts of the Midwest/Ohio Valley, and a
    corridor of greater severe probabilities may eventually be needed,
    depending on the evolution of morning convection and subsequent destabilization.

    An MCS or its remnant will likely be ongoing at the start of the
    period somewhere from far eastern MO into IL. Uncertainty remains
    regarding the evolution and intensity of this potential MCS through
    the morning, but at least isolated damaging wind will be possible as
    it moves eastward. Depending on the timing of this system, there
    will be some potential for diurnal intensification as the downstream environment destabilizes, though deep-layer flow/shear will tend to
    weaken with eastward extent.

    In the wake of the morning convection, diurnal heating of a very
    moist airmass will support strong destabilization along/south of the
    remnant outflow boundary, with some potential for recovery and
    destabilization to the cool side of the boundary through the day.
    The approaching shortwave trough will support scattered afternoon
    storm development across parts of the mid MS Valley into the OH
    Valley.

    Deep-layer shear will be sufficient for storm organization, given
    the favorable instability. Some supercell potential will be possible
    with initial development, with an attendant threat of damaging wind,
    hail, and possibly a tornado or two, especially in closer proximity
    to any remnant outflow boundary. Storm clustering and some upscale
    growth will be possible with time, which could result in a
    forward-propagating MCS with increasing damaging-wind potential.

    Farther northwest, additional strong to locally severe storm
    development will be possible closer to the midlevel cyclone across
    parts of WI into eastern IA and northern IL. Deep-layer shear will
    likely remain rather modest, but moderate instability could support
    at least isolated hail and damaging wind with the strongest storms.

    ...Mid Atlantic/Carolinas/Georgia...
    Strong heating of a moist environment will result in the development
    of moderate to locally strong buoyancy from GA and the Carolinas
    into parts of the Mid Atlantic. With generally weak large-scale
    ascent across the region, storm coverage remains uncertain and could
    be relatively limited. However, isolated storm development will be
    possible by late afternoon into early evening, as MLCINH erodes.
    Modest midlevel northwesterly flow in the wake of the departing
    upper-level trough could provide sufficient effective shear for some
    storm organization, with a threat of isolated damaging wind and
    perhaps some hail.

    ...Northeast NM into parts of the southern Plains...
    As the outflow-reinforced front becomes nearly stationary somewhere
    over the south-central High Plains into northeast NM, scattered
    thunderstorms will become possible this afternoon. Initial
    development may occur near the Raton Mesa vicinity, with more
    isolated development possible farther east along the front into the
    TX/OK Panhandles, and potentially farther east along the boundary
    into northern OK/AR. Low/midlevel flow will be rather weak, but with
    sufficient veering of winds with height to support effective shear
    of 20-30 kt, sufficient for some storm organization in the presence
    of moderate to strong buoyancy. Initial discrete storms could
    produce some hail, but outflow production and consolidation within
    the well-mixed environment will lead to an increasing threat for at
    least isolated severe gusts later in the storm evolution.

    ...Arizona...
    00Z guidance has trended somewhat stronger with destabilization and
    potential storm coverage across parts of southeast into northern AZ.
    Modest southeasterly midlevel flow could support a few briefly
    organized storms, and isolated strong wind gusts and small to
    marginally severe hail cannot be ruled out. Severe probabilities may
    eventually be needed if confidence increases in the development of
    robust storms.

    ..Dean/Weinman.. 08/01/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Aug 1 18:17:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 012000
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 011958

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0258 PM CDT Thu Aug 01 2024

    Valid 012000Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM MOST OF
    KENTUCKY INTO OHIO...AND OVER PARTS OF INDIANA AND WEST VIRGINIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms remain possible today across parts of the
    Midwest and Ohio Valley, with the primary threat being damaging
    winds.

    ...20Z Update...
    Minor changes were made to the existing outlook primarily behind the
    ongoing severe MCS now over southern IN and into far northern KY. A
    moist and unstable air mass remains downstream of this system, and
    the potential remains for north and/or southward growth as the cold
    pool increases. In addition, storms may develop into OH ahead of the
    main system, with localized downbursts possible. For more
    information see mesoscale discussion 1788.

    To the north, an unstable air mass has developed over WI, with
    scattered cells noted. Shear will remain weak, but continued heating
    beneath the cool upper trough may support isolated severe storms
    with wind and/or hail. Some of this activity may persist into the
    evening into northern IL and IN. With time, severity is expected to
    decrease. For more information see mesoscale discussion 1787.

    Elsewhere, a band of strong instability continues to develop in an
    east-west oriented zone near a weak front extending from the TX
    Panhandle toward the Ozarks. Isolated storms are expected later
    today, but the severe threat should remain localized. Although lift
    is very weak, any cells that develop will have severe gust or brief
    hail potential.

    ..Jewell.. 08/01/2024

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1130 AM CDT Thu Aug 01 2024/

    ...Upper Midwest/Ohio Valley...
    Primary upper trough located over the Upper Midwest late this
    morning is forecast to develop generally east-southeastward across
    the Great Lakes and OH Valley through the period. Multiple
    convectively enhanced MCVs are present over the Midwest, along with
    outflow boundaries from prior convection. These features will likely
    serve as forcing mechanisms for additional robust thunderstorm
    development across the OH Valley this afternoon and evening. One
    such MCV located over far eastern MO into western IL should track
    eastward through the day, while aiding a cluster of thunderstorms
    that have already started strengthening across southern IL. The
    outflow boundary extending across southern IN and vicinity will
    likely serve as a focus for the subsequent MCS track, as the airmass along/south of this boundary is rapidly destabilizing.

    Given the mainly linear mode expected and sufficient deep-layer
    shear present, scattered severe/damaging winds should be the main
    threat. But, a line-embedded tornado or two may also occur,
    especially near the outflow boundary. See recently issued Mesoscale
    Discussion 1784 for more details. The northward extent of MCS
    development into northern/central IN/OH remains uncertain given
    lingering cloudiness and the outflow boundary remaining farther
    south. Still, there may be additional strong to severe thunderstorm
    development across these areas in association with another MCV over
    northeast IL/northwest IN. Have therefore made no changes to the
    northern edge of the Slight Risk in the OH Valley with this update.

    Farther northwest, a separate area of strong to locally severe
    thunderstorm development may occur closer to the mid/upper-level
    cyclone across parts of WI into northern IL. Deep-layer shear is
    forecast to remain modest, but moderate instability could support
    isolated hail and damaging wind with the strongest cores.

    ...Mid-Atlantic into the Carolinas and Southeast...
    Strong heating of a moist environment will result in the development
    of moderate to locally strong instability from GA and the Carolinas
    into southern parts of the Mid-Atlantic. Large-scale ascent across
    this region should remain rather weak/nebulous. Accordingly,
    thunderstorm coverage remains uncertain, and could be isolated to
    widely scattered. However, robust thunderstorms may still form by
    late afternoon into early evening, as lingering convective
    inhibition erodes. Modest mid-level northwesterly flow in the wake
    of the departing upper-level trough along the East Coast may provide
    sufficient effective bulk shear for modest updraft organization,
    with a threat of isolated damaging winds and perhaps marginally
    severe hail.

    ...Southern/Central High Plains to the Mid-South...
    The outflow-reinforced front has nearly stalled over the
    south-central High Plains into northeast NM. Initial development may
    occur near the Raton Mesa NM vicinity in a modest low-level upslope
    flow regime, with more isolated development possible farther east
    along the front into the OK/TX Panhandles, and potentially farther
    east along the boundary into northern OK/AR and southern MO.
    Low/midlevel flow will remain rather weak. Still, sufficient veering
    of winds with height should support effective shear generally around
    20-30 kt. This should be sufficient for some convective organization
    with of moderate to strong instability present along/near the
    boundary. Initially discrete thunderstorms could produce large hail,
    but outflow and convective consolidation/clustering with the
    well-mixed boundary layer should lead to an increasing threat for
    isolated severe gusts later in the convective evolution.

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Aug 2 07:48:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 020550
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 020549

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1249 AM CDT Fri Aug 02 2024

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE OHIO VALLEY...SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...CAROLINAS...MID-ATLANTIC...CENTRAL PLAINS AND SOUTHEAST ARIZONA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms associated with strong winds will be possible today
    from the Ohio Valley and southern Appalachians eastward to the
    Atlantic Seaboard, and in parts of the central High Plains and
    southeast Arizona.

    ...Ohio Valley and Southern Appalachians Eastward to Atlantic
    Seaboard...
    An upper-level trough, and an associated cold front, will move
    eastward into the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys today. Ahead of the
    cold front, surface dewpoints will be from the upper 60s to the mid
    70s F in most areas. As surface temperatures warm, scattered
    thunderstorm development is expected over a large area. RAP forecast
    soundings across the moist airmass suggest that lapse rates will
    become steep in the 0-3 km layer. This will coincide with 0-6 km
    shear generally around 20 knots or less. This should favor pulse
    storm development, with a potential for isolated severe wind gusts.
    The threat should be concentrated mainly in the mid to late
    afternoon.

    ...Central High Plains...
    An upper-level ridge will be in place across the Rockies, as
    northwest mid-level flow remains over much of the Great Plains. An
    axis of moderate instability is forecast to develop from the western
    Texas Panhandle northward into the central High Plains, where MLCAPE
    could peak in the 1000 to 2000 J/kg range. Although large-scale
    ascent will be weak, thunderstorms will develop in the higher
    terrain, with additional more isolated storms forming in the central
    High Plains. Forecast soundings along the instability axis this
    afternoon show very steep low-level lapse rates and 0-6 km shear in
    the 25 to 30 knot range. This should be enough deep-layer shear for
    a marginal severe threat. A few strong wind gusts and hail will be
    possible.

    ...Southeast Arizona...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms, associated with the monsoon,
    will develop today across much of the Desert Southwest. The greatest
    potential for severe winds will be across southeast Arizona, where
    moderate instability is forecast to coincide with steep low to
    mid-level lapse rates. As cells develop in the early afternoon, a
    few marginally severe wind gusts will be possible.

    ..Broyles/Thornton.. 08/02/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Aug 4 16:58:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 041939
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 041938

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0238 PM CDT Sun Aug 04 2024

    Valid 042000Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR A FEW
    TORNADOES OVER PART OF FLORIDA AND EXTREME SOUTHERN GEORGIA...AND
    FOR DAMAGING GUSTS ACROSS SOUTHEAST MONTANA THIS EVENING...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Tropical Storm Debby may produce a few tornadoes over parts of
    Florida and extreme southern Georgia through early tomorrow morning
    as it intensifies. Scattered thunderstorms may produce damaging
    wind gusts across parts of Montana this evening.

    ...20Z Update...
    Overall forecast outlined in the previous discussion (appended
    below) remains valid, with no changes needed. TS Debby continues to
    strengthen off the west coast of FL, while numerous convective rain
    bands progress across FL Peninsula. Brief tornadoes will remain
    possible within these bands through the afternoon and evening, with
    a lower, but still non-zero chances overnight. Thunderstorms capable
    of strong gusts are still anticipated this evening from eastern ID
    into southern MT and northern WY. Strong gusts are possible this
    evening from eastern SD into southern MN and northern IA, with some
    isolated hail possible as well.

    Isolated severe threat across the Northeast was discussed in
    recently issued MCD #1814, which mentioned that short-lived, strong
    storm cores capable of marginally severe hail will be the primary
    risk over the next few hours as they travel east/southeast across
    the narrow instability zone.

    ..Mosier.. 08/04/2024

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1123 AM CDT Sun Aug 04 2024/

    ...FL/South GA...
    Tropical Storm Debby continues to intensify off the west coast of
    the FL. Low-level wind fields are enlarging, resulting in
    strengthening shear profiles across much of peninsula. Dewpoints in
    the mid-upper 70s and pockets of heating, combined with deep
    tropical moisture, will result in scattered to widespread afternoon thunderstorms. Given the favorable wind fields, a few tornadoes are
    possible.

    ...MT/WY...
    Water vapor loop shows a well-defined mid-level shortwave trough
    moving eastward across ID. This feature and an associated mid-level
    speed max will cross the northern Rockies and into southern
    MT/northern WY this afternoon/evening. A consensus of 12z model
    guidance shows clusters of thunderstorms forming in this region,
    tracking eastward across southern MT through the evening. CAMs have
    a consistent signal for a more organized damaging wind threat, so
    have added a small SLGT to account for this scenario.

    ...SD/MN/IA...
    A strengthening low-level jet will enhance warm advection and lift
    over eastern SD/western MN this evening/tonight. Isolated
    thunderstorm development is possible in this regime, perhaps not
    until after midnight. This region will be beneath the southern
    fringe of stronger west-northwest flow aloft, and in a region of
    relatively steep mid-level lapse rates. Elevated storms capable of
    hail and perhaps gusty winds are possible.

    ...Northeast States...
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected today across much of New
    England and eastern NY/PA into NJ. Surface conditions are
    considerably cooler than recent days, which should weaken low-level
    lapse rates and temper the overall severe threat. Nevertheless, a
    few strong storms are possible - capable of gusty wind and small
    hail.

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Aug 5 08:46:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 051250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 051249

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0749 AM CDT Mon Aug 05 2024

    Valid 051300Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE UPPER
    OHIO VALLEY INTO NEW ENGLAND...ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE UPPER
    MIDWEST...AND FROM NORTHERN FLORIDA INTO SOUTHERN GEORGIA AND
    SOUTHEAST SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible today and tonight from the Upper
    Ohio Valley into New England, across portions of the Upper Midwest,
    and from northern Florida into southern Georgia and southeast South
    Carolina.

    ...Synopsis...
    With height falls well underway on its northern rim -- over the
    northern Rockies -- the Four Corners regional anticyclone has become
    ore zonally elongated, with a shift/reformation of the associated
    500-mb high over the San Juan Mountains or adjoining San Luis
    Valley. Through the period, associated ridging will extend
    east-southeastward across southern KS to AR, west-southwestward over
    the LAS area to southern CA, and will rebuild northwestward over the
    northern Rockies. The latter will occur as a series of closely
    spaced shortwave perturbations -- apparent in moisture-channel
    imagery from the western Dakotas to north-central MT -- shift
    eastward across the Dakotas to MN by 00Z. These features then
    should cross WI and Lake Michigan tonight. Just west of the ridge,
    a weak shortwave trough now over the central/northern Sierra should
    move north-northeastward toward the northern Rockies through the
    day.

    Farther east, a strong shortwave trough was evident over northern ON
    north of Lake Superior, in the southwest quadrant of a vast cyclone
    covering most of eastern Canada. This trough should move
    east-southeastward across southernmost QC to ME by 06Z, then over
    the Canadian Maritimes.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a wavy, slow-moving (mostly
    stationary) frontal zone from central New England to a weak low over
    southern Lake Huron, across southern Lake Michigan and northern IA,
    to another low over south-central SD between PIR-VTN, then across
    central WY. As the mid/upper shortwave trough approaches and grazes
    the area, the eastern part of the front should move slowly
    southeastward across the Lower Great Lakes, Adirondacks, White
    Mountains and much of ME by 00Z. The trailing part should drift
    southward into northern parts of OH/IN/IL, then decelerate/stall
    overnight. The SD low should ripple east-southeastward along the
    front and across the Siouxland region by 00Z, then over northern IA
    tonight. The trailing cold front from there should extend across
    eastern NE, northwestern KS and southeastern CO by 00Z, stalling
    overnight over southwestern KS and southeastern CO in response to
    cyclogenesis near LAA.

    ...FL/GA/SC -- Hurricane Debby...
    Hurricane Debby has made landfall in the FL "Big Bend" coastal area,
    and the center is forecast by NHC to proceed slowly northeastward
    over the FL/GA line through the period. See SPC Tornado Watch 596
    and related mesoscale discussions for near-term potential. Refer to
    latest NHC advisories for forecast track/intensity of Debby, and
    tropical watches/warnings.

    The existing tornado potential southeast of center largely is
    expected to translate along with Debby, while expanding
    northeastward to the Atlantic Coast of northeastern FL and GA, as
    favorable low-level theta-e advection from the Atlantic destabilizes
    the nearshore airmass there. An extensive area of precip northeast
    through north of center should be maintained, substantially
    restricting instability over northwestern FL and southwestern/
    south-central GA to the left of the forecast center track, and
    reinforcing the baroclinic gradient there. That should act as a buoyancy-limiting northwestern bound to the supercell/tornado
    threat. Meanwhile, as low-level flow veers further on the FL West
    Coast through the remainder of this morning, and weaker lift with a
    more skeletal convective structure moves across the area south of
    center, supercell/tornado potential will diminish there. The
    optimal CAPE/shear parameter space should shift through northern FL
    into southeastern GA today, while expanding along the GA and
    eventually SC Coast later today through tonight.

    ...Northeast and Great Lakes to upper Mississippi Valley...
    Through tonight, multiple rounds of strong to severe convection are
    possible across this lengthy but relatively narrow corridor near the
    front, through tonight. Damaging winds will be the main concern in
    the Northeast, though enough low-level shear/hodograph enlargement
    exists in forecast soundings across parts of northern New England to
    support some supercell potential. Meanwhile, supercells with large
    hail and a tornado threat may develop before dark or in early
    evening between southern MN and southern Lake Michigan. Activity
    overall should evolve upscale to a more clustered, wind-driven
    threat with time, lasting later in the evening over western areas.

    Surface-based development is likely to occur earlier in the eastern
    "slight risk" area -- from midday through this afternoon, as
    peripheral mass response to the Canadian perturbation increases
    low-level convergence and tightens the height gradient aloft. The
    latter will increase deep shear, though nearly unidirectional wind
    profiles should persist over the corridor, except in parts of
    north-central New England and northern IA/southern MN, each to the
    east of frontal-wave lows. Strong diurnal warming will occur in
    conjunction with favorable low-level moisture, with surface
    dewpoints commonly in the mid/upper 60s from OH eastward and low 70s
    from northern IN across the upper Mississippi Valley. This should
    yield peak/preconvective MLCAPE ranging from around 500-1500 J/kg
    over the Northeast -- where midlevel lapse rates will be weaker --
    to 2000-3000 J/kg in a narrow corridor near the front from northern
    OH to the IA/MN border vicinity. However, capping will be stronger
    over the IA/MN/WI part of the front, and diurnal development/
    coverage accessing the greatest surface-based buoyancy is more
    uncertain than evening/overnight severe hail/gust potential near and
    north of the front.

    ...Northern Rockies and vicinity...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this
    afternoon and evening over much of ID into western MT, as modest
    large-scale ascent preceding the shortwave trough spreads across
    diurnally heated higher elevations. Development will be supported
    further by at least marginally favorable moisture, represented by lower-elevation surface dewpoints now in the upper 40s to low 60s F,
    and not expected to dry very much via mixing through early/mid
    afternoon. Still, heating/mixing should be strong enough to build
    steep low/middle-level lapse rates and "inverted-v" thermodynamic
    profiles supporting strong/isolated severe gusts, Some of this
    activity also may take the form of dry thunderstorms, especially in
    eastern areas -- see SPC Fire Weather products for more on that
    concern.

    ..Edwards/Grams.. 08/05/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Aug 6 09:08:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 061300
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 061258

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0758 AM CDT Tue Aug 06 2024

    Valid 061300Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER MUCH OF
    MONTANA INTO WESTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...AS WELL AS FROM PARTS OF LOWER
    MICHIGAN INTO NEW JERSEY...THE COASTAL CAROLINAS...AND ACROSS PARTS
    OF ARIZONA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe-thunderstorm potential exists today over much of Montana into
    western South Dakota, as well as from parts of Lower Michigan into
    New Jersey, the coastal Carolinas, and across parts of Arizona.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a longstanding, large, western CONUS
    anticyclone -- centered initially over southern CO -- is expected to
    become more compressed on the northern and southwestern fringes,
    while the center retrogrades back across the Four Corners region.
    This will occur in response to shortwave developments in the
    northern stream and subtropical easterlies. For the latter, a well-
    defined trough is evident in moisture-channel imagery over portions
    of southern NM, far west TX, and northwestern MX, with an embedded
    low over west-central Chihuahua. The trough should proceed westward
    through the period, reaching western Sonora and southern AZ by 12Z
    tomorrow.

    North of the mid/upper high, an accelerating, nearly zonal northern
    stream is forecast from the interior Northwest to the northern Upper
    Midwest, as heights fall south of a progressive synoptic trough over western/central Canada. This will take an initially slow-moving
    shortwave trough over coastal WA/OR and accelerate it eastward into
    the northern Rockies around 00Z, then to eastern MT by the end of
    the period. Another, weaker perturbation now near the CA/OR/NV
    border junction should accelerate northeastward today as well,
    preceding the Northwest trough in an eastward-turning path across
    southern MT. This perturbation should reach the central Dakotas by
    12Z. Farther downshear, a convectively enhanced shortwave trough
    with embedded MCV is evident over the southern Lake Michigan region.
    This feature should move eastward across Lower MI and southern ON
    to the Lower Great Lakes by 00Z, then across the northern
    Mid-Atlantic and most of New England by 12Z.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a wavy, quasistationary front
    from a low near ORD east-southeastward across northern portions of
    IN/OH/PA to southeastern NY and coastal southern New England. A
    cold front extended from the low southwestward over northern MO,
    east-central KS, to an elongated low-pressure area over the southern
    KS/CO border vicinity. The low is expected to migrate eastward
    along the frontal zone and weaken today, but perhaps slower than
    model progs, given the presence of the MCV/shortwave trough
    supporting it. By 00Z, the frontal zone should extend from near the
    southern New England Coast across central/northern PA and northern
    OH, while moving south as a cold front across central IN, southern
    IL, the Ozarks, to central/western OK, becoming quasistationary
    again to a low over southeastern CO. Surface cyclogenesis is
    expected late tonight across eastern WY, effectively replacing the
    prior southeastern CO low along a lee trough.

    ...Great Lakes to northern Mid-Atlantic...
    Scattered thunderstorms -- both discrete and in clusters -- are
    expected near the frontal zone today from the southern Upper Great
    Lakes eastward. The initial activity is apparent over southern
    Lower MI ahead of the shortwave trough. This includes an intense,
    heavy-precip supercell that may maintain a tornado threat on the
    north end of a favorably unstable environment in the frontal zone,
    juxtaposed with strong low-level shear. Upscale growth into a
    bowing clusters also may occur, following the frontal-related
    instability gradient east-southeastward. See Tornado Watch 604 and
    related SPC mesoscale discussions for near-term coverage.

    This activity, or later/foregoing development near the front, will
    encounter favorably moist and gradually more unstable/heated inflow
    air today. Supercells and bowing clusters will remain a threat,
    with all severe hazards possible. Surface dewpoints along and south
    of the front -- as well as a sort distance to its north -- will
    remain in the upper 60s to low 70s F (locally higher) over the
    outlook corridor, offsetting modest mid/upper-level lapse rates to
    yield MLCAPE in the 1500-2000 J/kg range. Enhancements to low-level
    and deep shear are expected in the mass response immediately
    preceding the shortwave trough, combining with backed surface winds
    along and north of the front to contribute to 150-300 J/kg effective
    SRH from southern Lower MI into northernmost OH, shifting into
    western PA later this afternoon. One or two corridors of relatively dense/greater damaging wind potential may develop within the current 15%/"slight" area, depending on timing/intensity of
    convective-cluster evolution.

    ...Northern/central High Plains and adjacent foothills...
    A couple rounds of strong-severe thunderstorms are possible across
    the northern High Plains:

    1. Convection developing by midafternoon over higher terrain of
    southwestern MT, moving northeastward to eastward over
    southern/central MT the remainder of the afternoon into evening.
    Activity may aggregate upscale to a mainly wind-producing MCS with
    sporadic severe gusts, though isolated, marginally severe hail may
    occur as well. This convection should form as a zone of increasing
    large-scale lift (preceding the leading/weaker shortwave trough
    mentioned above) superimposes favorable diurnal heating of higher
    terrain and related preferential removal of MLCINH. This convection
    should move into lower elevations characterized by deep, well-
    heated/mixed boundary layers, but with enough low-level moisture to
    maintain and perhaps strengthen the convection as it crosses the
    outlook area. Activity should encounter progressively more-stable
    inflow air eastward into the western Dakotas tonight, leading to
    weakening.

    2. Development over the northern Rockies and adjacent foothills of northwestern MT from late afternoon into evening, proceeding
    eastward to east-southeastward across northern MT, with large hail
    and locally strong-severe gusts possible. Compared to farther
    south, expect somewhat more low-level moisture, in a pocket of
    favorable boundary-layer theta-e undisturbed by the slightly earlier
    activity to the south and southeast, as well as stronger deep shear
    (45-50-kt effective-shear magnitudes) in support of supercell
    potential. Peak MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg is expected, supported by lower-elevation surface dewpoints commonly in the 50s F, and
    residual steep low-level lapse rates from diurnal heating. Long,
    relatively straight hodographs will support hail potential from any
    sustained supercells -- either left- or right-moving (with splitting
    storms possible). Eastward extent of the threat into tonight is
    uncertain, given the potential for outflow from the higher-based,
    drier-rooted southern complex to advect into the path of this
    activity somewhere over central to northeastern MT.

    ...AZ...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to form
    this afternoon over the higher terrain of north-central through
    southeastern AZ, roughly from east of IGM southeastward past the SAD
    area, as well as on some of the smaller ranges to the south of the
    Mogollon Rim. Activity should move over deserts/valleys to the west
    and southwest across southern AZ, offering areas of strong-severe
    gusts as outflows aggregate and additional, discretely propagating
    development occurs atop the cold pools.

    As the northern MX mid/upper trough shifts westward, height falls
    and a somewhat tightened mid/upper gradient will shift westward over
    southern AZ, leading to regional enhancement of midtropospheric
    easterlies to influence convective motion and ultimate forward
    propagation. Large-scale ascent/DCVA also is expected in advance of
    the trough, overlying diurnally heated/deeply mixed boundary layers
    to ensure steep deep-layer lapse rates. Sufficient low-level
    moisture (9-13 g/kg mean mixing ratios) will remain through the
    vertical-mixing process to support 1000-1500 J/kg preconvective
    MLCAPE, as well as pulses of newer development when forced ascent
    occurs above outflow. These processes should drive outflow, with
    channels of locally severe wind, across south-central/southwestern
    AZ and potentially into the lower Colorado River Valley and into
    portions of southeastern CA, before activity dissipates tonight.

    ...Coastal Carolinas...
    The threat for a few tornadoes will continue through today, and
    perhaps into the evening, as T.S. Debby moves very slowly eastward
    to northeastward, per NHC forecasts. With Debby potentially moving
    slightly offshore, the cyclone should maintain substantial
    southeasterly inflow from a large, favorably high-theta-e boundary
    layer over the Gulf Stream. Within its northeastern quadrant, and
    seaward of a large area of stabilizing rain a short distance inland,
    the development of sporadic middle/outer-band supercells will remain
    possible offshore, with tornado potential for roughly a couple
    counties inland until cells encounter more prohibitively
    low-buoyancy inflow air. Roughly 150-300 J/kg effective SRH and
    favorably enlarged hodographs will support this threat.

    See SPC Tornado Watch 603 and related mesoscale discussions for the
    latest near-term guidance on tornado potential. Refer to NHC
    advisories for the latest track/intensity guidance for Debby, as
    well as tropical watches/warnings.

    ..Edwards.. 08/06/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Aug 7 07:56:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 071248
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 071247

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0747 AM CDT Wed Aug 07 2024

    Valid 071300Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS AND COASTAL CAROLINAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Marginal severe-weather potential is apparent over parts of the
    central Great Plains and coastal Carolinas.

    ...Synopsis...
    The persistent western CONUS anticyclone will contract through the
    period and shift westward across the southern Great Basin, in
    response to both infusions of positive vorticity in its eastern
    semicircle, and more strongly, amplification/progression of a
    northern-stream synoptic trough over western/central Canada. That
    trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery from a low over
    north-central MB west-southwestward across the Canadian Rockies --
    will move southward through the period. By 12Z tomorrow, the 500-mb
    low should cross the remainder of central/southern MB to near the
    eastern ND/MB border. Associated height falls and cyclonic flow
    aloft will spread southward over the northern Plains today, to the
    central Plains late tonight.

    Downstream, the northern-stream flow will flatten to a more-zonal
    configuration through the period, across the Upper Great Lakes, the
    St. Lawrence Valley and northern New England. This temporarily
    maintains a dearth of steering flow near T.S. Debby, with weak
    poleward/inland motion forecast by NHC through 12Z tomorrow.
    See latest NHC advisories for track/intensity forecasts for Debby,
    as well as tropical watches/warnings.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a wavy, quasistationary to
    slowly moving cold front from southern New England coastal waters
    westward over northeastern PA, then southwestward through a low near
    HTS, becoming a cold front over central KY to northeastern OK,
    through a low near LTS, then quasistationary again northwestward to
    a weak low over southeastern CO. The boundary should continue
    southward across parts of KY, TN, northern MS and AR, amidst broader northerlies extending westward from the circulation of T.S. Debby.
    A separate cold front -- related to the northern-stream perturbation
    over Canada -- was drawn from southeastern MB to near a BIS-RAP-RWL
    line. By 00Z, this front should extend from western parts of
    northwestern ON southwestward over northern MN, eastern SD, central
    NE, and northeastern CO. By 12Z tomorrow, the front should reach
    western parts of Lake Superior and WI, then southwestward over
    western IA, southeastern NE, southwestern KS, and northeastern NM.

    ...Central Great Plains...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are forecast to form
    this afternoon and evening -- mainly on the cold front over NE and
    southeastern SD, and over higher elevations of southeastern WY and north-central/northeastern CO behind the front. Activity will pose
    a threat for isolated large hail and severe gusts before weakening
    overnight.

    Once an area of clouds and precip now over southern SD and northern
    NE exits the area, afternoon destabilization should reduce
    EML-related CINH ahead of the front through the afternoon, with
    frontal lift expected to be strong enough to break the cap in a few
    spots by late afternoon. Surface dewpoints in the upper 50s to low
    60s F (locally higher) will contribute to a prefrontal plume of
    1000-1500 J/kg MLCAPE that will narrow with northeastward extent
    into lower antecedent theta-e. The southern fringe of falls and a
    tightening gradient of heights aloft will extend across parts of
    this area from late afternoon onward as well, contributing to
    favorable deep shear for some storm organization and isolated
    supercell potential -- with effective-shear magnitudes generally
    35-45 kt. Stronger veering with height -- but somewhat weaker
    mid/upper flow -- will characterize the post-frontal upslope regime,
    with elongated, nearly straight hodographs and similar bulk-shear
    values. Well-mixed subcloud layers will support gust potential,
    which may become concentrated on the mesobeta scale where any
    upscale clustering and cold-pool development can occur (most
    probable with activity initiated in the higher elevations).

    ...T.S. Debby -- Coastal Carolinas...
    As Debby gradually turns and moves northward to northwestward, only
    a slow corresponding shift of the tornado potential will occur.
    Inland destabilization is expected to be minimal, owing to extensive
    cloud cover and areas of precip north of center, and acting as a northern/northwestern limiter to the threat. Meanwhile the skeletal
    to almost nonexistent core convective structure and weaker shear
    will minimize potential closer to center. This leaves a segment of
    eastern NC near the sounds and Outer Banks today and tonight, as
    well as perhaps a small part of the adjoining SC coastal areas
    today, with potential for isolated, mainly short-lived supercells in
    the middle/outer bands. While hodographs are not forecast to be
    especially large, compared to many TC-tornado events, 150-250 J/kg
    effective SRH for northwestward-moving cells has been present in VWP
    hodographs and 6-hourly RAOBs, and should continue. This will
    overlap favorable buoyancy within roughly 75-100 nm inland of the
    beaches in NC. If a relatively concentrated area of sustained,
    multiple supercell development or potential appears for a particular
    band, a smaller area of greater probabilities may be added in a
    subsequent outlook.

    ..Edwards/Dean.. 08/07/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Aug 8 09:10:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 081243
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 081242

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0742 AM CDT Thu Aug 08 2024

    Valid 081300Z - 091200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF NORTH
    CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The main severe-weather threat today is for tornadoes from Tropical
    Storm Debby, in parts of North Carolina and Virginia.

    ...Synopsis...
    Mid/upper-level ridging has been suppressed considerably over the
    West, as a highly amplified northern-stream pattern takes shape over
    Canada and the northern tier of the CONUS. A compact but well-
    defined cyclone -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over southern
    MB -- will pivot southeastward then eastward over the MN/ON Boundary
    Waters region, then Lake Superior and adjoining portions of
    northwestern ON. As that occurs, height falls and strengthening
    cyclonic flow will spread over the Great Lakes, contributing to
    greater poleward advance of the deep-layer low accompanying T.S.
    Debby.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis shows a cold front from northwestern ON
    across western Lake Superior to west-central KS and southeastern CO,
    preceded by a strong outflow boundary across western MO, northwestern/central/southwestern OK, the southern TX Panhandle, and
    eastern NM just south of I-40. While supporting thunderstorm
    formation today, lack of greater shear will preclude enough severe
    potential near the boundary or front for an accompanying,
    unconditional severe risk.

    ...T.S. Debby: NC/VA...
    The tornado threat from T.S. Debby ramped up again overnight, with
    several strong mesocyclones and a few tornadic-debris signatures
    noted. Most of this activity has been occurring in response to two
    internal factors that continue:
    1. Stronger low-level convergence/lift over the northeast quadrant
    of the system, helping to sustain both a persistent spiral band of
    embedded supercells and an occasional discrete/semi-discrete
    supercell outside the band;
    2. Northwestward shift of favorable boundary-layer
    theta-e/buoyancy, as the inland rain shield and its stabilizing
    effects have shifted likewise, and as the cyclone as a whole has
    made landfall and moved roughly the same way.

    Though the more deeply overland path of Debby will foster gradual
    weakening of the wind fields overall, per NHC wind-radii forecasts, sufficiently strong low-level wind shear and enlarged hodographs
    will remain over a favorably moist and unstable sector well
    northeast of center. In that sector, both band-embedded and
    discrete supercells should continue to form and move northwestward
    as the system (and favorable sector) shift poleward. This will
    spread the tornado threat into more of northeastern NC and into
    southeastern VA with time today, perhaps reaching parts of central
    VA by evening.

    See SPC Tornado Watch 613 and related mesoscale discussions for
    near-term coverage of the tornado threat. Refer to NHC advisories
    for latest track/intensity forecasts for Debby, as well as tropical watches/warnings.

    ...Southern Great Basin, southwestern Colorado Plateau...
    Isolated severe gusts are possible this afternoon into early evening
    from thunderstorms over portions of northern AZ and southern UT.

    The northern periphery of a trough in the easterlies (equatorward of
    the remaining ridge) will continue to move slowly westward over
    western AZ and the lower Colorado River Valley today. This includes
    a well-defined MCV -- produced by yesterday's convection over
    southern AZ -- and now moving west-northwestward roughly over I-10
    in western AZ. These features are expected to tighten the midlevel
    flow gradient northward toward the ridge just enough to encourage
    slow westward motion of thunderstorms developing this afternoon over
    the Mogollon Rim, North Rim/Kaibab Plateau, and other higher-
    elevation areas, where heating will preferentially remove MLCINH
    soonest. Activity in the transition zone between richer moisture to
    the south, and deeper mixing/dry-thunder potential to the north,
    will pose a risk of isolated severe gusts from either wet or dry
    downbursts, with small clusters/cold pools possibly forming also.
    Peak MLCAPE in the 300-800 J/kg range should overlie a very deep
    subcloud mixed layer supporting even larger vales of DCAPE, with
    surface dewpoints commonly remaining in the 40s to low 50s at lower
    elevations.

    ..Edwards/Dean.. 08/08/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Aug 9 10:02:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 091237
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 091236

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0736 AM CDT Fri Aug 09 2024

    Valid 091300Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
    MID-ATLANTIC STATES INTO EASTERN NEW YORK...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A tornado threat is expected today from the Mid-Atlantic states
    northward into eastern New York. A few strong wind gusts will also
    be possible across parts of the Northeast, and in parts of the
    southern Plains.

    ...Mid-Atlantic states into the Northeast...
    The remnants of Debby will continue to move north-northeast and
    accelerate reaching the St. Lawrence Valley late this evening as a
    mid-level speed max over the Midwest quickly moves through the
    southern and Lower Great Lakes regions. A warm front will advance
    northward into central NY and New England later today as a southerly
    850-mb speed max shifts northward. South of the boundary, a very
    moisture-rich airmass (mid 70s deg F surface dewpoints) and some
    modest heating will contribute to weak to moderate destabilization.
    The 12 UTC IAD raob showed 250 J/kg MLCAPE and 36 kt of 0-0.5 km
    shear. Enlarged hodographs especially in the vicinity of the
    surface frontal zone will aid in storm-scale rotation with any
    robust updraft. The risk for a few tornadoes will likely focus
    initially over the Mid-Atlantic states and PA this morning before
    shifting northward towards early afternoon. A wind-damage threat
    may also develop today with the stronger linear structures and
    supercells. This activity is expected to eventually affect parts of
    western New England by mid to late afternoon and into the early
    evening before diminishing.

    ...East-central Texas...
    A moist airmass will be in place today across parts of the Texas
    Coastal Plains northward into the Texas Hill Country. As surface
    temperatures warm, moderate instability will develop across parts of
    central and east Texas. Model forecasts indicate widely scattered
    to scattered storms will favor this region later this afternoon into
    the early evening. The expected moderate instability combined with
    steep low-level lapse rates could be sufficient for a few marginally
    severe wind gusts.

    ...Southern High Plains...
    A large area of mid to upper-level high pressure will remain over
    the southern Plains today. At the surface, an axis of maximized
    low-level moisture will be in place across parts of west Texas and
    eastern New Mexico. As surface temperatures warm, moderate
    instability will likely develop along this corridor. Convection that
    initiates in the higher terrain of northern New Mexico is expected
    to move southeastward along the northern edge of this instability
    corridor during the afternoon and evening. The stronger cells within
    this cluster may be associated with marginally severe wind gusts.

    ..Smith/Jewell.. 08/09/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Aug 9 12:47:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 091642
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 091640

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1140 AM CDT Fri Aug 09 2024

    Valid 091630Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA...EASTERN NEW YORK...AND NEW JERSEY...AND INTO
    WESTERN NEW ENGLAND...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple of tornadoes will be possible today from parts of the
    Mid-Atlantic states northward across portions of New England. A few
    strong wind gusts will also be possible across this region, along
    with parts of the southern High Plains, and southern Wyoming.

    ...Portions of the Mid-Atlantic and New England...
    As the center of P.T.C. Debby -- now over south-central New York --
    continues moving north-northeastward across New York today, and then
    into Quebec/across the St. Lawrence Valley this evening and tonight,
    very strong low-level shear will continue to spread northward across
    eastern New York and much of New England. While northward
    destabilization will be hindered by a lack of appreciable daytime
    heating due to widespread cloud cover, a very moist boundary layer
    (dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s) spreading northward toward
    the Canadian border will support at least neutrally buoyant profiles
    across most of New England this evening and tonight. As such, low
    (2%) tornado probability is being expanded northward/northeastward
    in this update, to include the remainder of northern Vermont and
    northern New Hampshire, and much of Maine, to cover the potential
    for a brief tornadic spin-up after dark.

    Otherwise, greatest potential for a couple of tornadoes will exist
    this afternoon and into this evening from eastern
    Pennsylvania/eastern New York into parts of New Jersey, and across
    the Hudson and Champlain Valleys into western Vermont, western
    Massachusetts, and western Connecticut.

    ...Southern High Plains...
    Afternoon storm development is expected across the Raton Mesa
    vicinity of northeastern New Mexico, aided by afternoon heating/destabilization, and the eastward advance of a mid-level
    vort max across southern Colorado. Moderate (around 30 kt)
    mid-level westerlies may support some organization/upscale growth of
    storms into the evening, along with accompanying potential for a
    couple of strong gusts as convection crosses the Oklahoma and
    northern Texas Panhandle area.

    ...Southern Wyoming...
    Daytime heating/modest destabilization across the Intermountain West
    will support development of isolated to scattered afternoon and
    evening thunderstorms. With a belt of moderate (30 to 40 kt)
    northwesterly flow across the Wyoming vicinity, some storm
    organization will be possible. Some CAMs suggest eventual upscale
    growth into a loosely organized cluster by this evening, moving east-southeastward toward southeastern portions of the state.
    Resulting potential for a few stronger wind gusts with this activity
    warrants inclusion of 5% wind probability/MRGL risk area.

    ..Goss/Weinman.. 08/09/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Aug 10 09:51:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 101245
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 101244

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0744 AM CDT Sat Aug 10 2024

    Valid 101300Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE
    HIGH PLAINS WESTWARD INTO THE EASTERN GREAT BASIN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms, capable of localized severe gusts and
    perhaps hail, are possible during the afternoon into early evening
    over parts of the High Plains and extending into the eastern Great
    Basin.

    ...High Plains into the eastern Great Basin...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a flattened mid-level ridge
    centered over the south-central U.S., with a belt of enhanced flow
    extending from northern CA east across the central Rockies and into
    the Lower Great Lakes. A 500-mb speed max will move across ID
    eastward into WY/northern CO during the period. In the low levels,
    a lee trough will act as a focus for thunderstorm development this
    afternoon across the High Plains.

    Showers/thunderstorms over the northern part of the southern High
    Plains will gradually push east into OK during the day. Relatively
    cool and a stable airmass sampled this morning over the central
    Great Plains [reference the 12 UTC Dodge City, KS raob (nearly nil
    buoyancy)] may serve as a relative minima in storm
    coverage/intensity later today. Yet, strong heating and the
    development of steep lapse rates are forecast to contribute to weak
    buoyancy later this afternoon (250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE) over the High
    Plains westward into parts of the eastern Great Basin. Inverted-V
    profiles over UT eastward into northern CO/southern WY will favor
    localized severe gusts with the widely scattered to scattered
    thunderstorms. Forecast soundings over the High Plains westward
    into the north-central Rockies indicate some storm organization may
    occur with the stronger updrafts (i.e., supercell structure).
    Marginally severe hail/gusts are the primary concerns with this
    activity. Tonight, the LLJ is forecast to intensify over the TX
    Panhandle into western OK. Scattered elevated storms will probably
    focus on the northern edge of greater instability within a
    favorable zone of low-level warm advection. Uncertainty in storm
    intensity precludes an eastward expansion of low-severe
    probabilities into OK at this time.

    ..Smith/Jewell.. 08/10/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Aug 11 07:40:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 110525
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 110524

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1224 AM CDT Sun Aug 11 2024

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS INTO THE BLACK HILLS REGION...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the
    central High Plains into the Black Hills of South Dakota.

    ...Central High Plains to Black Hills...

    Notable short-wave trough is currently located over western MT/ID.
    This feature is forecast to advance into eastern WY by 18z as a
    500mb speed max, in excess of 40kt, translates toward the NE
    Panhandle. This short wave will begin to dig southeast during the
    latter half of the period, subsequently shifting into the mid MO
    Valley by 12/12z. At the surface, dominant high pressure will hold
    across the mid MS Valley such that southeasterly low-level
    trajectories will be maintained across the central High Plains
    through the day1 period.

    Given the influence of the continental airmass across the central
    Plains, the strongest boundary-layer heating will be noted along the
    western periphery of the anticyclone from eastern WY into eastern
    CO. This will be the corridor of maximum destabilization, coincident
    with the large-scale ascent expected ahead of the short wave.
    Scattered convection will likely be ongoing early in the period
    across southern MT. This activity will propagate southeast toward
    western SD where renewed convection could develop by 21-22z, as
    convective temperatures are breached along the southwestern flank.
    At this time will maintain MRGL risk for hail/wind with convection
    that evolves ahead of the short wave. However, there is some concern
    this activity may become a bit more organized, and this could
    necessitate higher severe probabilities during the late
    afternoon/evening hours.

    ..Darrow/Wendt.. 08/11/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Aug 12 10:01:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 121224
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 121223

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0723 AM CDT Mon Aug 12 2024

    Valid 121300Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE
    COASTAL CAROLINAS...CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...THE EASTERN GREAT BASIN
    NORTHWARD INTO PARTS OF THE NORTH-CENTRAL ROCKIES...AND NORTHERN MONTANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible today over parts of the
    coastal Carolinas, central High Plains, the eastern Great Basin
    northward into parts of the north-central Rockies, and northern
    Montana.

    ...Rockies/Central High Plains Region...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning depicts a flattened upper
    anticyclone centered over east TX/LA and a large-scale trough over
    the WA/OR/northern CA coast. A notable mid-level disturbance will
    move from the eastern Pacific east-northeastward into northern NV
    during the period. Mid-level flow ahead of the western U.S.
    troughing will not be strong, but a plume of seasonably moist air
    from the Four Corners northward into MT will favor scattered to
    numerous thunderstorms developing this afternoon into the early
    evening. Heating will steepen 0-3 km lapse rates and promote severe
    gusts with the stronger outflow surges from UT northward along the
    ID/WY border. Recent model guidance also indicates widely scattered
    to scattered storms developing across northern MT and moving east as
    a small thunderstorm cluster. Localized severe gusts may accompany
    this activity before weakening by early to mid evening. Farther
    east over the central High Plains, the maintenance of moist/upslope
    flow into the High Plains and higher terrain (i.e., CO Front Range)
    will promote isolated to scattered storms developing around peak
    heating and moving into the adjacent High Plains. An isolated risk
    for large hail/severe gusts will be the primary hazards with the
    stronger storms. A cluster of storms will likely develop in
    response to a nocturnal intensification of a LLJ but waning
    instability by late evening will limit overall storm vigor.

    ...Coastal Carolinas...
    Southern influence of eastern US trough will glance this region
    today as a belt of 20-30kt mid-level flow overspreads a very
    moisture-rich airmass (i.e., mid to upper 70s deg F surface
    dewpoints) south of a front. Scattered thunderstorms should develop
    along this boundary by early afternoon then propagate toward and off
    the coast by early evening. Marginally severe gusts could be noted
    with the strongest storms.

    ..Smith/Jewell.. 08/12/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Aug 13 09:20:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 131356
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 131354

    Day 1 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0854 AM CDT Tue Aug 13 2024

    Valid 131300Z - 141200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE
    EASTERN GREAT BASIN/NORTHERN INTERMOUNTAIN REGION INTO THE NORTHERN
    AND CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS...AS WELL AS SOUTH CAROLINA...

    CORRECTED FOR ERROR IN TEXT

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon and
    evening across parts of the eastern Great Basin/northern
    Intermountain region into the northern/central High Plains and
    central Great Plains, as well as South Carolina.

    ...The Intermountain Region to the central and northern High
    Plains...
    Several weak disturbances/vorticity maxima are forecast to move
    through the broader/weakly cyclonic flow field that will persist
    across the West today. A residual plume of seasonably high moisture
    resides from the Four Corners northward into the northern High
    Plains. The most notable mid-level shortwave will move from the
    OR/NV vicinity this morning northeastward into MT this
    afternoon/evening. Heating will contribute to weak to moderate
    instability across this broad region from the Interior West to the
    High Plains. Scattered to numerous thunderstorms are forecast to
    develop by late this afternoon into the early evening. A locally
    greater severe risk may evolve from eastern ID into northern UT
    where forecast soundings show shear profiles supporting a mixed mode
    of supercells/multicells. However, some uncertainty remains due to
    ongoing early morning convection and related airmass recovery.
    Nonetheless, an isolated risk for hail/wind will likely encompass
    the UT/ID/WY/MT corridor. Farther east and northeast, an isolated
    threat for hail/wind will potentially accompany the stronger
    late-day storms with some of this activity lingering into the
    evening across eastern CO in the form of a thunderstorm cluster.

    ...Central Plains/lower MO Valley...
    As a 40-plus kt south-southwesterly low-level jet develops across
    the central Plains during the evening, elevated storm development is
    expected north of a west-to-east surface front forecast to reside
    over central Kansas. With moderate CAPE expected atop the
    cool/stable boundary layer north of the front, a few stronger storms
    are expected to evolve, potentially capable of producing hail at or
    exceeding severe levels. Strong/gusty outflow winds will also be
    possible, particularly with storms nearer the frontal zone.

    ...South Carolina...
    Surface analysis this morning depicts a remnant weak frontal zone
    draped from southern GA into the Carolinas. A very moist airmass
    sampled by the 12 UTC Charleston raob (16.7 g/kg lowest 100-mb mean
    mixing ratio) will diurnally destabilize today. Weak convergence
    via the frontal zone will aid in widely scattered storms developing
    by early to mid afternoon due to a negligible cap. A mid to
    upper-level disturbance moving southeast into the southern
    Appalachians this morning will move to the Carolina coastal plain
    later today. Moderate west-northwesterlies (around 30 kt at 500 mb)
    may aid in some multicellular organization. Isolated gusts 50-60
    mph capable of wind damage will be the primary concern with the
    stronger storms.

    ..Smith/Jewell.. 08/13/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Aug 14 08:51:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 141231
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 141229

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0729 AM CDT Wed Aug 14 2024

    Valid 141300Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR EASTERN NEBRASKA...SOUTHWEST IOWA...NORTHEAST KANSAS...AND NORTHWEST MISSOURI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of all hazards are possible
    late this afternoon through the evening across adjacent portions of
    the mid and lower Missouri Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a mid- to upper-level
    shortwave trough over WY/CO moving east-northeast. This upper
    feature is forecast to rotate through the base of a larger-scale
    trough and move into the eastern ND/northern MN vicinity by daybreak
    Thursday. In its wake, an upstream perturbation will move from
    southeast OR/southern ID into NE by late tonight. Consequently, an
    upper ridge will shift eastward from the lower-mid MO Valley through
    the mid MS Valley during the period.

    At the surface, weak/broad low pressure initially over the High
    Plains is forecast to gradually consolidate as it shifts eastward
    across the central Plains, in tandem with the advance of the upper
    trough. As this occurs, a cool front will shift southeastward
    across the central Plains through the afternoon and evening.
    Overnight, further consolidation of the surface low is expected as
    it moves slowly northeastward into southern Minnesota, while the
    trailing front sharpens, extending from the low southwestward across
    Kansas and into New Mexico by the end of the period.

    ...Mid to lower Missouri Valley...
    Mid morning radar/IR satellite mosaic shows an MCS over northern
    MO/IA with a well-developed MCV moving east-northeast over northeast
    NE. This activity will continue to weaken this morning and become
    increasingly displaced from KS/NE where a renewed focus for
    thunderstorm development will occur later today. The remnant
    outflow boundary will likely persist into the afternoon across
    the southeastern Nebraska/northwestern Missouri/southwestern Iowa
    area and modify as heating occurs to the west edge of the MCS cirrus
    canopy. Rich low-level moisture was sampled this morning on the
    Topeka, KS 12 UTC raob (16.7 g/kg lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratio).
    Southerly low-level flow will aid in moistening the airmass as
    insolation contributes to moderate to strong buoyancy (2000-4000
    J/kg MLCAPE) by peak heating.

    By late afternoon as low pressure and the cold front shifts
    eastward into this area, the low/front and remnant outflow should
    all provide low-level foci for storm initiation. With enhanced
    southerly low-level flow ahead of the advancing mid-level trough
    beneath moderate (30 to 40 kt) mid-level westerlies, resulting shear
    suggests that initial storms will likely be supercells capable of
    producing large hail (1 to 2.5 inches in diameter). Enlarged
    hodographs along and north of the modified outflow boundary suggest
    a tornado risk will probably accompany a couple of the more intense
    supercells, where surface to 0.5 km flow remains relatively backed
    beneath a belt of 30-40 700-mb flow. Given modest flow above 300
    mb, upscale growth into a cluster is forecast to occur relatively
    quickly during the early evening with a band further consolidating
    into a eastward-moving line by mid to late evening. Coincident with
    the transition to upscale growth, the tornado risk will gradually
    wane and severe gusts capable of wind damage will become the primary
    concern. This activity will likely persist as a linear MCS but the
    severe threat should lessen with east extent towards the MS River
    late.

    ...Wyoming and vicinity eastward across the northern and central
    Plains...
    As the upper trough -- comprised of several vorticity maxima
    embedded in the broader cyclonic flow field -- shifts across the
    Rockies toward/into the Plains, daytime heating beneath cooler air
    at mid levels will support modest destabilization across a broad
    area. Ascent -- focused near favored higher terrain areas and near
    various weak surface boundaries -- will contribute to widely
    scattered thunderstorm development during the afternoon. Moderate
    mid-level westerlies will contribute to shear sufficient for a few
    stronger storms -- and attendant risks for hail and locally
    strong/severe wind gusts into the evening hours.

    ..Smith.. 08/14/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Aug 15 08:28:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 151244
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 151243

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0743 AM CDT Thu Aug 15 2024

    Valid 151300Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE OZARKS...LOWER MISSOURI VALLEY...AND ILLINOIS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the
    Midwest through tonight. Severe gusts capable of wind damage and
    large hail are the primary risks with the stronger thunderstorms.

    ...Central Plains to the Mid Mississippi Valley...
    Morning water-vapor imagery shows a series of embedded disturbances
    rotating through a larger-scale trough centered over the northern
    Great Plains. A notable shortwave trough is located near the
    WY/NE/SD vicinity and this feature will move east reaching the Upper
    Great Lakes by Friday morning. A lead convectively augmented
    disturbance is moving east across the mid MS Valley this morning,
    and it will move east into the southern Great Lakes and weaken
    during the day. Broken bands of showers/thunderstorms associated
    with this lead impulse will progress east this morning and move into
    a less unstable airmass across the Wabash Valley. Some rejuvenation
    of storms is possible later today on the southern portion of the
    trailing outflow near the MS-OH River confluence westward into the
    Ozarks. Appreciable uncertainty exists at this time on the
    intensity/coverage of storms in the aforementioned corridor.
    Nonetheless, heating of a moist airmass will potentially yield an
    environment favorable for at least isolated to widely scattered
    storms capable of a wind/hail threat.

    In wake of the early day cloud debris and overnight storm activity,
    strong boundary-layer heating is expected across much of the Plains
    into portions of the mid MS Valley. As a result, strong buoyancy
    will develop along the eastern edge of this steeper lapse-rate
    plume. Model guidance suggests very strong instability (MLCAPE
    3000 J/kg) will probably develop by mid-late afternoon from
    portions of eastern KS/MO into southern IA. Thunderstorms may focus
    along a synoptic front that will arc from southeast MN-eastern
    IA-northern MO-southeast KS-northern OK by late afternoon. Some
    guidance (i.e., 00Z MPAS and recent HRRR runs) indicates lower storm
    coverage until later this evening across the lower MO Valley/mid MS
    Valley portion of the Slight Risk. Regardless, deep-layer shear
    should be adequate for supercells and organized clusters and
    wind/hail can be expected with the most robust updrafts. High-based thunderstorms are also expected to develop along the trailing
    boundary into the southern Plains where surface temperatures will
    easily rise through the upper 90s to near 100F. The stronger
    evaporatively cooled downdrafts will potentially result in severe
    gusts before this activity diminishes by mid-late evening.

    ...New England...
    Upper troughing will hold across New England today with cool
    mid-level temperatures and modest northerly flow at 500mb. Strong boundary-layer heating will allow convective temperatures to be
    breached by 19z and scattered convection is expected to develop
    within a sheared environment that favors robust multi-cell updrafts.
    Some of this activity could generate strong gusts and marginally
    severe hail. Convection will be diurnally driven and should weaken
    with loss of daytime heating.

    ...Northern Rockies...
    A mid- to upper-level trough over the Pacific Northwest will
    gradually move northeast impinging on the northern Rockies by
    afternoon. The favorable timing of large-scale ascent and diurnal destabilization will yield scattered to numerous thunderstorms
    developing from the Upper Snake Valley north-northwestward into
    north-central ID and western MT by early evening. Forecast
    soundings show steep lapse rates and potentially favorable for
    localized severe gusts with the stronger thunderstorm cores and outflow-dominant clusters.

    ..Smith.. 08/15/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Aug 16 08:45:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 161251
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 161250

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0750 AM CDT Fri Aug 16 2024

    Valid 161300Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR MUCH OF KANSAS
    INTO NORTHERN OKLAHOMA AND INTO NORTHWEST ARKANSAS AND FAR SOUTHWEST MISSOURI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible for much of Kansas into
    northern Oklahoma and into northwest Arkansas. Large to very large
    hail and severe gusts are the expected hazards with the stronger
    thunderstorms.

    ...Central/Southern Plains Region...
    A surface front will become draped from the Ozarks westward into KS
    and arcing into the north-central High Plains by mid afternoon.
    With this region largely in between a mid-level anticyclone over NM
    and an upper low over the Upper Midwest, a subtle impulse in
    water-vapor imagery over the central High Plains is forecast to
    gradually move east across KS today. Models show an instability
    axis paralleling the frontal zone where the combination of
    deep-layer shear/buoyancy will be greatest. It is within the Slight
    Risk where the potential for organized storms, including supercells
    and eventually severe clusters/line segments appear to be most
    probable. However, given the relatively modest forcing, it is not
    entirely clear how storm clusters evolve except for the peak storm intensity/coverage to generally focus late this afternoon into the
    evening. This activity will likely continue to move east-southeast
    into richer moisture in the northeast OK vicinity and yield a risk
    for severe gusts potentially into tonight.

    Farther southwest into western OK and adjacent parts of TX, a hot
    and deeply mixed boundary layer will feature very steep 0-3 km lapse
    rates by late afternoon. Isolated to scattered storms are indicated
    in model guidance. Severe gusts associated with evaporatively
    cooled downdrafts appear to be the primary hazard before this
    activity weakens by mid evening.

    ...KY/TN Valley/Mid South...
    Scattered showers/thunderstorm ongoing this morning across parts of
    TN/KY will continue east through the morning. Heating ahead of this
    activity will act to destabilize a moist airmass with additional
    development forecast on trailing outflow. Isolated to widely
    scattered damaging gusts are possible with the more intense storms
    once the boundary layer sufficiently destabilizes. Some recent
    model guidance indicates a focused mesoscale corridor for wind
    potential may evolve across the TN Valley but uncertainty is
    relatively high for this scenario.

    ...Southern Great Lakes vicinity...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a leading mid-level vorticity
    maximum moving east across northern IN/southern Lower MI. Weak
    instability immediately downstream of this impulse (250 J/kg MUCAPE
    per the Detroit 12 UTC raob) and an associated cloud shield will
    likely limited storm intensity until stronger heating can occur.
    Upstream of the aforementioned disturbance, another mid-level
    shortwave is forecast to rotate east-southeastward from MN towards
    Lake Michigan through the early evening. Heating ahead of this
    impulse will yield at least weak to moderate buoyancy by early
    afternoon. Isolated strong/severe thunderstorms are expected to
    develop immediately ahead of the upper low. Hail/wind are possible
    with storms that evolve along this corridor of stronger instability.

    ..Smith/Mosier.. 08/16/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Aug 17 09:36:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 171250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 171248

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0748 AM CDT Sat Aug 17 2024

    Valid 171300Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR CENTRAL KENTUCKY INTO SOUTHERN OHIO...UTAH...AND PARTS OF THE CASCADES OF OREGON AND WASHINGTON...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible in parts of Kentucky and
    the Ohio Valley mainly this afternoon into the early evening.
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are also forecast for Utah and in the
    vicinity of the Cascades of Oregon and Washington. Wind and hail
    are the primary threats.

    ...Lower Great Lakes into the central/southern Appalachians and OH
    Valley...
    A mid-level low and associated trough will slowly move east today
    and reach the Upper OH Valley/Appalachians tonight as a mid-level
    anticyclone remains centered over northeast NM. High-level
    diffluent flow will be noted across the OH Valley into the Mid South
    and be favorable for scattered thunderstorms developing across much
    of this region coincident with strong heating. A front will
    gradually shift east across the OH Valley with this boundary
    becoming more diffuse in part related to convective outflow across
    the Mid South/Ozarks. Stronger mid-level flow aiding in storm
    organization will primarily extend from the Great Smoky Mtns
    northward into KY/OH/WV. Organized multicells and transient
    supercells are possible with scattered coverage of severe wind/hail
    possible with these storms. Observational trends of an MCV over
    Middle TN moving eastward into the southern Appalachians and the 00z
    MPAS-NSSL model run data, lend the possibility for a mesoscale
    corridor of higher thunderstorm coverage and greater damaging-wind
    potential for the western Carolinas and perhaps into central
    portions of AL. Limited confidence in this scenario precludes
    higher severe probabilities at this time.

    ...Lower MS Valley into north TX...
    Morning thunderstorms over the OK/AR border associated with
    low-level WAA may continue into the midday with incipient outflow
    progressively shunting additional storms/new development farther
    west and south across eastern OK. Model guidance indicates at least
    isolated storms potentially developing within an east-west corridor
    from MS westward into north/northwest TX later today. Forecast
    soundings indicate severe microbursts will be possible with the more
    intense cores. Have adjusted low-severe probabilities to trend
    farther west/southwest based on this forecast scenario.

    ...Utah Region...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a northward-moving shortwave
    trough over southern NV and extrapolation has this feature moving
    into northern UT by mid afternoon. Scattered to numerous
    thunderstorms are forecast to begin developing by late morning and
    spreading north-northeast within a strongly sheared environment.
    Increasing cloud cover and some limit on the quality of lapse rates
    will temper overall buoyancy. However, some organization into small
    clusters yielding severe gusts will be the primary threat with the
    stronger storms.

    ...Western OR/Southwest WA...
    Strong 500mb speed max will round the base of the offshore trough
    and translate across northern CA into eastern OR by early evening.
    Left exit region of this feature will aid UVV near the higher
    terrain and cooling/moistening mid-levels will contribute to modest
    buoyancy along the cyclonic side of the speed max. Forecast
    soundings exhibit strongly sheared profiles and isolated supercells
    are expected to develop, then spread north-northeast as a short-wave
    trough ejects into southern WA. Hail/wind are possible with these
    storms.

    ..Smith/Mosier.. 08/17/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Aug 18 08:50:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 181254
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 181253

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0753 AM CDT Sun Aug 18 2024

    Valid 181300Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR KANSAS INTO
    THE WESTERN OZARKS...AND FROM THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES INTO THE DEEP SOUTH...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe gusts are possible from northern Kansas to the
    western part of the Ozark Plateau, and in a separate area from the
    Mid-Atlantic States to the Deep South this afternoon to early
    evening.

    ...Rockies/Central Plains...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning indicates a short-wave trough
    cresting the Rockies mid-level ridge. This feature is forecast to
    move southeast with an enhanced belt of 500-mb flow (40-50 kt)
    moving into the Ozarks late. The 00z MPAS-HT-NSSL model seemed to
    reasonably depict elevated convection and a small severe cluster
    this morning over SD and northern NE. Other model guidance varies
    considerably on the handling of this early day storm activity. A
    risk for large hail will continue across east-central NE through the
    late morning in association with WAA-related storms favoring the
    eastern gradient of moisture/instability where isentropic lift will
    be maximized. Based on several factors 1) the aforementioned MPAS
    guidance, 2) enhanced mid to upper-level northwesterly flow per OAX,
    TOP, and SGF 12 UTC raobs, and a reservoir of higher theta-e across
    northern OK into KS, it seems possible a forward-propagating
    cluster/MCS may evolve this afternoon from KS into the western
    Ozarks. Have increased severe probabilities to account for this
    forecast evolution.

    ...Middle Atlantic to Deep South...
    Not much change in thinking from the prior forecast in that a Great
    Lakes/OH Valley upper trough will shift east and reach the spine of
    the Appalachians by early evening. Modest 500mb flow should extend
    within the base of the trough into the Mid-Atlantic states where
    shear profiles will be most supportive of organized storm structures
    (including multicells and transient supercells). Damaging gusts
    (50-65 mph) will likely be the primary risk, but some risk for hail
    and perhaps a brief tornado can be expected.

    The trailing portion of the front across the Deep South will not be particularly convergent as it surges into GA-AL-MS. However, a
    seasonably moist airmass (15-16 g/kg lowest 100-mb mean mixing
    ratios) sampled by the 12 UTC Jackson, MS east to the coastal
    Carolinas raob sites, will undergo strong heating through mid
    afternoon. Several clusters of strong to severe/damaging
    thunderstorm clusters are forecast to evolve by mid to late
    afternoon and push towards the coastal areas by early evening.

    ...Interior West...
    Scattered to numerous diurnal thunderstorms are forecast to develop
    on the western/northern periphery of a mid-level anticyclone
    centered over northeast NM. An ongoing thunderstorm cluster over
    central AZ will continue to move northward through the midday. This
    convection appears to be partly influenced by a weak disturbance of
    convective origin and is partly evident some augmenting of mid-level
    flow in the KIWA (Phoenix WSR-88D) VAD data. As a result, greater
    storm coverage will likely be associated with this feature as it
    moves into a destabilizing airmass across southern UT by early to
    mid afternoon. Severe gusts (60-75 mph) are possible with this
    diurnally enhanced activity from the UT/AZ border northward into MT.

    ..Smith/Mosier.. 08/18/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Aug 19 09:39:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 191242
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 191241

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0741 AM CDT Mon Aug 19 2024

    Valid 191300Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN INTO NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA...EASTERN MONTANA...AND EASTERN COLORADO...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across portions of
    Montana and eastern Colorado during the afternoon and evening.
    Large hail and severe gusts are the primary hazards.

    ...Synopsis...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a mid- to upper-level ridge
    situated over the south-central High Plains northward through the
    northern Great Plains. A mid-level trough is over the East and a
    mid-level low and associated trough are over the eastern Pacific to
    the west of the Pacific Northwest.

    ...Portions of the central and northern Rockies/High Plains...
    Broad 40+ kt southwesterly 500 mb flow will overspread portions of
    the central into the northern Rockies as an impulse embedded in the
    West Coast mid-level trough grazes the region. Isolated to
    scattered thunderstorms are forecast across Montana with locally
    greater thunderstorm coverage forecast over western into
    north-central MT this afternoon and evening, and separately over
    portions of eastern Montana. Richer moisture is evident in morning
    surface analysis across eastern MT where lower 60s F surface
    dewpoints are present with mid 50s farther west near the I-15
    corridor. Consequently, greater buoyancy is expected later this
    afternoon over eastern MT with 2000+ J/kg MLCAPE possible with
    750-1250 J/kg farther west. Given the deep boundary layer and
    corresponding steep lapse rates in both areas, severe gusts are
    possible with the more intense cells and clusters, especially if a
    linear cluster can evolve near the Rocky Mtn Front and push
    northeastward into the High Plains. Elsewhere, isolated instances
    of hail/wind may accompany the stronger thunderstorms from the
    eastern Great Basin northward into ID/WY.

    ...Eastern Colorado...
    Moist upslope flow during peak surface heating will result in
    thunderstorm initiation off of the higher terrain. Surface
    dewpoints in the low 60s F beneath 7.5-8 C/km mid-level lapse rates
    will support over 2000 J/kg MLCAPE. Modest veering and
    strengthening of the vertical wind profile will contribute to 30-40
    kts of effective bulk shear and modestly elongated hodographs. Some
    of the stronger multicells and transient supercells may yield a risk
    for large hail and severe gusts beginning mid afternoon through the
    early evening.

    ...North Carolina into the Northeast...
    At least scattered thunderstorms will develop amid weak vertical
    wind shear this afternoon ahead of a cold front. Pulse cellular and
    occasional multicells are the expected storm mode. Rich low-level
    moisture preceding the front will contribute to 1000-2000 J/kg
    MLCAPE, which may support a few strong, potentially damaging gusts
    with some of the stronger storms.

    ...North Florida...
    A couple of strong thunderstorms may develop along the trailing
    portion of a cold front by afternoon. Similar to the Northeast, rich
    low-level moisture will promote 2000-3000 J/kg MLCAPE, fostering wet downburst/strong wind gust potential with pulse single cells and
    multicells.

    ...Sabine River Valley...
    Ongoing clusters of weak thunderstorms moving southward on the
    backside of the Eastern U.S. mid-level trough will likely continue
    southward through the Sabine River Valley today. Although the 12
    UTC Lake Charles raob is characterized as only weakly unstable,
    additional heating will result in moderate destabilization by
    midday. A localized wind-damage risk may accompany the stronger
    outflow surges before this activity moves into the northwest Gulf.

    ..Smith/Mosier.. 08/19/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Aug 20 07:35:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 200544
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 200542

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1242 AM CDT Tue Aug 20 2024

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    MONTANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Widely scattered to scattered storms are possible in parts of
    central/eastern Montana with more isolated coverage into parts of
    the central High Plains. Severe winds and large hail are the primary
    threats.

    ...MT into the Central High Plains...

    Upper ridge is forecast to hold across the High Plains through the
    day1 period, though some weak mid-level height falls are expected
    across the northern Rockies in response to a very weak disturbance.
    With broad southwesterly flow entrenched across the northern
    intermountain region into central MT, a surface lee trough will arc
    from central MT-western Black Hills-eastern CO. This will ensure
    southeasterly boundary-layer winds are maintained across the
    northern High Plains into central MT. Strong surface heating will
    allow temperatures to warm into the 90s across eastern MT and
    convective temperatures should be breached at lower elevations by
    20z. Latest thinking is scattered convection will develop over the
    higher terrain of southern MT then spread northeast toward the High
    Plains. NAM forecast sounding for LWT at 20z exhibits 2300 J/kg
    MLCAPE with 0-6km bulk shear around 50kt. This profile suggests
    supercells are likely, especially early in the convective cycle.
    Relatively high cloud bases favor strong gusts and this should be
    the primary risk, though large hail is certainly possible with
    supercells. Scattered convection should spread toward eastern MT
    where gradual weakening is expected during the late evening.

    Farther south, a very weak disturbance will rotate around the
    southern Rockies anticyclone into eastern CO by late afternoon.
    Scattered convection should easily develop over the higher terrain
    of southern CO then spread east along/north of a front that will be
    draped from northwest OK into southeast CO. Favorable veering wind
    profiles with height, along with 0-6km shear on the order of 30kt,
    suggests slow-moving supercells could spread east-southeast during
    the late afternoon/evening. Isolated hail/wind are the primary
    threats.

    ..Darrow/Halbert.. 08/20/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Aug 21 08:47:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 211252
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 211251

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0751 AM CDT Wed Aug 21 2024

    Valid 211300Z - 221200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF
    EASTERN MONTANA AND WESTERN NORTH DAKOTA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe hail and thunderstorm gusts are most probable over parts of
    eastern Montana and western North Dakota.

    ...Synopsis...
    The CONUS portion of the large-scale, mid/upper-level pattern this
    period will be characterized by mean troughing over the East and
    West Coasts, and ridging extending northward over the Great Plains
    States from a high over west TX. A strong cyclone -- initially
    centered just south of the AK Panhandle -- is expected to dig south-southeastward, with its 500-mb center moving to around 200 nm
    west of UIL by 12Z tomorrow. As this process reinforces the mean
    western trough, a series of mostly low-amplitude shortwave
    perturbations will eject through the foregoing southwest flow.

    The best-defined and potentially most important of those
    perturbations evident in moisture-channel imagery over portions of
    northern CA, northwestern NV and southeastern OR. This feature
    should reach southeastern ID and west-central MT around 00Z, before
    ejecting northeastward across the northern High Plains and losing
    definition tonight. Meanwhile, in the subtropical easterlies, a
    shortwave trough will continue to drift westward across parts of
    Sonora, the Gulf of California, and central/northern Baja.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed rich Gulf-origin moisture still
    confined near and south of a slowly weakening synoptic front over
    northern FL, the northern Gulf shelf waters, and southeast to
    north-central TX. Nonetheless, a plume of mainly 60s F surface
    dewpoints was analyzed from much of OK north-northwestward across western/central portions of KS, NE and the Dakotas. A lee trough
    was drawn farther west, over eastern portions of MT/WY/CO. This
    trough should intensify through the day as ridging aloft shifts
    somewhat eastward, and southwest flow aloft spreads over more of the
    High Plains. As part of that process, surface cyclogenesis is
    expected over the northeastern WY/southeastern MT region, with the
    resulting low shifting eastward into northwestern SD around 06Z.

    ...Northern Plains...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop
    initially over the higher terrain of south-central/southwestern MT
    by midafternoon. In this area, heating of greater elevations
    preferentially removes MLCINH first, as large-scale lift ahead of
    the ejecting shortwave begins to move overhead. This activity
    should move northeastward into parts of central MT atop a boundary
    layer that is diurnally destabilizing/mixing, yet still favorably
    moist. Additional thunderstorms may develop by late afternoon near
    the surface trough, where strong surface heating and the western rim
    of the corridor of greatest moisture (surface dewpoints commonly in
    the upper 50s to mid 60s F) will remove capping at lower elevations.
    Convection of both origins may merge near the trough, over eastern
    MT. Along the way, activity should produce at least occasional
    large hail (mainly with any sustained supercells) and damaging
    gusts. Some aggregation of convection should occur, leading to forward-propagational clustering and increased potential for
    swath(s) of severe to potentially significant (65+ kt) gusts from
    late afternoon through much of the evening, as activity moves
    through a lingering, deep, well-mixed layer left by diurnal heating.

    A well-heated and deep boundary layer west of the moist plume will
    support MLCAPE in the 500-1500 J/kg range, with 1000-1500 J/kg DCAPE
    as well. This will foster high-based convection for the first few
    hours, with some potential for activity to cluster and become
    collectively outflow-dominant before reaching the grater moisture.
    weak low-level winds are expected, beneath 50-80 kt flow in the
    upper half of the buoyant profile, contributing to favorable deep
    shear (40-50 kt effective) for supercells, and long, relatively
    straight hodographs supporting splitting storms and hail potential
    where convection doesn't produce too much outflow too soon.

    Thunderstorms will move into larger nominal CAPE and greater near-
    surface moisture over easternmost MT into western ND, where the
    moist axis should be found, with MLCAPE of 2000-3000 J/kg. Though
    MLCINH also will be stronger in the higher-CAPE corridor than
    farther west, forced ascent that is driven by cold-pool processes
    should sustain some of the strong-severe convection well into ND
    this evening. Activity should peak near the moist/buoyancy axis and
    weaken afterword tonight, as it moves into progressively more-stable
    low-level profile, both with lower ambient theta-e and nocturnal
    diabatic cooling/stabilization near the surface.

    ...Central High Plains...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms should develop this
    afternoon over higher terrain from the Black Hills to the Laramie
    Range and southward over the Front Range, its foothills, and
    adjoining ridges such as the Cheyenne Ridge and Palmer Divide. This
    convection should move east toward the lee trough and low-level
    moist axis, while crossing over a hot, deeply mixed boundary layer.
    Isolated severe gusts are expected, and severe hail also may be a
    concern with relatively discrete cells.

    While vertical shear will be weaker than farther north, strong
    veering of flow with height (especially near the trough) should
    contribute enough deep shear (30-40 kt effective mainly north of
    I-70) for at least brief supercell potential. Aggregation of
    outflows may foster one or more eastward-surging clusters into this
    evening from western KS to central SD, and a relatively concentrated
    local severe-wind threat will exist in any such cluster. However,
    guidance is too inconsistent in convective evolution and longevity,
    and in location/number of such clusters, to assign greater
    unconditional probabilities within the long "marginal" area at this
    time.

    ...Southeastern AZ...
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon, at
    first over higher terrain then across deserts/valleys as outflow/ differential-heating boundaries develop. With a relatively deep
    layer of south-southeasterly midlevel flow, activity should move
    generally northwestward. Though most progs keep the flow aloft
    modest (15 kt or less), some mesoscale enhancement is possible east
    of the track of a northwestward-moving MCV -- evident in IR
    satellite imagery over north-central Sonora. The most intense
    convection will be capable of isolated severe gusts.

    Clouds related both to earlier/overnight convection over southern
    AZ, as well as to activity over MX, are south and west of this
    region already, portending essentially a full day of insolation over
    the outlook area. Residual lower-elevation surface dewpoints in the
    50s to mid 60s should decrease only slightly through the diurnal
    heating/mixing cycle, offset to some extent by moist advection.
    MLCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range should develop through early/mid
    afternoon, atop the well-mixed subcloud/boundary layer.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 08/21/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Aug 22 08:38:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 221255
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 221254

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0754 AM CDT Thu Aug 22 2024

    Valid 221300Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The greatest threat for severe gusts and hail appears to be over
    parts of the central High Plains this afternoon and evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    A highly amplified pattern in mid/upper levels will persist through
    the period, but with some weakening noted for both mean troughing
    near the East Coast, and a central CONUS ridge extending northward
    from a high over west TX. Southwest flow over the Intermountain
    West will strengthen and back somewhat in response to slow
    southeastward movement of an intense cyclone -- now centered west of
    the northern OR Coast --- while a strong shortwave trough pivots
    through its southern semicircle and onshore the northern CA coast by
    the end of the period.

    Farther east, on the periphery of that southwest flow, a shortwave
    trough (with some incorporation of a Sonoran MCV from 24 hours
    earlier) was apparent in moisture-channel imagery over northern AZ
    and southern UT. This perturbation should eject northeastward over
    western CO by 00Z, then into the central Plains overnight, perhaps
    with some further convective-vorticity reinforcement then. To the
    north, closely spaced shortwave troughs now over south-central SK
    and parts of ND/southeastern SK should pivot eastward across the
    rest of ND, northern MN and southern/central MB through the period.

    At the surface, a quasistationary frontal zone from northern FL
    across the northern Gulf Coast, east/north TX and the TX Panhandle
    should remain near that position through the period, with the
    richest low-level moisture remaining to its south. However, gradual
    moisture return of more incompletely modified (yet still
    convectively sufficient) character is apparent up the High Plains
    from the Panhandles across western NE to the central Dakotas. This
    is east of a lee trough over eastern parts of WY/CO, and a weak cold
    front analyzed from north-central ND to western SD. The latter
    front should proceed eastward across the Dakotas and into
    northwestern MN through this evening.

    ...Central High Plains...
    Highly variable thunderstorm coverage is expected over this region,
    with the greatest density in the 15%/"slight" area, where upscale
    evolution of increasingly outflow-driven thunderstorm clusters
    should support severe-gust potential this afternoon into evening.
    The primary foci for formation of eventually severe activity should
    be the northern Raton Mesa region, Front Range/Sangre de Cristo,
    and/or Palmer Divide, with some contribution from the lee trough as
    well.

    Though far south and east of the stronger flow aloft, sufficient
    veering of wind with height is expected to result in effective-shear
    magnitude in the 30-40-kt range, indicating potential for some
    organized convection. The boundary layer will remain well-heated/
    mixed and deep, with very steep lapse rates, even as moisture/
    buoyancy increase eastward. With surface dewpoints in the mid 50s
    to mid 60s F, peak/preconvective MLCAPE should reach 1500-2000 J/kg
    (locally higher) in a corridor near and just east of the longitude
    of the CO/KS line. This will foster pulses of strong to isolated
    severe gusts in initially discrete to semi-discrete activity atop a
    drier boundary layer, becoming better-organized with potential
    cold-pool aggregation eastward toward east-central/northeastern CO
    and adjoining portions of KS/NE into the higher CAPE. While
    specific shape, size, and track(s) of this clustering still depend
    on mesoscale details, enough consensus/confidence is now apparent in
    the general area of greatest severe-wind potential to ratchet up
    unconditional probabilities a level. With MLCINH increasing
    eastward from about the KS/CO border longitude and nocturnal
    near-surface cooling, the severe threat should weaken eastward from northwestern KS and southwestern NE tonight.

    ...Eastern Great Basin and vicinity...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are possible this
    afternoon into early evening, offering strong to isolated severe
    gusts and marginally severe hail. After the shortwave trough and
    related precip now over parts of this region shifts northeastward,
    most of the day should remain for diabatic heating/destabilization
    of the higher terrain across the region, with airmass recovery
    furthered by warm/theta-e advection from the south. In concert with
    available monsoonal moisture, a roughly meridional plume of
    essentially uninhibited MLCAPE in the 500-1500 J/kg range should
    develop. This will be superimposed under the southeastern rim of
    stronger upper flow related to the West Coast troughing/cyclone.
    The result should be strengthening cloud-layer shear and some
    potential for storm organization, as activity moves generally
    northeastward over well-mixed boundary layers.

    ...Upper Midwest...
    A large area of clouds and precip -- with widely scattered embedded thunderstorms -- should proceed eastward today across the remainder
    of eastern ND and parts of northern MN near the international
    border. Though the associated lead perturbation now over ND should
    be past the area before this afternoon, cyclonic flow aloft should
    continue in response to the stronger perturbation farther north,
    moving into MB. As such, little if any hindrance to convective
    potential is expected from large-scale subsidence, while the
    low-level airmass destabilizes diabatically from surface heating
    behind the morning activity. Isolated to widely scattered
    thunderstorms may develop along/ahead of the cold front, within a
    narrow plume of 1000-2000 J/kg MLCAPE supported by 60s F surface
    dewpoints. Modest low/middle-level flow is expected, through enough
    veering with height should develop to support effective-shear
    magnitudes locally near 35 kt. The strongest cells may produce
    marginally severe hail or gusts, before convection weakens this
    evening.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 08/22/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Aug 23 10:26:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 231254
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 231252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Fri Aug 23 2024

    Valid 231300Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    MONTANA...THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST AND CENTRAL ROCKIES...SOUTHEAST
    ARIZONA TO EXTREME SOUTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO...AND THE CENTRAL AND
    NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to severe storms with severe gusts and possibly some hail are
    possible across Montana, the Intermountain West and central Rockies,
    southeast Arizona to extreme southwestern New Mexico, and the
    central and northern High Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    A highly amplified but somewhat progressive mid/upper-level pattern
    is in place over the CONUS, led by a cyclone departing New England
    for the Canadian Maritimes. Weak mean troughing will persist in its
    wake over the Atlantic Coast States. A persistent anticyclone --
    initially centered over southwestern OK -- should expand somewhat
    across the southern/central Plains while its 500-mb high drifts
    northeastward over OK through the period.

    West Coast troughing is anchored by a strong cyclone -- initially
    centered just off the OR Coast. This feature should shift
    eastward/inland through tonight, while breaking up into a couple
    strong shortwave troughs as internal vorticity maxima pivot over the
    Northwest and northern CA. A broad fetch of downstream southwest
    flow will extend across the Great Basin, Intermountain West, and northern/central Rockies. Moisture-channel imagery indicates
    embedded shortwave troughs over southeastern ID -- forecast to move northeastward over the northern Rockies today -- and over the Four
    Corners region. The latter perturbation should cross much of
    western/northern CO and southern WY today, reaching to WY/NE border
    vicinity by 00Z, then northeastward to eastern SD by 12Z.

    11Z surface analysis showed a longstanding, quasistationary to warm
    frontal zone, from northern FL across the northeastern Gulf shelf
    waters to southern LA, north-central TX, southwestern OK, to a low
    over the northern TX Panhandle. This boundary still defines the
    northern rim of the richest Gulf moisture/theta-e, and should drift
    northward over the southern Plains through the period while moving
    little elsewhere. A low was drawn over eastern WA, with cold front
    across northeastern OR, central NV to south-central CA. This low
    should occlude and move northward into southern BC today, while the
    cold front moves slowly eastward across ID and northern NV, and
    loses definition farther south. A secondary low should form by 00Z
    over northwestern MT and move northeastward to the southern AB/SK
    border region by 12Z. Meanwhile, a lee trough will strengthen and
    extend from the secondary low southeastward over central/eastern MT,
    then over eastern arts of WY/CO. The trough should move
    northeastward over more of eastern MT, and into the western Dakotas,
    overnight.

    ...Intermountain West to northern Rockies...
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected in the field of southwesterly
    mid/upper flow, preceding the Pacific Coast trough, and mostly ahead
    of the surface cold front. Within that plume, isolated severe gusts
    and marginally severe hail will be possible.

    Severe potential may begin as early as midday to early afternoon --
    and continue through the afternoon -- across parts of the eastern
    Great Basin/western Colorado Plateau region. This will occur as
    clearing behind the shortwave trough permits sustained heating of
    higher terrain from the Wasatch Range southward and southeastward.
    Additional thunderstorms should form this afternoon from western WY
    and eastern ID across western MT, as eastern fringes of large-scale
    ascent preceding the Pacific Northwest trough and embedded
    shortwaves overlie destabilizing, elevated terrain.

    A monsoonal plume and associated parallel moisture-transport vectors
    will ensure sufficient boundary-layer moisture supply, even through
    the diurnal heating/mixing process, with somewhat less moisture and
    deeper inverted-v thermodynamic profiles northward. MLCAPE should
    range from around 1000-2000 J/kg in southern UT, in richest
    moisture, to around 200-800 J/kg over the northern Rockies, in
    stronger flow aloft. Throughout the corridor, sufficient deep shear
    (30-45 kt) should exist for organized multicells, small bowing/
    outflow-driven clusters, and perhaps a few supercells. Despite the
    weak moisture, enough is apparent to suggest isolated severe-gust
    potential into parts of eastern WA and northeastern OR, including
    areas of dry-thunder potential in the fire-weather outlook.

    ...Northern/central High Plains...
    Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over
    the central/northern Rockies, as well as near the lee trough over
    eastern MT this afternoon. Activity should move northeastward to
    eastward across the adjoining High Plains. Along the way, this
    convection will encounter a diurnally destabilizing, well-mixed
    boundary layer with steep low-level lapse rates, supporting isolated
    severe gusts. Isolated large hail also will be possible.

    Strongly difluent mid/upper-level flow will exist over most of this
    corridor, between the Northwest cyclone and the southern Plains
    anticyclone, with speeds generally increasing northwestward and
    low-level moisture greater southward down the central High Plains.
    Still, sufficient moisture should persist near the MT lee trough,
    along with enough veering with height over the entire area to yield
    enough deep shear (30+ kt effective-shear magnitudes) for organized
    convection. Interestingly, most progs show a relative minimum in
    convective coverage in the area of greatest midlevel DCVA/ascent
    head of the ejecting shortwave trough, compared to farther north and
    south. For now, a long 5%/Marginal outlook will be maintained, with
    the understanding that conditional/localized concentrations of
    severe-gust potential in particular may exist where upscale
    aggregation can occur. Potential for activity to persist later into
    the evening is most apparent over the southern part of the outlook
    area, which has been expanded somewhat eastward accordingly.

    ...Southeastern AZ, extreme southwestern NM...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop
    this afternoon in a plume of monsoonal moisture and favorable
    surface heating today from western Chihuahua across southeastern AZ
    and southwestern NM, north-northeastward over eastern AZ and western
    NM. Increasing midlevel southerlies around the western rim of the
    anticyclone should enable 20-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes, and
    enough northward storm motion to augment already strong downbursts
    from the most intense cells locally. Isolated, marginally severe
    hail also may occur in some cores. Forecast soundings reasonably
    suggest that lower-elevation dewpoints, remaining in the 50s to near
    60 F through most of the heating/mixing cycle, contribute to MLCAPE
    in the 1000-2000 J/kg range.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/23/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Aug 24 10:11:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 241251
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 241249

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0749 AM CDT Sat Aug 24 2024

    Valid 241300Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE FOUR
    CORNERS REGION NORTHEASTWARD INTO THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...OVER
    PARTS OF MISSOURI TO NORTHERN ARKANSAS...AND ALSO OVER AND NEAR
    WESTERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to locally severe storms are possible today from the Four
    Corners region northeastward into the central High Plains, over
    parts of Missouri to northern Arkansas, and also over and near
    western Oklahoma.

    ...Synopsis...
    Positively tilted mid/upper-level troughing should shift slowly
    eastward through the period, from the West Coast States to the
    northern Rockies, Great Basin and southern CA. Several shortwaves
    will pivot through the associated tightly cyclonic regime astride
    the trough, then eject into the downstream southwest flow.
    Additional perturbations will move northeastward in continuing
    southwest flow over the southern Rockies and central Plains, closer
    to a pronounced anticyclone whose 500-mb high should move slowly
    northeastward over OK. Ridging accompanying that high should build northeastward to southern Hudson Bay by the end of the period. A
    broad fetch of deep-layer moisture was apparent in moisture-channel
    imagery and surface analysis from northwestern MX across the Four
    Corners to the central Rockies and adjacent High Plains.

    Otherwise, the 11Z surface chart showed a long-lived,
    quasistationary frontal zone from Atlantic waters off the Carolinas, southwestward over northern FL, to coastal LA, then northwestward as
    a warm front across southern/western OK to a low near DDC. Rich
    moisture has spread through the front over central eastern OK and
    into southern/central KS, with upper 60s and greater surface
    dewpoints. The low is expected to move/redevelop into the
    north-central KS/south-central NE vicinity by 00Z, with warm
    frontogenesis to its east across the southern IA/northern NE area.
    A separate cold front -- analyzed from eastern MT southwestward over northwestern UT and southern NV -- should move slowly eastward
    through the period, reaching the western Dakotas, central WY and
    southwestern UT by 12Z tomorrow.

    ...Four Corners to Central High Plains...
    Again today, the persistent monsoonal moisture plume (somewhat eastward-displaced from previous days) should host widely scattered
    to scattered thunderstorms by mid/late afternoon. Activity should
    move northward to northeastward over this corridor, with isolated
    severe gusts being the main concern, and hail near severe limits
    possible over the High Plains portion of the outlook area.

    Diurnal heating of higher terrain from just south of I-40 across the
    Four Corners, San Juans, and assorted ranges from there to the
    Laramies and Front Range, should remove MLCINH quickly into early
    afternoon, fostering deep convective growth. Effective shear will
    be modest (generally 30 kt or less) due to a lack of both
    1. Stronger/backed near-surface flow and
    2. Greater CAPE density and buoyant depth (related to modest lapse
    rates aloft in the monsoonal plume).
    Still, the southeastern fringe of the mass response in upper levels
    to the Western CONUS troughing should yield enough cloud-layer shear
    for a few organized multicell storms, with translational vector
    augmentation of outflow winds possibly contributing to marginal
    severe potential. The main supporting factor for downdraft
    intensity will be a well-mixed subcloud layer beneath around 200-800
    J/kg ambient MLCAPE.

    ...MO/AR...
    An MCV was apparent in composited radar imagery over southeastern NE
    between LNK-FNB, and should pivot slowly southeastward through the
    day. Associated regionally enhanced low-level moist/warm advection,
    and isentropic lift to LFC, have been supporting swath of elevated
    convection now over portions of northwestern MO. Lightning coverage
    and cooling IR cloud tops have been noted the past hour in a roughly north/south-oriented band of embedded thunderstorms, though
    radar-reflectivity structures remain messy and disorganized.

    Further organization/intensification with a southward translational
    thrust is possible through the day, as a combination of surface
    heating and boundary-later warm/moist advection combine to
    destabilize the foregoing airmass. This will lead to at least
    isolated potential for damaging gusts and marginally severe hail.
    Guidance still varies considerably on the potential for this
    activity to merge upscale enough for a single, well-developed cold
    pool, which would create a greater conditional wind threat over
    parts of west-central/southwestern MO and perhaps into northern AR
    before encountering decreasing instability. Southern parts of the
    outlook area have been extended somewhat, and the area widened
    somewhat, to account for these mesobeta- to convective-scale
    uncertainties.

    ...Western OK and vicinity...
    Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible from mid-
    late afternoon, with a few perhaps straying into early evening,
    offering locally strong-severe microbursts.

    A surface moist/buoyancy axis will persist under and near the
    mid/upper high, across southern to northeastern OK and into eastern
    KS. West of the associated moisture plume, an effective dryline
    will set up by midafternoon from northwest TX to northwestern OK,
    representing a differential between more intense heating/mixing to
    the west and the more strongly capped, moist boundary-layer
    environment under and nearer the high aloft. That boundary also
    should conform closely to a wind-shift line and confluence/
    convergence axis, west of which winds at the surface will have a
    substantial westerly component. With further westward extent into
    the Panhandles, the boundary layer will be too dry to support
    substantial convection. Within the transition zone, represented by
    the outlook area, just enough moisture should be present to support
    a minimally capped, deep, hot, well-mixed boundary layer with around
    250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE and DCAPE values commonly 1000-2000 J/kg. the
    dryline should retreat northwestward through the area this evening,
    but under unfavorably strong (and intensifying) MLCINH, and without
    appreciable large-scale support, later development is not expected.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/24/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Aug 25 08:57:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 251257
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 251256

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0756 AM CDT Sun Aug 25 2024

    Valid 251300Z - 261200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE
    FOUR CORNERS TO SOUTHWESTERN WYOMING...AND OVER PORTIONS OF WESTERN
    MINNESOTA AND THE EASTERN DAKOTAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe gusts and hail are most probable today over parts of the Four
    Corners to southwestern Wyoming, and this evening over portions of
    western Minnesota and the eastern Dakotas.

    ...Synopsis...
    A seasonally well-amplified mid/upper-level pattern will persist
    over the CONUS, but with some important changes due to the
    progression of embedded synoptic- to subsynoptic-scale features. An intermittently closed cyclone now over north-central NV will eject
    slowly northeastward to southeastern ID through the period, while
    devolving to an open-wave trough. By 12Z tomorrow, the full trough
    should extend from the MT Rockies southward through the remnant
    low's vorticity max, then southwestward to southern NV.

    Meanwhile, a broad anticyclone -- initially centered over northern
    OK/southern KS -- will move northeastward, with the 500-mb high over
    central MO by 12Z, and ridging north-northeastward across Lake
    Superior. The northward component of this shift should occur partly
    in response to a well-defined low/trough in the subtropical
    easterlies, now evident over the north-central to southwestern Gulf.
    This feature should move ashore on the lower/middle TX Coast around
    the end of the period. Northeast of the high, a strong shortwave
    trough now over northwestern QC will dig south-southeastward through
    tonight, reaching the St. Lawrence Valley and approaching northern
    NY by 12Z.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a persistent, very slowly
    frontolytic, quasistationary boundary from just offshore of the
    Carolinas to the north-central Gulf Coast, becoming a diffuse warm
    front over astern parts of TX/OK. Rich low-level moisture has
    returned northward near this boundary in OK/AR and farther north
    across parts of the central/northern Plains. A low was drawn north
    of MIB, with cold front southwestward across the northwestern corner
    area of SD, into north-central WY. By 00Z, the front should reach
    from near the MN/ND/MB border confluence across the eastern Dakotas,
    parts of north-central/southwestern NE and near CYS. The front
    should proceed overnight to a 12Z position from northeastern MN to
    the FSD/SUX vicinity, central NE and eastern CO.

    ...Northern Plains/Upper Midwest...
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop along/ahead of the
    cold front -- predominantly after 00Z, though enough moistening/
    heating may occur for isolated late-afternoon development.
    Supercells and bowing lines/clusters will be possible, offering
    large hail and severe gusts.

    Activity should occur as the front encounters what is left of a
    diurnally well-heated and still-unstable boundary-layer airmass,
    with only minimal diabatic cooling, due to the presence of rich
    moisture near the surface, Surface dewpoints already are commonly
    in the 70s F in a swath of the warm sector with 11Z axis from
    north-central ND south-southeastward across eastern portions of
    SD/NE/KS and the Arklatex region. Forecast soundings indicate the
    moist layer should deepen through the day beneath strong capping,
    and steep midlevel lapse rates. With a deep troposphere still
    present over this area, atop the favorably unstable boundary layer,
    MLCAPE in the 3000-4000 J/kg range will be possible. This will be
    collocated with slowly strengthening flow aloft, such that 30-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes will be possible from late afternoon
    through the evening.

    ...Central/southern Rockies and vicinity, south-central Plains...
    Scattered showers and thunderstorms, with at least isolated
    strong-severe gust potential, should become common by this afternoon
    in a vast, roughly triangular area in and near the outlook, from
    western NM and eastern AZ to parts of southeastern MT and southern
    KS. Within that area, the greatest potential for severe should be
    on the western fringes, with supercells and bowing clusters possible
    in a corridor spanning portions of the Four Corners area to
    southwestern WY. In that region, the greatest diurnal
    destabilization will overlap the most favorable deep-layer lapse
    rates, and strengthening vertical shear ahead of the progressive
    western trough.

    Mid/upper-level moisture-channel imagery, available GPS PW data, and
    surface analysis show a persistent plume of deep-layer monsoonal
    moisture, maintaining some continuity from the ITCZ well south of
    mainland MX, across parts of west-central MX and Chihuahua, to NM,
    CO, WY and western NE. Enough low-level moisture (PW above 1 inch
    in some areas) to support organized convective potential extends
    farther westward over the Four Corners area, especially into
    northeastern AZ, eastern UT and western CO. Forecast soundings in
    that corridor show favorable deep shear for supercells, with
    effective-shear magnitudes in the 40-55-kt range, and elongated,
    rather straight low/middle-level hodographs favoring a large-hail
    threat, in addition to the broader severe-gust potential.

    Farther east, much of the higher terrain across the "marginal" area
    will reach convective temperature relatively early in the
    diurnal-heating cycle, with little CINH, resulting in abundant
    development, slowing the pace of additional destabilization. Still,
    isolated strong/briefly severe gusts may occur, especially where north-northeastward moving clusters of convection encounter pockets
    of well-mixed boundary layer suitable for intense downdrafts.
    Farther east onto the High Plains, more-favorable heating/mixing
    will occur, but with weak shear nearer to the mid/upper high.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/25/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Aug 27 09:03:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 271256
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 271254

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0754 AM CDT Tue Aug 27 2024

    Valid 271300Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE GREAT
    LAKES REGION AND PORTIONS OF THE MIDWEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Clusters of damaging thunderstorm winds and occasional large hail
    are possible across the Great Lakes region and portions of the
    Midwest.

    ...Synopsis...
    The mid/upper-level pattern temporarily will become less amplified
    over the CONUS, as an anticyclone now over the mid Mississippi
    Valley region weakens, and a nearly zonal northern stream takes
    shape across most of the northern tier of states. This will occur
    downstream from a strong synoptic-scale cyclone -- evident in
    moisture-channel imagery over southwestern/near-coastal BC. The
    500-mb low should move east-southeastward to the northern Rockies by
    12Z tomorrow, with trough and cyclonic flow southward to the
    northern Great Basin. Downstream, a strong shortwave trough was
    apparent over the western Dakotas to the NE Panhandle, with embedded circulation center near DIK. This perturbation is forecast to
    deamplify gradually, but still remain a well-defined shortwave
    trough, as it moves eastward to the Lake Superior/northern Lake
    Michigan region by the end of the period.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low near the end of the
    Keweenaw Peninsula in Upper MI, with cold front extending diffusely southwestward through post-outflow air across northern WI, southern
    MN, central NE, to parts of western KS and eastern CO. The Great
    Lakes low should migrate eastward along the front to ME by 12Z
    tomorrow. The front is expected to reach Lake Huron, central Lower
    MI, southeastern WI, northern MO, central KS, and southwestern CO by
    00Z, preceded by several outflow boundaries. By 12Z, the front
    should extend from the ME low across central/western NY, Lake
    Ontario, northern IN, and central MO, becoming quasistationary from
    there to central KS, and a warm front over eastern CO. The latter
    will occur in response to return flow setting up ahead of the
    Northwest cyclone aloft, with strengthening lee troughing between
    the front and a low over eastern MT. That low will be attached to
    another, stronger cold front emerging from the Rockies, and moving
    eastward over central/southwestern MT by 12Z.

    ...Great Lakes to central Plains...
    Widely scattered to locally numerous thunderstorms (in episodic
    clusters) are expected to cross the outlook area through the period,
    offering damaging to severe gusts, occasional large hail, and a
    marginal tornado threat. Within the broader 15%/"slight risk" area,
    one or more corridors of greater severe-wind threat may develop in
    concert with the best-organized portions of any cold-pool-driven, forward-propagational complex(es) that may develop. However,
    specific tracks of such axial maxima are still too uncertain at this
    time, due to dependence on iterative mesoscale factors.

    A residual arc of thunderstorms over Lake Huron and southeastern
    Lower MI has left an outflow boundary across southern Lower MI to
    south-central WI to near the southeast tip of MN, where it is being
    intercepted from the west by fresh outflow from another complex
    moving northeastward over western WI. The relatively stable airmass
    north of the first MCS' outflow boundary is shallow and subject to destabilization from both warm advection and (later this morning)
    diurnal heating, lending some potential for expansion or
    intensification of any part of the WI complex that still is present
    and extends into the increasingly favorable theta-e. Meanwhile, the
    outflow in/from the second ongoing complex may:
    1. Produce isolated severe gusts through the shallow stable outflow
    layer over WI in the near term,
    2. Modify favorably across parts of WI/IL/lower MI today (the
    latter assuming it reaches Lower MI to reinforce the first outflow
    pool) and
    3. Focus additional development an uncertain distance farther south
    -- possibly including upscale growth into more complex(es), today
    into this evening.

    Overall, the environment along and south of the outflow boundaries
    should be favorable thermodynamically, with strong diabatic heating
    and rich moisture (70s F surface dewpoints being common). In
    satellite imagery, a plume of moisture with origins in the Southwest
    monsoon -- and still connected to MCS activity in western MX --
    extends near an ELP-CAO-GLD-FSD axis. A residual EML to the east of
    this, and around the northwestern quadrant of the anticyclone,
    results in a plume of warmer 700-mb temperatures (per last night's
    00Z charts and available soundings so far this morning), as well as
    somewhat steeper midlevel lapse rates and slightly stronger capping
    atop the moist boundary layer. This contributes to the potential
    for areas of 3000-4500 J/kg MLCAPE along and south of the
    boundary(s) from parts of WI and Lower MI southwestward into
    northern MO. While such strong buoyancy will support upscale
    growth, longevity of clusters also is uncertain due to lack of a
    supportive LLJ.

    This far southeast of the main mid/upper-level shortwave trough,
    flow aloft and deep shear will be rather weak, so steering flow will
    be less of an influence on convective motion than internal cold
    pools and foregoing mesoscale boundary alignment. Farther
    southwest, nearer to the cold front over the lower Missouri Valley
    into KS, shear and CAPE both will be weaker, but still with enough
    instability to support isolated to scattered afternoon development.
    A few organized multicells are possible atop a strongly heated
    boundary layer, with pulse gusts and hail near severe limits
    possible.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/27/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Aug 28 09:26:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 281253
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 281252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0752 AM CDT Wed Aug 28 2024

    Valid 281300Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE OHIO
    VALLEY TO THE NORTHERN MID-ATLANTIC COAST...AND ACROSS PARTS OF
    NORTH AND SOUTH DAKOTA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected from the Ohio Valley to the
    northern Mid-Atlantic Coast, and across parts of North and South
    Dakota.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a progressive northern-stream pattern will
    prevail through the period, with the main feature being a cyclone
    now apparent in moisture-channel imagery near the southeastern
    corner of BC. The associated 500-mb low should move eastward
    roughly along, or just north of, the international border through
    the period, with the accompanying trough extending south-
    southwestward. By 00Z, the low should be near the southwestern
    corner of SK, with trough to northern UT. By 12Z, the low should
    reach extreme south-central SK, with trough across central MT to
    southwestern WY.

    Downstream, a complex but much lower-amplitude shortwave trough was
    evident over Lake Superior and adjoining portions of ON and western
    U.P. of MI. One part of this perturbation should break eastward to
    the St. Lawrence Valley by the end of the period, while the trailing
    part drifts eastward over Lake Superior and the U.P. Of perhaps
    greater direct influence on convective potential, an MCV was
    apparent in composited radar imagery over southeastern IA. The
    associated perturbation should move across much of central IL today,
    reaching western OH by 12Z tomorrow.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a cold front from northern ME west- southwestward across Lake Ontario and southern Lower MI, becoming quasistationary for the time being across southern parts of Lake
    Michigan and WI, to northeastern NE, then a warm front over
    southwestern SD, to a low over southeastern MT. This front is
    expected to move southeastward by 00Z to coastal NS, Cape Cod, Long
    Island, northern parts of MD/WV, and southern parts of OH/IN/IL,
    becoming a diffuse warm front northwestward over central IA,
    southwestern MN and central ND. There it will be overtaken by
    another cold front -- initially analyzed through the low over
    eastern MT and across northwestern WY. By 00Z, this second,
    stronger cold front should extend from central ND across central/
    southwestern SD to east-central WY. By 12Z, the western cold front
    should extend from a low over southeastern ND or northeastern SD
    across south-central SD, western NE and northeastern CO.

    ...Ohio Valley to Mid-Atlantic...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected along and
    south of the front today from IN to the Mid-Atlantic Coast, and
    perhaps the southern New England Coast/Long Island vicinity.
    Damaging gusts and isolated large hail will be possible.

    Coverage of convection is uncertain, but relative concentrations may
    develop downshear from what is now disorganized/nonsevere convection
    over OH (in the same UVV field), and ahead of the MCV over parts of
    IL/IN, becoming organized across parts of IN/OH. Diurnal heating of
    a favorably moist airmass is expected to weaken already modest
    ambient MLCINH along the outlook corridor by late morning. With
    lift along the front and prefrontal outflow/differential-heating
    boundaries, growth of morning to early afternoon development into
    one or more complexes appears to be a plausible scenario, rendering
    a greater wind than hail threat. Surface dewpoints commonly in the
    mid 60s to low 70s F will offset modest mid/upper-level lapse rates
    enough to contribute to peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 800-1500
    J/kg range from OH eastward, and 1000-2000 J/kg back into portions
    of IN. Weak, generally veered low/middle-level flow will limit
    vertical shear. Still, nearly unidirectional westerly flow through
    a deep layer will foster movement of convection parallel to the
    low-level moisture-instability axis.

    ...Dakotas...
    A line or arc of scattered thunderstorms should develop along/near
    the cold front during late afternoon into evening, perhaps initially
    over ND where deep-layer forcing will be stronger, then southward
    into greater capping in SD, as the front impinges on greater
    moisture and lingering boundary-layer instability.

    Ahead of the cold front, enough easterly component to near-surface
    flow will develop to support moist advection into the convective
    genesis zone, with surface dewpoints into the 60s F becoming common.
    Capping at the base of a modest EML will suppress development for
    much of the afternoon, especially over SD, but once frontal lift
    overcomes it, a corridor of 2000-3000 J/kg MLCAPE should be
    available southwest of (and parallel to) the warm front. Though the
    strongest flow aloft and large-scale ascent will remain behind the
    cold front, the eastern rim of stronger height falls will spread
    over the frontal zone, with enough mass response to both foster
    favorable vertical shear for supercells and enhanced storm-relative
    flow in low levels. Effective-shear magnitudes of 30-40 kt (locally
    higher) and broad low-level hodographs along and south of the warm
    front should foster supercell development, until mergers and upscale
    growth occur. Large to very large hail and severe gusts will be the
    main concerns, though a tornado is possible. However, relatively
    weak midlevel flow may encourage a transition to messier, quasi-
    linear mode with embedded LEWP/bow formations for a few hours.
    Activity should weaken overnight as it moves into stabilizing
    boundary-layer air, though a 45-55-kt LLJ may encourage persistence
    of a cluster or two tonight into the eastern Dakotas.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/28/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Aug 29 10:00:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 291251
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 291249

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0749 AM CDT Thu Aug 29 2024

    Valid 291300Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY REGION...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are most probable this afternoon and evening
    over portions of the upper Mississippi Valley region, with a threat
    for tornadoes, damaging to severe gusts, and sporadic large hail.

    ...Synopsis...
    The mid/upper-level pattern will be characterized by a progressive
    belt of westerlies across the northern tier of states, and messy
    area of ridging across the south-central/southeastern CONUS,
    suffused with numerous small vorticity maxima and a few slow-moving
    MCVs. In that northern stream, a strong shortwave trough -- with
    embedded closed cyclone now located over extreme southern SK -- will
    move eastward to southern MB and the Dakotas by 00Z. The trough
    should deamplify overnight and eject northeastward to
    northwesternmost ON by 12Z, while a positively tilted trailing
    portion of the trough lingers across parts of WI/IA/NE/KS. Farther
    east, a weak perturbation -- evident in moisture-channel imagery
    from just north of Lake Huron in ON to astern Lake Superior -- will
    weaken gradually and move southeastward across the remainder of ON
    to NY and New England by the end of the period. An even weaker
    shortwave trough -- initially extending from central OH across
    southern IN -- should move slowly southeastward into the central
    Appalachians.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a triple-point low over
    northeastern SD, with a warm front southeastward over southwestern
    MN and northern IA, becoming quasistationary to a weak cold front
    over central IL, southern IN, central OH, central PA , and NJ. The
    eastern part of the front should drift southward over the Mid-
    Atlantic through the period, while the western part proceeds
    northeastward across MN/WI as a warm front. A cold front was drawn
    from the low southwestward over west-central NE and east-central CO.
    By 00Z, the cold front should reach northern/central MN,
    northwestern IA, eastern NE, north-central/southwestern KS, and
    parts of southeastern CO/northeastern NM. By 12Z, the front should
    extend across parts of Lake Superior, WI, northern/western MO,
    southeastern KS, northern/western OK, northwest TX, and southeastern
    NM.

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley to central Plains...
    Scattered thunderstorms should develop along/ahead of the surface
    cold front -- earliest (around midday) where deep-layer lift is
    strongest over northern/central MN, then later where stronger
    capping, weaker upper support, but stronger heating will be present
    from around the Missouri Valley southwestward. All severe hazards
    will be possible with greatest vertical shear supporting a threat of
    supercells in MN and perhaps northern IA for the first few hours of
    the convective cycle. If supercells can remain discrete/mature long
    enough before the quasi-linear evolution occurs, tornado potential
    could be relatively maximized over central MN where the overlap of
    large buoyancy, low LCL and greatest SRH is forecast. Activity
    overall should evolve into a line of numerous thunderstorms by late
    afternoon and evening, with severe gusts and marginal hail becoming
    the dominant concerns. Convection should weaken over eastern and
    southern parts of the "marginal area tonight, while moving into a less-unstable, larger-CINH airmass from WI to southern KS.

    Although the main mid/upper cyclone/trough will be pivoting
    northeastward over Canada, the southeastern rim of associated height
    falls and mass response will pass across the "slight risk" outlook
    area. This should back the near-surface flow ahead of the front
    enough to enlarge low-level hodographs and shear vectors, and to
    strengthen effective-shear magnitudes into the 30-40-kt range
    (decreasing southward over IA). A deep troposphere, rich boundary-
    layer moisture with dewpoints commonly in the upper 60s to low 70s
    F, and steep low-level lapse rates, should support MLCAPE commonly
    in the 2500-3500 J/kg range, and locally nearing 5000 J/kg, within
    the northward-narrowing warm sector, over IA/MN part of the outlook.
    Farther southwest, buoyancy will weaken due to somewhat less
    moisture content and greater boundary-layer mixing.

    ...VA/NC to southern PA...
    Scattered multicell thunderstorms are expected to form this
    afternoon along and south of the front over the outlook area,
    offering isolated gusts near severe limits and marginally severe
    hail. This activity will develop in a plume of rich low-level
    moisture, with lower-elevation surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to
    low 70s F. That, along with diurnal heating offsetting modest
    midlevel lapse rates, should support MLCAPE in the 2000-3000 J/kg
    range. Weak deep-layer flow/shear should keep activity relatively disorganized, with pulse severe possible.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 08/29/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Aug 30 10:06:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 301234
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 301232

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0732 AM CDT Fri Aug 30 2024

    Valid 301300Z - 311200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    EASTERN LOWER MICHIGAN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are possible across eastern
    Lower Michigan this afternoon, with damaging winds the main threat.
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms may occur into parts of the
    Midwest, and also across portions of the Carolinas and Virginia into
    northeast Georgia.

    ...Great Lakes to the Mid Mississippi Valley...
    Weak/elevated thunderstorms ongoing this morning from parts of
    northern IL into Lower MI should continue to gradually weaken. In
    their wake, moderate instability should develop along and ahead of a
    cold front that will extend from the Upper Great Lakes region
    southwestward to the southern Plains by this afternoon. This front
    should make continued slow east-southeastward progress across these
    regions through the period as an upper trough moves eastward over
    Ontario, the Great Lakes, and Midwest. Stronger mid-level winds
    associated with this feature will generally remain confined to
    Canada. But, modest enhancement to the west-southwesterly
    low/mid-level flow should be present over parts of Lower MI this
    afternoon.

    Even though low-level convergence along the front should remain
    fairly weak, expectations are for at least scattered thunderstorms
    to develop along much of its length from eastern Lower MI to the mid
    MS Valley and southern Plains. The combination of moderate
    instability with modest deep-layer shear should promote some
    convective organization, with loosely organized multicells/clusters
    likely becoming the dominant thunderstorm mode. Steepened low-level
    lapse rates with daytime hearing should encourage occasional strong
    to damaging winds, with slightly stronger low/mid-level flow perhaps
    supporting a relatively greater threat ahead of the front in eastern
    Lower MI. Isolated hail may also occur with the strongest cores.
    Convection should weaken with time this evening with the loss of
    daytime heating.

    ...Southern Appalachians to the Southern Mid-Atlantic...
    Upper ridging will persist over the Southeast today. Very weak
    low/mid-level flow is expected to limit overall thunderstorm
    organization. Still, moderate instability should be present this
    afternoon as daytime heating occurs along and south of a stalled
    front over southern VA and northern NC. Even though deep-layer shear
    will remain negligible, pulse-type thunderstorms that develop in
    this moderately unstable and high precipitable water environment
    could produce isolated strong to damaging downburst winds this
    afternoon.

    ..Gleason/Leitman.. 08/30/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Aug 31 09:45:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 311241
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 311240

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0740 AM CDT Sat Aug 31 2024

    Valid 311300Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND UPPER OHIO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms capable of producing mainly damaging winds will
    be possible today from parts of the central Appalachians into the
    Ohio and Tennessee Valleys. Isolated severe wind gusts may also
    occur across parts of the northern Great Lakes.

    ...Mid-Atlantic into the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys...
    A mid/upper-level trough will make slow eastward progress today
    across Ontario/Quebec and the Great Lakes while amplifying further.
    Ahead of this feature, a surface front should continue to lose
    definition and weaken through the day as it moves eastward over
    parts of the Northeast/Mid-Atlantic, and southeastward over the OH
    Valley before eventually stalling. Recent visible satellite imagery
    shows cloud cover remains prevalent over much of the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. This will hinder daytime heating and delay
    destabilization, especially east of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Still,
    area 12Z soundings and recent surface observations indicate a moist
    low-level airmass remains in place ahead of the weak cold front.
    Generally less cloud cover with westward and southward extent into
    the upper OH Valley and TN Valley should allow for greater
    instability to develop this afternoon across these regions.

    The stronger mid-level flow associated the upper trough is expected
    to remain generally displaced to the north/west of the surface warm
    sector. Even so, modestly increasing west-southwesterly winds with
    height through mid levels should support around 20-30 kt of
    deep-layer shear across parts of the central Appalachians and upper
    OH Valley vicinity. This shear will be sufficient for loosely
    organized multicell clusters to develop and subsequently spread east-southeastward through this afternoon. Isolated to scattered
    damaging winds should be the main threat with this convection,
    although some hail may also occur with the strongest cores. Activity
    should weaken with eastward extent late this afternoon and evening
    across the Mid-Atlantic as it encounters a less unstable airmass.
    Weaker deep-layer shear with southward extent into the lower OH
    Valley and TN Valley will likely limit overall thunderstorm
    organization. But, occasional damaging winds may still occur with
    thunderstorms along/south of the front as low-level lapse rates
    steepen with diurnal heating.

    ...Northern Great Lakes...
    Strong west-northwesterly mid-level flow will be present today over
    the Upper Midwest and northern Great Lakes, in association with a
    shortwave trough embedded within a larger upper trough moving east-southeastward across these regions. While low-level moisture
    and related instability are both expected to remain limited,
    large-scale ascent and strong deep-layer shear may support the
    development low-topped convection this afternoon. If these
    thunderstorms can form and be sustained, then isolated strong to
    severe winds may occur given the forecast strength of the low to
    mid-level flow amid steepened low-level lapse rates.

    ..Gleason/Leitman.. 08/31/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Sep 1 09:55:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 011250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 011248

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0748 AM CDT Sun Sep 01 2024

    Valid 011300Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC AND SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong thunderstorms capable of producing isolated damaging winds
    may occur this afternoon across parts of the southern Appalachians
    into the Mid-Atlantic and southern New England.

    ...Southern Appalachians into the Mid-Atlantic and Southern New
    England...
    Thunderstorms should gradually increase in coverage this afternoon
    along/south of a weak front that extends from the Mid-South/lower OH
    Valley into the Mid-Atlantic. Morning visible satellite imagery
    shows plentiful cloud cover near this boundary, and downstream
    across parts of NC and the Mid-Atlantic into southern New England.
    Still, filtered daytime heating of a moist low-level airmass should
    allow at least weak instability to develop by early to mid afternoon
    along and south/east of the front, even though mid-level lapse rates
    will remain poor.

    The glancing influence/ascent of an upper trough over eastern
    Canada, along with weak orographic lift, will likely encourage
    convection development through the afternoon and early evening.
    Mid-level flow and related deep-layer shear are forecast to remain
    fairly modest, especially with southward extent across the
    Mid-Atlantic into the Carolinas and southern Appalachians. Still,
    enough flow and related shear may be present to support modest
    thunderstorm organization. Multiple loosely organized multicell
    clusters may eventually develop and consolidate by late afternoon
    and early evening, while posing some threat for isolated strong to
    damaging winds as they move generally eastward. The greatest
    concentration of thunderstorms should exist across parts of southern
    VA into NC and upstate SC where greater instability is forecast this
    afternoon. But, confidence in a more organized wind threat remains
    too low to include greater severe wind probabilities.

    ...Western/Northern New York into Northern New England...
    As the primary upper trough and related surface cold front continue
    eastward across Ontario/Quebec today, daytime heating of a modestly
    moist low-level airmass will occur over parts of western/northern
    NY. Although poor mid-level lapse rates will likely hinder the
    development of any more than weak instability across this area
    (MLCAPE generally 500 J/kg of less), low/mid-level winds and related
    shear in the cloud-bearing layer is expected to strengthen through
    this afternoon with the approach of the upper trough. Some high-resolution/convection-allowing model guidance shows a
    low-topped line of thunderstorms developing this afternoon along or
    just ahead of the cold front. As low-level lapse rates steepen with
    daytime heating, some of this convection could produce isolated
    strong to severe wind gusts given the strengthening low/mid-level
    flow expected. The area impacted should remain fairly small across western/northern NY (generally downstream of Lake Ontario) due to
    more even more limited instability farther east across central NY
    into northern New England.

    ..Gleason/Leitman.. 09/01/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Sep 2 08:54:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 021240
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 021238

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0738 AM CDT Mon Sep 02 2024

    Valid 021300Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE INTERIOR PACIFIC NORTHWEST INTO THE NORTHERN GREAT BASIN/ROCKIES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms across the northern Great Basin
    and parts of the interior Pacific Northwest may be capable of
    occasional strong to severe wind gusts this afternoon and evening.

    ...Interior Pacific Northwest into the Northern Great
    Basin/Rockies...
    A closed upper low approaching the northern CA and OR Coast will
    continue eastward today across the Pacific Northwest and northern
    Great Basin. Associated 35-50 kt mid-level south-southwesterlies
    will overspread these regions through the afternoon and evening.
    Large-scale ascent attendant to the upper low has already encouraged
    weak, elevated convection this morning across pats of eastern OR and
    vicinity. Current expectations are for additional showers and
    thunderstorms to develop later this afternoon as daytime heating
    occurs, mainly across parts of central/eastern OR into ID and
    northern NV/northwest UT. This convection will likely be rather
    high-based (LCLs around 3-4 km AGL), as latest surface observations
    and area 12Z soundings show very limited low-level moisture, and
    total PWAT values generally 0.5-0.7 inches. Even with rather weak
    buoyancy forecast across much of this area, a deeply mixed boundary
    layer should encourage efficient evaporative cooling of convective
    downdrafts. An isolated risk for strong/gusty winds approaching and occasionally exceeding severe levels remains apparent with this
    high-based convection as it spreads generally north-northeastward
    through the afternoon/evening before eventually weakening.

    ..Gleason/Leitman.. 09/02/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Sep 3 08:37:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 031235
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 031234

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0734 AM CDT Tue Sep 03 2024

    Valid 031300Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE NORTHERN ROCKIES/GREAT BASIN AND ADJACENT HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms developing across the northern Rockies and adjacent
    portions of the Great Basin this afternoon may produce occasional
    strong to severe wind gusts, before spreading eastward toward the
    northern High Plains this evening.

    ...Northern Great Basin/Rockies into the Adjacent High Plains...
    An upper trough/low over the Pacific Northwest this morning will
    continue moving eastward today across the northern Rockies. This
    feature is forecast to gradually weaken through the period, but
    enhanced mid-level west-southwesterly flow will persist across parts
    of the northern Great Basin into the northern Rockies and adjacent
    High Plains. As large-scale ascent associated with the upper trough
    overspreads the northern Rockies, thunderstorms should develop over
    the higher terrain through early afternoon in tandem with daytime
    heating.

    Latest surface observations show somewhat greater low-level moisture
    across this region, with surface dewpoints generally in the mid 40s
    to low 50s across central ID into southwest MT. Although instability
    is forecast to remain fairly modest this afternoon, deep-layer shear
    around 25-35 kt should be sufficient to support organized
    convection, including the potential for a couple of marginal
    supercells initially with associated hail/wind threat. With
    steepened low/mid-level lapse rates present, this activity should
    continue to pose some threat for isolated strong to severe wind
    gusts as it congeals and spreads east-northeastward across parts of
    the northern High Plains through this evening.

    Somewhat more limited low-level moisture should be present this
    afternoon farther south into WY and northern UT. Even so, diurnal
    heating will aid in a deeply mixed boundary layer by this afternoon,
    and steep mid-level lapse rates are also expected to remain over
    this region. The net result will be high-based thunderstorms capable
    of producing isolated strong to severe winds initially developing
    across northern UT into far eastern ID, and subsequently moving east-northeastward over WY through the evening. Confidence in a more concentrated corridor of severe winds remains generally low at this
    time given the weak instability and modest deep-layer shear
    forecast, especially with southward extent into the northern Great
    Basin and WY.

    ..Gleason/Leitman.. 09/03/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Sep 4 09:47:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 041218
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 041216

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0716 AM CDT Wed Sep 04 2024

    Valid 041300Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL ROCKIES INTO THE NORTHERN/CENTRAL PLAINS AND UPPER
    MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms capable of gusty winds and
    hail may occur this afternoon and evening across parts of the
    central Rockies into the northern/central Plains and upper
    Mississippi Valley.

    ...Central Rockies into the Northern/Central Plains and Upper
    Mississippi Valley...
    A weak shortwave trough over the northern Rockies and adjacent Great
    Basin this morning will become absorbed later today into an
    amplifying upper trough over the Canadian Prairie provinces and
    northern Plains. At the surface, a cold front related to the upper
    trough will continue southward over the northern Plains, and
    southeastward across the Upper MS Valley through the period. Modest
    low-level moisture is forecast to be in place ahead of this boundary
    across the northern Plains and upper MS Valley, with more limited
    moisture expected farther west across the central Rockies and
    adjacent High Plains. Relatively cool mid-level temperatures
    associated with the weak shortwave trough and the presence of steep
    mid-level lapse rates should aid in the development of weak
    instability across parts of WY, northern CO, and vicinity this
    afternoon. Sufficient deep-layer shear (generally 25-35 kt) should
    support some updraft organization with convection that initially
    forms over the higher terrain before subsequently spreading
    eastward. Isolated instances of marginally severe hail and
    strong/gusty winds may occur with the more cellular development.
    But, some increase in strong to severe wind potential may be
    realized as thunderstorms move into an area of steeper low-level
    lapse rates across the central High Plains by late this afternoon
    and early evening, especially if any small clusters can form.

    The severe potential along much of the length of the front in the
    northern Plains and upper MS Valley appears rather conditional.
    While large-scale ascent associated with the approaching upper
    trough should gradually overspread the warm sector by late
    afternoon/early evening, most guidance continues to suggest that a
    cap and substantial MLCIN will hinder robust convection from
    developing through much of the day. Even so, sufficient instability
    and shear should be in place along/ahead of the front to support an
    isolated hail/wind threat if thunderstorms can form and be sustained
    through the evening and early overnight period. The post-frontal
    regime across much of MT into ND and western SD appears unlikely to
    support severe convection. Accordingly, the Marginal Risk has been
    trimmed southward to account for recent guidance and observational
    trends.

    ..Gleason/Leitman.. 09/04/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Sep 5 08:45:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 051243
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 051242

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0742 AM CDT Thu Sep 05 2024

    Valid 051300Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    FAR SOUTH-CENTRAL COLORADO INTO NORTHERN/CENTRAL NEW MEXICO...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms capable of producing isolated severe wind gusts and
    hail will be possible today across parts of far south-central
    Colorado into northern/central New Mexico.

    ...Central/Southern Rockies into the Southern High Plains...
    On the southwest fringe of large-scale upper troughing over Canada
    and the northern Plains/Upper Midwest, a mid-level shortwave trough
    over the central Rockies this morning will move generally southward
    across NM and vicinity through the day. Even though low-level
    moisture remains fairly modest across the southern Rockies and
    adjacent High Plains along/near of a cold front, cool mid-level
    temperatures and somewhat steepened lapse rates aloft will likely
    contribute to the development of around 500-750 J/kg of MLCAPE by
    early afternoon as daytime heating occurs. Initial development of
    robust convection by around 18-19Z will likely be tied to the higher
    terrain as weak large-scale ascent associated with the shortwave
    trough overspreads the south-central Rockies in a low-level
    post-frontal regime. This activity should then spread generally south-southeastward across parts of northern/central NM through the
    late afternoon and into the evening. While low-level easterly flow
    ahead of the front is forecast to remain weak, veering winds with
    height through mid/upper levels should still support around 25-35 kt
    of effective bulk shear and some updraft organization. The strongest
    cores that can develop may be capable of producing severe hail.
    Otherwise, the threat for isolated strong to severe wind gusts
    should spread southward in tandem with any small clusters that can
    form.

    ...Great Lakes/Midwest to the Central Plains...
    Generally elevated convection is ongoing this morning across parts
    of the Upper Midwest along and near a surface cold front, and ahead
    of a large-scale upper trough moving generally southeastward.
    Instability across this region is expected to remain weak (MUCAPE
    500 J/kg or less), which should tend to limit the overall severe
    threat. Still, some of the stronger cores could produce small hail
    or gusty winds in the short term. Other thunderstorms may eventually
    develop this afternoon along/near the front across parts of the
    Midwest and/or central Plains. Regardless, the overall severe threat
    across these regions currently appears too limited to introduce low
    severe probabilities.

    ..Gleason/Leitman.. 09/05/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Sep 6 08:10:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 061247
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 061246

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0746 AM CDT Fri Sep 06 2024

    Valid 061300Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MUCH OF
    OHIO TO THE OHIO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to locally severe storms are possible this afternoon from
    Lake Erie across much of Ohio to the Ohio Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    A highly amplified mid/upper-level pattern will persist across the
    CONUS, but with some weakening of the western mean ridge and
    intensification of troughing over the Great Lakes/Ohio Valley
    regions. The latter will occur in relation to a synoptic-scale
    trough with several accompanying vorticity maxima and broad cyclonic
    flow -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery over much of northern
    ON and the Lake Superior vicinity. Phasing of accompanying
    shortwaves/ vorticity lobes will contribute to both amplification
    and wavelength shortening through the period. A closed 500-mb low
    should develop around 00Z near the eastern end of Upper MI, with
    trough near an MKG-ORD-MVN line. By 12Z, a fully developed cyclone
    should cover much of ON from the southern end of James Bay to Lake
    Erie, with 500-mb trough extending southwestward near a CVG-BNA
    line. Associated cyclonic flow at that time will cover most of the
    CONUS over and east of the mid/upper Mississippi Valley.

    At the surface, a cold front related to the ON trough was drawn at
    11Z near a DTW-FDY-IND-ICT line. This front should proceed eastward/southeastward across the Ohio Valley, Lower Great Lakes and
    into the central/northern Appalachians through the period, ahead of
    the mid/upper trough. By 00Z, the front should extend from Lake
    Ontario across western parts of NY/PA to southeastern OH, northern
    middle to western TN, and AR, becoming diffuse amidst northeast flow
    on both sides over OK. Northeasterlies over the southern Plains
    south of the cold front will be largely in isallobaric response to a
    deepening surface frontal-wave low over the northwestern Gulf,
    initially drawn about 100 nm south of GLS, and forecast to drift
    erratically eastward through tonight. Strong/organized convection
    related to the Gulf cyclone is expected to remain over water through
    the period.

    ...OH, Ohio Valley...
    Damaging to isolated, marginally severe gusts, as well as marginal
    hail, will be possible with thunderstorms moving eastward across the
    outlook area today.

    A broken line of convection -- including widely scattered non-severe thunderstorms -- is apparent this morning from northwestern OH to
    western MO approximately along the low-level cold front. This
    activity, or succeeding/newer development after a short time gap
    later this morning -- should become better organized between Lake
    Erie and the Ohio Valley around midday as the foregoing boundary
    layer (and prospective inflow) destabilizes. This will occur in
    response to a combination of warm advection and diurnal heating/
    mixing, whose mixing-related moisture-reduction effects will be
    counterbalanced to some extent by moist advection. Activity should
    move into a narrow corridor of 50s to mid 60s F surface dewpoints,
    combining with diurnal heating to support patchy, highly variable
    MLCAPE in the 500-1500 J/kg range.

    Substantial westerly component to prefrontal near-surface flow will
    limit both convergence and vertical shear, though weak MLCINH will
    permit frontal development/maintenance of thunderstorms, regardless.
    Around 30-35 kt effective-shear magnitudes will support mainly
    multicells, though some intermittent/transient supercell character
    will be possible for longer-lived, discrete cells. Activity should
    weaken this evening as it moves eastward out of the most favorable
    moisture, and into a nocturnally cooling/stabilizing boundary layer.

    ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/06/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Sep 8 08:13:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 081225
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 081224

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0724 AM CDT Sun Sep 08 2024

    Valid 081300Z - 091200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Though a few strong thunderstorm gusts may be noted in the interior
    Northwest and central High Plains, severe potential appears too low
    and disorganized for an outlook area.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    In mid/upper levels, the large-scale pattern will deamplify somewhat
    over the CONUS this period, but maintain a mean trough in the Great
    Lakes and eastern CONUS, and mean ridging over the Intermountain
    West and Southwestern deserts. A shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over the interior of OR/WA into far
    northern CA -- is forecast to continue weakening as it moves
    northeastward, crossing the northern Rockies between 06-12Z. Still,
    associated cooling aloft and midlevel moisture, over pockets of
    marginally favorable low-level moisture and diurnal surface heating,
    will contribute to general thunderstorm potential in parts of the
    interior Northwest and Intermountain West. A few of these high-
    based cells may produce strong gusts, but severe potential appears
    to be limited by lack of greater moisture/buoyancy.

    Farther east over the central Rockies and adjoining High Plains,
    isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible this
    afternoon into evening. Activity should be related to diabatic
    heating of elevated terrain, along with lift near a surface lee
    trough, and a corridor of meager but sufficient low-level moisture.
    Beneath strongly difluent but weak west to northwest flow in mid/
    upper levels, bulk shear should be modest, despite considerable
    veering with height. Here too, a few cells may produce strong gusts
    through a well-mixed subcloud layer, and a severe gust cannot be
    ruled out. However, severe potential appears too isolated, poorly
    focused and conditional for a categorical risk area. Elsewhere,
    isolated to scattered thunderstorms will be possible in a very moist
    air mass (but with poor lapse rates) from parts of the Gulf Coast
    States across FL and the southern Atlantic Coast.

    ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/08/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Sep 9 09:12:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 091240
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 091239

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0739 AM CDT Mon Sep 09 2024

    Valid 091300Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF NEW YORK...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated damaging thunderstorm gusts are possible in parts of New York.

    ...Synopsis...
    Mid/upper-level flow will become more zonal across most of the
    northwestern and north-central CONUS, as a series of embedded
    shortwave troughs penetrates/flattens antecedent ridging over the
    Intermountain West and central/northern Rockies. Downstream, a
    substantial cyclone -- initially centered near the southwestern edge
    of Labrador -- anchors mean troughing that extends southwestward
    down the Appalachians. The cyclone will eject northeastward over
    Labrador through the period. In its southwestern quadrant, a
    shortwave trough was apparent in moisture-channel imagery over
    northeastern ON, approaching Georgian Bay and the neck of ON. This
    feature should move southeastward to the upper St. Lawrence Valley,
    eastern Lake Ontario and western NY by 00Z, then across southern New
    England and offshore from the northern Mid-Atlantic Coast overnight.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a weak cold front from southern QC,
    through a frontal-wave low over northern Lake Huron, then across
    northern parts of WI/MN. The low should move east-southeastward
    toward Lake Ontario and weaken through the day, while the cold front
    and associated veering wind shift cross the remainder of ON and
    start moving into NY. The front should cross the remainder of NY
    and most of New England and PA overnight. An older, quasistationary
    front was drawn across north-central FL westward over north-central
    Gulf shelf waters, then bending southwestward into the western parts
    of the developing tropical cyclone in the western Gulf.

    Potential TC 6 -- now offshore from the Mexican Gulf Coast -- is
    forecast by NHC to organize into a tropical storm this period.
    Given the forecast track, intensity and wind radii, any developing
    favorable sector for supercells/tornadoes will remain well out in
    the Gulf day-1, and not an overland tornado concern until day 3,
    when a risk area has been introduced northeast/east of the forecast
    center track. See NHC advisories on this system for latest tropical watches/warnings, and path/strength forecasts.

    ...NY...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to move
    southeastward to eastward across the outlook area from early
    afternoon into early evening. Isolated damaging gusts, and perhaps
    a gust or two near severe limits, may occur from the most vigorous
    embedded cells.

    This convection will be related to a compact (mesoscale) but strong
    field of large-scale ascent preceding the shortwave trough, related
    to its progressive field of DCVA, and forcing in the left-exit
    region of a cyclonically curved speed max in the 250-500-mb layer.
    The UVV field likely is manifest already by convection now over
    Georgian Bay and vicinity, moving toward what should become a more
    unstable environment over the outlook area. Deep-layer mean lapse
    rates likely will never get steeper than about 6.5 C/km in this
    setting. Still, the combination of subtle cooling aloft, weak but
    sufficient boundary-layer moisture, and some diurnal heating ahead
    of the UVV field, should deepen the buoyant layer enough to yield
    pockets of 500-700 J/kg MLCAPE. Weak low-level shear, and 25-30 kt effective-shear magnitudes in forecast soundings, indicate activity
    should be multicellular. A shallow but well-mixed subcloud layer --
    containing around 7 C/km lapse rates -- will support strong
    downdraft accelerations in some of the cores.

    ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/09/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Sep 10 08:36:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 101244
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 101243

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0743 AM CDT Tue Sep 10 2024

    Valid 101300Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER COASTAL
    AREAS OF LOUISIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Marginal tornado potential may reach coastal areas of Louisiana
    during the late overnight/early morning hours.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a strong shortwave trough now over the eastern
    Gulf of Alaska is forecast to dig southeastward and develop a closed
    500-mb cyclone tonight, with the low about 150 nm west of AST by 12Z
    tomorrow. Ahead of this progressive and intensifying perturbation,
    height falls and strengthening cyclonic flow will spread across the northwestern CONUS throughout the period, combining with modest low/ middle-level moisture to support thunderstorm potential in parts of
    the Northwest, in addition to the diurnal-cycle convection across
    the Four Corners region, central/northern Rockies and parts of MT.

    Downstream, mid/upper flow should be nearly zonal from the Rockies
    across the Great Lakes. An embedded shortwave trough was evident in moisture-channel imagery over the Dakotas. This feature is forecast
    to move eastward to MN by 00Z, then across the Upper Great Lakes to
    Lake Huron and adjoining parts of ON by 12Z. Farther south, a weak,
    cut-off, mid/upper-level low over north-central TX should drift
    erratically near its present location, while increasingly
    influencing the path of Tropical Storm Francine.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a wavy, quasistationary frontal zone
    fro Atlantic waters offshore SC, across northern FL to near the
    Mississippi River mouth, then a warm front arching across Gulf
    waters just south of the LA and TX Coasts, and into western parts of
    the Francine circulation. This boundary should move little from
    about 90W eastward, but remain a warm front over the upper TX and LA
    coastal waters, diffusely shifting inland over southern LA through
    the period.

    ...LA Coast...
    T.S. Francine -- initially centered southeast of BRO -- is forecast
    by NHC to turn northeastward across the northwestern Gulf today and
    become a hurricane, then move ashore in Louisiana on day 2.
    Suitably rich low-level moisture already is in place over coastal
    LA, and scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms should cover
    the outlook area throughout much of the period, even well northeast
    of Francine's center. However, supercell potential will await
    sufficiently strong wind fields reaching the coastline ahead of the
    cyclone to enlarge hodographs favorably -- likely during the last
    few hours of the period. Then, tornado potential will be a matter
    of having relatively distinct/discrete, outer-band convection that
    can survive long enough to mature into supercells before weakening
    again in more-stable inflow air -- either inland or in broader
    precip areas. Unconditional probabilities are kept at marginal
    levels for now, given the late timing of the favorable kinematic
    fields, the nocturnal min in overland instability, and convective/
    structural uncertainties with Francine.

    ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/10/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Sep 10 19:14:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 101942
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 101940

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0240 PM CDT Tue Sep 10 2024

    Valid 102000Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF COASTAL/SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Marginal tornado potential may reach coastal areas of Louisiana
    during the late overnight/early morning hours.

    ...20z Update...
    The forecast remains on track and no changes are needed to the D1
    Convective Outlook. See previous discussion below for more
    information.

    ..Thornton/Gleason.. 09/10/2024

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1122 AM CDT Tue Sep 10 2024/

    ...Southern Louisiana Late Tonight/Early Wednesday Morning...
    The latest NHC forecast indicates Tropical Cyclone Francine will
    move northeastward over the western Gulf of Mexico tonight through
    early Wednesday morning. Morning surface observations show a stalled
    front remains situated over the northern Gulf, with greater
    low-level moisture (mid/upper 70s surface dewpoints) generally
    confined near or just off the LA/MS/AL Gulf Coast. As Francine
    approaches the LA Coast late tonight, this very moist low-level
    airmass over the northern Gulf should gradually spread inland along
    parts of the immediate central Gulf Coast, supporting weak
    boundary-layer instability. As Francine approaches, a corresponding
    increase in low-level flow and related effective SRH should support
    some threat for tornadoes with any low-topped supercells in outer
    rain bands to the east-northeast of the central circulation. Latest
    guidance continues to suggest that the better tornado potential over
    land will occur in the Day 2/Wednesday time frame (after 12Z). But,
    an isolated/marginal tornado threat still remains apparent along
    parts of the LA Coast for the last few hours of the Day 1 period
    (08-12Z) early Wednesday morning, where a Marginal Risk has been
    maintained.

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Sep 11 12:52:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 111629
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 111627

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1127 AM CDT Wed Sep 11 2024

    Valid 111630Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE GULF COAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Hurricane Francine will pose a tornado threat through tonight across
    the middle Gulf Coast region.

    ...Gulf Coast - Hurricane Francine...
    Hurricane Francine will continue to generally move northeastward
    toward the southern Louisiana coast. Reference NHC for the latest
    forecast track and intensity details. As Francine approaches the
    coast later this afternoon into evening, a considerable
    strengthening of east-southeasterly winds on its east-northeast
    periphery will lead to an increasing near-shore/inland supercell
    risk. This will be in tandem with a northward shift of a maritime
    warm front and associated moisture-rich air, which will tend to stay
    with about 50-75 miles within the Gulf Coast spanning southeast
    Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle. The supercell/tornado risk is
    expected to steadily increase this afternoon across southeast
    Louisiana, transitioning northeastward toward southeast Mississippi,
    southern Alabama and the Florida Panhandle into this evening and
    overnight, with a few tornadoes possible regionally.

    ...Northern Rockies and northern High Plains...
    High-based thunderstorms are expected to pose an isolated severe
    risk late this afternoon into evening, with severe-caliber wind
    gusts a possibility, along with some hail possible as well across
    the northern Rockies including parts of Idaho and western Montana.
    This is influenced by the lead portion of a Pacific Northwest
    upper-level trough, with preceding height falls and the exit region
    of the upper jet overspreading the northern Rockies and northern
    High Plains through tonight.

    Thunderstorms should increase in coverage/intensity by late
    afternoon, especially from far southeast Oregon into southern Idaho,
    southern Montana and northwest Wyoming. Around 250-750 J/kg MLCAPE
    coincident with 25-35 kt of effective shear will support clusters
    and bands of storms capable of hail and stronger wind gusts.

    Additional widely scattered storms are expected across the northern
    High Plains within a modestly moist environment. Dry sub-cloud
    layers will support the potential for stronger downdrafts and the
    possibility of some severe-caliber wind gusts.

    ..Guyer/Jirak.. 09/11/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Sep 11 20:33:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 120042
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 120040

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0740 PM CDT Wed Sep 11 2024

    Valid 120100Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST IN ASSOCIATION WITH HURRICANE FRANCINE....

    ...SUMMARY...
    Tornado threat continues with Hurricane Francine across the middle
    Gulf Coast region.

    ...01z Update...

    Center of Hurricane Francine has moved onshore and will continue
    lifting slowly north through sunrise. Stronger, deeper updrafts are
    currently located within the eastern hemisphere of the low, per
    lightning data, along with a few longer-lived supercells. Have
    adjusted severe probabilities down along the western portion of
    Francine to reflect the latest position. Tornado threat continues
    with stronger supercells.

    High-level diffluent flow is noted across the northern Rockies this
    evening ahead of a pronounced short-wave trough that currently
    extends across eastern WA/OR into NV. 500mb speed max will dig into
    the base of the trough later tonight across the Great Basin which
    will ensure the left-exit region of the jet will spread across
    eastern ID/southern MT/western WY. Considerable amount of lightning
    is currently noted with convection ahead of the short wave, and some
    stronger wind gusts have also been observed. 00z sounding from Great
    Falls, MT exhibited meager buoyancy, but steep lapse rates are
    contributing to MLCAPE on the order of 500 J/kg across southern MT
    into eastern ID/western WY. This continues to favor some risk for
    locally severe winds with the more robust convection this evening.

    ..Darrow.. 09/12/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Sep 12 08:41:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 121249
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 121248

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0748 AM CDT Thu Sep 12 2024

    Valid 121300Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS...AND FROM THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE TO
    NORTH-CENTRAL ALABAMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few tornadoes are possible today, mainly in the morning and
    afternoon from the Florida Panhandle to north-central Alabama.
    Scattered large hail and severe gusts (some significant) are
    expected across the eastern Montana vicinity during the afternoon to
    early evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    Over the CONUS, in mid/upper levels, a highly amplified initial
    pattern will become more blocky through the period. A strong
    northern-stream trough with an intermittently closed cyclone is
    apparent in moisture-channel imagery from the Canadian Rockies
    southward over ID to the central Great Basin. The 500-mb low is
    forecast to move northeastward across western and northern MT to
    near the southwestern corner of SK by the end of the period. By
    then, the attached trough will deamplify slightly and become more
    positively tilted, extending from the low to central UT. A
    baroclinic leaf with strongly difluent flow aloft precedes the
    trough in satellite imagery over southeastern ID, western WY and
    central MT, with an eastward shift and some reinforcement expected
    today as small vorticity maxima pivot northeastward out of the
    trough.

    Meanwhile, an initially separate, weak 500-mb low now over the Red
    River near PRX, and the remnants of Tropical Storm Francine aloft,
    are progged to merge over the upper Delta/Mid-South region today
    into tonight. The result after 06Z should be a slow-moving
    mid/upper-level low over AR, nearly stacked above the weakening
    low-level vortex just to the east around MEM. [See NHC advisories
    for latest forecast track/intensity guidance on Francine.] An
    anticyclone aloft should form later today and expand tonight
    northeast of that low, over the Upper Great Lakes region.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a warm front across northernmost
    FL to the coastal FL Panhandle, then slightly inland over the
    western Panhandle, southwestern AL and southeastern MS. This
    boundary will move slowly northward/inland today, demarcating the
    north rim of mid-70s F surface dewpoints. Meanwhile, a surface low
    was drawn over eastern MT west of GDV, with slow-moving cold front south-southwestward across northeastern/central WY. The low and
    front will continue slow/intermittent eastward progress today, then
    move into the western Dakotas around 22-00Z, then eastward to the
    central Dakotas late overnight.

    ...Northern Great Plains...
    Strong-severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon into
    evening, along and behind the front, with the most probable severe
    potential arising from activity moving north-northeastward from
    northern WY. High-based supercells and multicells are possible,
    offering large hail and severe gusts. Some of the activity may
    aggregate upscale into one or two bowing clusters, racing northward
    accompanied by a swath of better-organized, potentially significant
    (65+ kt) gust potential.

    Thunderstorms may develop along the front in early-mid afternoon, as
    well as in and near the Bighorns, where diurnal heating of elevated
    terrain preferentially removes MLCINH earliest. A corridor of
    favorable surface moisture will remain near and behind the front and
    ahead of this convection. Meanwhile, midlevel temperatures will
    cool and steepen low/middle-level lapse rates, as large-scale ascent
    spreads over the area, both ahead of the ejecting mid/upper trough
    and in the left-exit region of a cyclonically curved 300-mb jet
    segment. This will occur atop a deep and well-mixed boundary layer
    containing nearly dry-adiabatic lapse rates. A northerly flow
    component west of the front will enhance storm-relative winds in the
    inflow layer, as well as low-level and deep-layer shear,
    strengthening lift and helping to maintain and further organize the
    convection. MLCAPE of 500-1200 J/kg and 45-55 kt effective-shear
    magnitudes will support the severe potential.

    Convection forming later and farther east near the front over the
    western Dakotas, from late afternoon into evening, also may pose a
    strong to locally severe gust threat for a few hours, and the
    marginal outlook area has been expanded eastward somewhat to give
    more room for that process. Flow aloft will bear a substantial
    component parallel to the convective axis, indicating a largely
    training or linear configuration is possible, along the western rim
    of a 50-60-kt LLJ fostering warm advection and moisture transport
    above the surface. However, the near-surface airmass over the
    central Dakotas should stabilize with time and eastward extent
    tonight, limiting duration and eastward shift of the threat.

    ...Southeastern CONUS...
    Tropical Storm Francine is forecast to continue moving northward
    over MS, and to lose definition as it interacts more closely with
    the mid/upper-level low. Accordingly, associated deep-layer winds
    will continue to weaken, but low-level shear will remain favorable
    through most of the day well east-southeast to southeast of center.
    A destabilizing airmass along and south of the warm/marine front
    will support a continued, slow inland shift of supercell potential
    amid enlarged hodographs. The favorable environment will be bounded
    on the west by a dry slot and veering low-level flow, on the
    northeast by unsuitably stable air in heavy precip and north of the
    front, and on the south by a gradual weakening of low-level winds
    and shear as the cyclone center pulls away and fills. In the
    favorable corridor, where inflow parcels are surface-based, expect
    effective SRH in the 200-500 J/kg range, very rich moisture, low
    LCL, and weak MLCINH. The threat should diminish overnight as the
    airmass slowly stabilizes inland, and the system continues to weaken
    overall.

    ..Edwards/Kerr.. 09/12/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Sep 13 08:22:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 131245
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 131243

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0743 AM CDT Fri Sep 13 2024

    Valid 131300Z - 141200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM MIDDLE
    TENNESSEE TO THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A marginal tornado threat is expected to develop this morning and
    afternoon across parts of Alabama, western Georgia and middle
    Tennessee. Isolated damaging to severe gusts will be possible in
    parts of Alabama, southwest Georgia and the Florida Panhandle.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, the CONUS portion of the large-scale pattern
    this period will be characterized by a "dirty" Rex block in the
    East, and troughing in the West. The block will be composed of an
    anticyclone drifting eastward over the Upper Great Lakes, and a
    small, deep-layer cyclone -- resulting from the merger of a weak,
    midlatitude, mid/upper-tropospheric low with the low/middle-level
    remnants of post-tropical cyclone Francine -- centered currently
    near BVX. This low should weaken gradually and meander slowly over
    the Mid-South, possibly drifting east-southeastward back across the
    MEM area through the period, but with negligible movement on the
    synoptic scale.

    In the northern stream, a mid/upper-level cyclone -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over southern SK -- will eject
    northeastward to northern MB and devolve to an open-wave trough by
    12Z tomorrow. In its wake, broadly cyclonic flow aloft, with mostly
    minor embedded shortwaves/vorticity maxima -- will cover the
    northwestern 1/4 of the CONUS. To its east, midlevel DCVA/ascent
    from a weak trough trailing the cyclone, combined with low-level
    warm advection and gradual moistening, will support general thunder
    potential over portions of the northern Plains to upper Mississippi
    Valley.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a wavy, quasistationary to warm
    front extending from off the SC Coast across southern GA and
    eastern/northern AL, intersecting a weak cold front there, then as
    an occluded front into the low over AR. This boundary should drift
    diffusely northward through the period, while weakening. A
    stationary to slow cold front was drawn from southern MB across
    central ND and western SD, and should drift eastward over the
    central Dakotas today through tonight.

    ...Southeast...
    Isolated, mostly short-lived supercells will be possible today,
    mainly in a belt of low-level convergence from parts of central/
    eastern AL and western GA into the Tennessee Valley, with a marginal
    tornado threat. Farther south, in weaker shear (but greater
    instability), a few of the stronger cells or small clusters may
    produce damaging gusts.

    A corridor of relatively maximized low-level shear/SRH remains near
    the old, diffuse warm-frontal zone well southeast of the center of
    Francine's remnants. Both that and a moisture/buoyancy axis to its
    west (centered roughly over the axis of the outlooked corridor)
    should move little today, given the slow filling and lack of motion
    of the related deep-layer cyclone over the Mid-South. Rich low-
    level moisture will persist in this corridor, with surface dewpoints
    commonly in the 70s F, and low LCLs. Weaknesses of both surface
    winds and midlevel flow will sandwich a 35-40-kt east-southeasterly
    to southeasterly LLJ that keeps hodographs somewhat enlarged and
    effective SRH in the 150-300 J/kg range over eastern/northern AL
    into southern mid TN. With some localized help from boundaries
    (outflow or differential-heating), a brief tornado is possible. A
    few of the most vigorous, water-loaded downdrafts will be capable of
    localized strong to marginally severe gusts, especially over
    southern areas where peak MLCAPE may reach about 2000 J/kg.
    Activity generally should weaken this evening and overnight as the
    airmass stabilizes and the remnants of Francine continue to decay.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 09/13/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Sep 14 08:49:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 141244
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 141242

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0742 AM CDT Sat Sep 14 2024

    Valid 141300Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF
    THE NORTH-CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms capable of isolated severe gusts and hail will be
    possible over parts of the north-central Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    Blockiness in the eastern CONUS will continue to dominate the
    large-scale, mid/upper-level pattern through the period. An
    anticyclone will drift eastward to southeastward over the Great
    Lakes, poleward of a broad belt of low heights and several embedded
    vorticity maxima extending from the lower Mississippi Valley to
    offshore from the Carolinas. One of those perturbations will be the
    decaying remnants of a merger of a midlatitude mid/upper low with
    the remnants of Francine. This feature is forecast to drift
    erratically eastward to southeastward over the Mid-South,
    contributing to convective potential over a broad area of the
    Southeast, but with wind fields and lift too weak to support
    organized severe potential.

    Farther west, synoptic-scale height rises are forecast across most
    of the central/northern Plains, as a strong trough digs south-
    southeastward near the BC Coast and forms a 500-mb low near UIL at
    the end of the period. By then, associated cyclonic flow should
    cover a large part of the CONUS west of the Rockies, as well as for
    several hundred miles off the West Coast.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a low over northern MS (associated
    with the remnants of Francine) with an occluded front arching across
    AL to a triple point near MGM, a warm front across southern GA, and
    a cold front across the western FL Panhandle. These boundaries
    should become more diffuse with time today as the deep-layer cyclone
    above the low continues its gradual degradation. Meanwhile, a
    quasistationary front from east-central ND across central SD to
    southwestern NE should weaken through the day, but with a remnant trough/convergence zone lingering near the present position. A weak
    surface low should form farther west today, in northeastern WY east
    of GCC, then migrate eastward into western SD toward RAP tonight.

    ...North-central Plains...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this
    afternoon, in a narrow corridor of relatively maximized low-level
    convergence (corresponding to the weak front/trough) and favorably
    strong surface heating east through southeast of the low. Isolated
    severe gusts and hail will be possible as convection proceeds across
    SD and perhaps into southern ND this evening, before encountering
    progressively more-stable low-level conditions with a decreasing
    severe threat. A weak perturbation apparent in moisture-channel
    imagery over east-central WY should move northeastward across the
    western NE Panhandle to southwestern/south-central SD by mid/late
    afternoon, and may contribute subtle large-scale ascent to the
    environment. Still, with broader, ambient height rises superimposed
    on that, considerable mesoscale timing/location uncertainty remains
    on the most probable initiation zone within the southern part of the
    outlook area. The later initiation occurs, the farther north the
    unconditional severe-threat area will be.

    Activity should move north-northeastward into a corridor of
    favorable moisture and buoyancy, with peak MLCAPE in the 500-1500
    J/kg range, atop a well-mixed subcloud layer. Greater lift and more
    backing of low level flow will be present over the SD part of the
    outlook, spreading northward into southern ND with time this
    evening, and supporting conditional potential for upscale growth of
    activity initiating in a hotter boundary layer near the Badlands.
    Stronger capping and weaker convergence over western NE cast some
    doubt as to formation and convective coverage in the Sandhills,
    though the environment will be favorable for marginal severe there
    as well. Modest low/middle-level winds nonetheless will veer
    strongly with height, leading to 25-35-kt effective-shear magnitudes
    in support of some organization.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 09/14/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Sep 15 08:51:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 151252
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 151250

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0750 AM CDT Sun Sep 15 2024

    Valid 151300Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms capable of isolated severe gusts and hail will be
    possible today across parts of the central and northern High Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a blocky longwave pattern will remain over the
    CONUS, with amplifying troughing in the West and a Rex configuration
    in the East. Cyclonic flow already covers most of the land west of
    the Rockies. That will continue but with backing of the flow aloft,
    as a cyclone now centered over Vancouver Island strengthens and digs south-southeastward down the West Coast. By 12Z tomorrow, the
    associated 500-mb low should be located near OAK, with strongly
    difluent flow and modest ridging over the High Plains from eastern
    NM to MT. The southern part of a weak shortwave trough -- evident
    in moisture-channel imagery from UT to eastern AZ -- should cross CO
    today and reach the eastern border of WY to near GLD by 12Z, likely
    enhanced from this evening onward by convectively generated
    vorticity.

    A mid/upper anticyclone now over the Lower Great Lakes will stretch
    eastward and open up to that direction around the end of the period.
    The base of the eastern pattern block will be composed of a broad,
    nearly zonal height weakness anchored by:
    1. The decaying remains of Francine, long merged with a mid/upper
    low, and forecast to drift erratically over the Mid-South while
    weakening further;
    2. An intensifying, deep-layer cyclone with low-level manifestation
    as a deepening wave cyclone along a frontal zone, offshore from the
    Carolinas.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a wavy, quasistationary frontal zone
    attached to a strengthening low located roughly south of EWN and
    east of SAV. The front extended across northern FL to the western
    FL Panhandle and southwestern AL. A remnant low was drawn well
    inland over northern MS, connecting to the Gulf boundary via an
    occluded front. These features should move little through the
    period, but with further weakening of the western low, and
    intensification of the eastern one. Elsewhere, a lee trough and
    dryline either overlapped, or were drawn within less than 100 nm
    apart, near the eastern border of WY, eastern CO, the northern/
    western TX Panhandle, and east-central/southeastern NM. The dryline
    should shift somewhat eastward today amid diurnal heating.

    ...Central/northern High Plains...
    Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible across a
    large part of the Rockies, Intermountain West, and Desert Southwest
    today. Some of this activity will mature atop deep, well-mixed
    boundary layers of desert valleys and the High Plains, with non-zero
    potential for a strong-severe gust. The most concentrated/organized
    potential for gusts near to above severe limits, as well as marginal
    hail, still appears to be over portions of the central High Plains
    into the Black Hills and vicinity, near the lee trough/dryline.
    East of that, low-level moisture will be relatively maximized in a
    return-flow airmass of predominantly continental origin, with a
    north-south belt of 50s to mid 60s F surface dewpoints. Where the
    western part of that moisture coincides with strong surface heating,
    and underlies the eastern part of the EML, a north-south corridor of
    MLCAPE in the 1500-2500 J/kg range should develop, with 500-1500
    J/kg extending into the more deeply mixed regime nearest the lee
    trough. East of the trough, considerable veering of winds with
    height is expected, with some low-level hodograph enhancement
    potentially moving 0-3-km SRH to near 150 J/kg, but lack of stronger
    midlevel flow will temper overall shear.

    ...Coastal NC, extreme eastern SC...
    Many progs deepen the low-level cyclone and transition it to
    subtropical or tropical character through the end of day 2, while
    eroding the frontal zone's baroclinicity; however, inconsistency
    among models is high. The most aggressive among the synoptic and
    CAM guidance with the speed of the transition and approach to the
    coast (e.g., 06Z GFS and 00Z ARW high-res window respectively) show
    favorably large low-level shear, but barely have surface-based
    effective inflow onshore at the end of the period, with greatest
    convective coverage and buoyancy still offshore. As such, the
    associated coastal tornado threat still appears too low and
    conditional to outlook until day 2 (after 16/12Z). Potential for
    faster/deeper development and shoreward translation of the low will
    continue to be monitored for onshore supercell threat the last few
    hours of day 1. See latest NHC tropical outlook for guidance on
    overall development potential with this system.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 09/15/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Sep 16 08:35:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 161248
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 161246

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0746 AM CDT Mon Sep 16 2024

    Valid 161300Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE EASTERN
    CAROLINAS AND PARTS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A tornado threat exists in the eastern Carolinas. Thunderstorms
    capable of severe gusts and large hail are expected today in parts
    of the northern Plains. Isolated severe wind and hail are expected
    in parts of the Four Corners and Great Basin.

    ...Synopsis...
    A highly amplified pattern is expected in mid/upper levels, anchored
    by two cyclones:
    1. A purely cold-core, midlatitude circulation initially centered
    over northern CA, with accompanying cyclonic flow covering most of
    the CONUS from the Rockies westward. Equatorward progression of
    this feature is about done, and the 500-mb low should pivot eastward
    across the RNO area by 00Z, then east-northeastward toward EKO
    overnight. In the downstream difluent flow, a shortwave trough is
    apparent in moisture-channel imagery over the western Dakotas. This
    feature should move northeastward to southwestern MB by 00Z, then to westernmost parts of northwest ON overnight.
    2. What is now a small, deep-layer circulation just offshore from
    ILM and MYR, designated Potential Tropical Cyclone 8 by NHC as of
    this writing. This system may become subtropical or tropical before
    moving inland later today, per NHC discussions. Regardless of
    whether it is named, the system will offer some tornado potential
    (below). The associated mid/upper low is progged to become better
    defined through the day and moving farther inland, with the
    low-level center tracking not far behind.

    As the surface, aside from PTC 8 and its attached frontal zone, the
    11Z analysis showed a quasistationary front extending northeastward
    from a low near SHR, across southeastern MT to north-central ND,
    behind the outflow of a mass of ongoing convection over ND. The
    outflow boundary should act as the effective frontal zone for this
    region, as it moves slowly eastward over ND and north-central SD
    before likely stalling around midday.

    ...Eastern Carolinas...
    A zone of enhanced low-level gradient flow is apparent north through
    northeast of the center of PTC 8, over coastal sections of NC and
    westward past MYR. This is related both to the cyclone itself and antecedent/post-frontal high pressure from north of the baroclinic
    zone upon which this low developed. The synoptically driven
    baroclinicity is expected to continue to decrease (frontolysis),
    especially if this low becomes tropical. However, some mesoscale
    baroclinicity will remain due to persistent rain north of the old
    front, and a lack of precip -- combined with a high-theta-e,
    maritime/tropical airmass to its south and southeast.

    This airmass should shift northward as the low moves inland, and
    support potential for inland penetration of enough moisture and
    limited diurnal heating to enable 500-1000 J/kg MLCAPE today, away
    from areas of continual/persistent rainfall. In an environment
    where LCLs are low and low-level shear and SRH already are favorable
    (per VWP from ILM and MHX), the tornado threat will be tied directly
    to a combination of
    1. Sufficient surface-based destabilization on the mesobeta scale,
    in that transition zone where flow still is backed enough to keep
    hodographs large, and
    2. Formation of supercell(s) and their ability to remain in the
    favorably buoyant/backed-flow slot long enough to mature and
    produce.

    See SPC mesoscale discussion 2070 for marginal, near-term potential
    near and north of center. Through the day, the effective warm-
    frontal regime is expected to shift northward up the coastline and,
    to some extent, areas around the Sounds, so a small unconditional
    5%/"slight risk" has been introduced in those areas. Tonight into
    tomorrow morning, as the center penetrates deeper inland away from
    the most favorable airmass and weakens considerably, and as diabatic
    cooling reduces instability at the surface, the tornado potential
    should diminish.

    ...Northern Plains...
    A large area of precip and convection is ongoing across much of west-central/central and northeastern ND, with embedded strong/
    isolated severe thunderstorms capable of gusts and hail. This
    activity is reinforcing/reorienting the antecedent baroclinic zone
    across the area, and may persist northeastward into the remainder of northeastern ND and northwestern MN through midday with a continued
    threat for isolated severe. Additional development is possible
    along the outflow-modulated boundary, both in the near term and
    through the afternoon, ahead of the shortwave trough, and in the
    area of related maximized lift (both convective-scale on the
    boundary, and broader-scale in the midlevel DCVA).

    The airmass south and east of the boundary should heat diurnally,
    steepening the low/middle-level lapse rates amidst favorable 60 F
    surface dewpoints. This should support peak/preconvective MLCAPE in
    the 1500-2500 J/kg range, along with veering flow with height.
    However, lack of stronger midlevel flow limits deep shear, keeping
    progged effective-shear magnitudes generally under 35 kt. The most
    probable convective mode appears to be a mix of multicells and messy supercells. Convection-allowing progs that most-closely depicted
    the current state (which has not included the underdone hourly HRRR
    for most of the night) reasonably show a lack of substantial
    destabilization north of the boundary, except perhaps for some
    elevated hail potential this evening. Convective coverage on ether
    side of the boundary may increase for a few hours this evening in
    response to enhancement of moisture, shear and storm-relative flow
    provides by the LLJ.

    ...4 Corners/Great Basin...
    A broad arc of combined baroclinic and large-scale ascent is
    expected to extend across the near-eastern to far-southeastern
    sectors of the mid/upper cyclone, supporting episodic, widely
    scattered to scattered thunderstorms throughout much of the period.
    Where this activity encounters diurnally/diabatically destabilized
    boundary layers, characterized by deep mixing with related
    maximization of lapse rates and DCAPE, and at least marginal CAPE
    above, isolated severe gusts will be a threat. The potential for
    high-based supercells amidst greater shear to the southeast, across
    the Four Corners area, suggest isolated severe hail also will be
    possible there.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 09/16/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Sep 17 07:37:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 171207
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 171206

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0706 AM CDT Tue Sep 17 2024

    Valid 171300Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms capable of severe wind gusts and isolated large hail
    will be possible this afternoon and evening across parts of the
    central and northern High Plains.

    ...High Plains/Central and Southern Rockies...
    Water-vapor imagery early this morning shows a potent mid-level low
    and associated trough centered over northeast NV. This feature will
    become negatively tilted and move into the High Plains late today
    while the low moves east-northeast reaching southeast MT Wednesday
    morning. Strong attendant forcing for ascent will overspread the
    High Plains this afternoon into the early evening with an
    accompanying 50-60 kt 500-mb speed max moving into CO and eventually
    western NE/SD. In the low levels, a lee trough will sharpen with
    southerly flow maintaining a fetch of seasonably adequate moisture
    (50s deg F surface dewpoints) into the High Plains.

    Ahead of the approaching trough, partial clearing will result in
    strong surface heating this afternoon over the central High Plains.
    MLCAPE is expected to peak near 1500 J/kg from eastern Colorado
    northward into western Nebraska. Initial storm activity late this
    morning through the early afternoon will develop over the high
    terrain of CO/northern NM and move/develop east into richer moisture
    by mid-late afternoon. The increasing large-scale ascent coupled
    with heating will eventually result in numerous storms mainly in the
    form of linear clusters evolving into linear bands of convection by
    early evening. The greatest combination of instability, lift
    and deep-layer shear is forecast across western Nebraska and
    northeast Colorado, suggesting an enhanced threat for severe wind
    gusts. Based on some of the latest CAM data, have expanded the
    Slight-Risk equivalent wind probabilities farther south into
    northeast NM/northwest TX Panhandle. Some consideration was given
    to expand the ENH Risk into southwestern SD, but the later timing of
    storms lends enough uncertainty to preclude this change this outlook
    update.

    ...Northern High Plains...
    Ahead of the approaching mid-level low, divergent south to
    south-southeasterly flow will be in place across the northern
    Rockies and northern Plains. During the afternoon, thunderstorms
    will develop in the north-central Rockies and move north to
    northeastward across the northern High Plains. An axis of moderate
    instability is forecast by afternoon from the Dakotas northwestward
    into northeast Montana. As large-scale ascent and moderate
    deep-layer shear overspread the northern High Plains late this
    afternoon and evening, organized storms will be possible. Severe
    wind gusts and isolated large hail will be the primary threats.

    ...Eastern Florida...
    A mid-level trough will move across the eastern Gulf of Mexico
    today, as an associated surface trough moves across the Florida
    Peninsula. Surface dewpoints in the lower to mid 70s F, along with
    surface heating will contribute to moderate instability by
    afternoon. As surface temperatures warm today, scattered
    thunderstorms are expected to develop along and ahead of the surface
    trough. RAP forecast soundings at 21Z in eastern Florida have
    MLCAPE in the 2000 to 3000 J/kg range, with 0-6 km shear around 20
    knots. This, combined with steep low-level lapse rates could be
    enough for a marginal threat for locally severe wind gusts.

    ..Smith/Mosier.. 09/17/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Sep 18 09:19:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 181235
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 181233

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0733 AM CDT Wed Sep 18 2024

    Valid 181300Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE MID MISSOURI VALLEY NORTHWARD INTO EASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA AND
    WESTERN MINNESOTA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms capable of severe wind gusts and isolated large hail
    are possible today across parts of the eastern Dakotas and Minnesota
    southward in the mid Missouri Valley. A marginal severe threat will
    also be possible in parts of the central and southern Plains.

    ...Northern Plains/Upper Mississippi Valley/Mid Missouri Valley...
    Water-vapor imagery depicts a mid-level low over southeast MT this
    morning and this feature will continue northeastward during the
    period and reach southeastern SK by early Thursday morning. A
    mid-level ridge extending northward from the northwest Gulf Coast
    into the upper MS Valley will slowly shift eastward into the Upper
    Great Lakes. A ribbon of stronger southwesterly mid-level flow will
    extend from southern CA through the central High Plains and wrapping cyclonically through the eastern Dakotas and into southern Canada.

    In the low levels, a surface trough will be the primary feature of
    interest with a plume of 60s deg F dewpoints extending northward to
    the east of the boundary from the southern Great Plains into the
    Upper Midwest. In wake of early day dissipating shower/thunderstorm
    activity (e.g., eastern Dakotas, southern KS), heating of an
    adequately moist boundary layer will result in moderate
    destabilization by mid afternoon (1500-2500 J/kg SBCAPE). Isolated
    to scattered thunderstorms are forecast within a zone of 25-40 kt
    0-6 km shear. Some model guidance varies on storm coverage across
    the Slight Risk (isolated vs. scattered) but forecast sounding
    profiles indicate a risk for organized storms mainly in the form of
    organized multicells and supercells. Hail/wind may accompany the
    stronger storms during the late afternoon through the early evening
    before this activity begins to weaken.

    Further south into the southern and central Plains, low-levels are
    forecast to be drier near the surface trough, with dewpoints
    expected to be mostly in the upper 50s and lower 60s F. Warmer
    mid-level temperatures and limited large-scale ascent than farther
    north will likely contribute to tempering the overall intensity of
    the updrafts and resultant severe intensity/coverage. Models
    suggest perhaps locally higher storm coverage and resulting
    severe-wind threat from the TX Panhandle north-northeast into far
    southern KS during the late afternoon/early evening.

    ..Smith/Mosier.. 09/18/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Sep 19 08:08:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 191252
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 191251

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0751 AM CDT Thu Sep 19 2024

    Valid 191300Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM
    MINNESOTA...IOWA AND WESTERN WISCONSIN SOUTHWARD INTO EASTERN KANSAS
    AND WESTERN MISSOURI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across central/eastern
    Minnesota, Iowa, and western Wisconsin. A couple tornadoes, isolated
    large hail, and damaging winds may occur. An area of locally severe
    gusts and hail may also develop over parts of eastern Kansas,
    southwest Missouri, and into northeast Oklahoma.

    ...Synopsis...
    Early morning water-vapor imagery shows a slow-moving mid- to
    upper-level low near the SK/MB/Dakotas border. A negatively tilted
    shortwave trough will move across the Dakotas and MN through the
    day. A belt of strong (40-50 kt) 500mb flow will extend through the
    base of the trough from NE wrapping cyclonically through the Upper
    MS Valley into western ON and to the northwest of a flattening ridge
    over the mid MS Valley/southwest Great Lakes. Farther south, weaker
    west to northwest winds will encompass an area around a southern
    Plains upper high from KS/OK into MO and AR. In the high levels,
    flow will be strongest across the central Plains, with weakening
    winds over the northern Plains/upper MS Valley.

    In the low levels, a cyclone will develop northeastward from
    southeast SK into central MB by early Friday morning, while a cold
    front moves into MN/western IA by mid afternoon, with frontolysis
    expected during the latter part of the period. A wind shift/surface
    trough will also extend southward across eastern KS and into
    northern OK. Ahead of the aforementioned boundaries, southerly flow
    will maintain a plume of mid to upper 60s F dewpoints.

    ...MN/IA/WI...
    Scattered weak, elevated storms from the lower MO Valley northward
    into MN/WI will gradually move east this morning and likely
    dissipate by midday. Cloud breaks and clearing in their wake will
    contribute to appreciable heating and moderate to strong buoyancy
    developing from near the MO River in western IA northward into MN.
    Forecast soundings show 2500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE with a veering and
    strengthening wind profile into the mid levels. A broken band of quasi-discrete storms (including supercells) is forecast to develop
    from MN southward into at least northern IA. The risk for a couple
    of tornadoes may be highest from MN into northern IA where effective
    SRH may exceed 200 m2/s2. A couple of stronger supercells may also
    develop into western/southwest IA per recent HRRR model trends.
    Given the northward lifting of the shortwave trough, and increasing
    inhibition east of the MS River, the primary threat should remain
    relatively narrow.

    ...Eastern KS into western MO and into OK...
    Widely scattered thunderstorms are ongoing this morning from
    south-central into northeast KS. Much of this activity will likely
    dissipate but a few residual storms may continue or regenerate on
    outflow over parts of western MO later this afternoon. Strong
    heating and the steepening of 0-3 km lapse rates will favor the
    development of other isolated to widely scattered storms later this
    afternoon near the wind shift. 12 UTC regional raobs sampled warm
    mid-level temperatures (around -1 deg C at 525 mb at Norman, OK).
    These warm midlevel temperatures will limit the overall magnitude of instability. However, lengthy mid to upper level hodographs will
    support storm organization with any robust/established updraft. The
    stronger storms will potentially be capable of a risk for severe
    gusts and perhaps large hail.

    ..Smith/Mosier.. 09/19/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Sep 20 09:54:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 201245
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 201243

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0743 AM CDT Fri Sep 20 2024

    Valid 201300Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM SOUTHWEST
    LOWER MICHIGAN INTO PARTS OF ILLINOIS...INDIANA...AND SOUTHEAST
    MISSOURI...AND OVER PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible during the late
    afternoon over parts of southwest Lower Michigan, Illinois, Indiana,
    and southeast Missouri. Isolated strong to severe storms are also
    possible across parts of the south-central Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    Shortwave trough currently moving through WI and Upper MI will
    continue eastward through the Upper Great Lakes region today.
    Another shortwave trough will follow quickly in its wake,
    progressing across Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba, and adjacent
    portions of MT and the northern Plains this evening and overnight.
    Father south, a deep upper low with seasonably cold mid-level
    temperatures will move from southern CA into AZ. Progression of this
    low will dampen the northwestern periphery of the upper ridging
    centered over TX.

    A surface low attendant to this WI/Upper MI shortwave trough is
    currently near the IA/WI/IL border intersection, with weak cold
    front extending southwestward from this low to another subtle
    surface low over the central OK/KS border. Surface troughing
    continues southwestward from this secondary low, but this portion of
    the boundary has taken on more warm-front-like characteristics over
    the past several hours (evidenced by the dewpoint increase of 3-4
    deg F over the past 3 hours across the eastern TX/OK Panhandle).
    Enhanced westerly/southwesterly flow aloft attendant to both the
    central Canada/MT shortwave trough and CA upper low will contribute
    to sharpening surface lee troughing throughout the day and into this
    evening.

    ...Central Plains...
    Low-level moisture is expected to advect northward/northwestward
    throughout the day as Thursday's cold front returns northward as a
    warm front. As a result, low to mid 60s dewpoints will likely be in
    place across south-central/southeast KS during the late afternoon.
    Dewpoints will likely be in upper 50s farther west in southwest KS,
    with notably drier conditions across the adjacent TX/OK Panhandles
    where downsloping southwesterly surface winds are likely.

    Southwesterly flow aloft ahead of the approaching upper low will
    advect steep mid-level lapse rates northeastward through the
    southern High Plains into western portions of the central Plains.
    Modest buoyancy is anticipated during the late afternoon where these
    lapse rates overlay the more favorable low-level moisture across
    southern KS. Limited large-scale ascent and low-level confluence
    near the warm front is anticipated over this region as well, with
    isolated to widely scattered high-based thunderstorm anticipated.
    Vertical shear will be modest, but still strong enough for
    persist/organized storm structures, and the potential for some
    strong gusts with the more robust storms. Some isolated hail is also
    possible over south-central KS where buoyancy is maximized.

    Low-level moisture will continue advection northward during the
    evening and overnight, with a strengthening low-level jet
    anticipated as well. Consequently, additional thunderstorm
    development is expected after 04Z over northeast KS and adjacent far
    southeast NE and northwest MO. Isolated hail is possible with the
    strongest storms.

    ...Southwestern Lower MI into IN, IL, and southeast MO...
    Upper 60s to low 70s dewpoints are expected from southwest Lower MI southwestward across western IN, southern IL, and southeast MO.
    Daytime heating of this moist low-level air mass will yield a
    moderately unstable and uncapped air mass ahead of the approaching
    front, and thunderstorm development is anticipated as the front
    interacts with this airmass. Moderate vertical shear will be in
    place, but poor lapse rates and notable mid-level dry air could make
    updraft maintenance difficult. As such, a more multicellular storm
    mode is anticipated. Highest storm coverage is expected over
    southwest Lower MI and western IN, with warm mid-level temperatures
    likely limiting coverage across southern IL and southeast MO.
    Locally strong gusts will be the primary severe risk, with isolated,
    marginally severe hail possible as well.

    ..Mosier/Broyles.. 09/20/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Sep 21 09:52:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 211246
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 211245

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0745 AM CDT Sat Sep 21 2024

    Valid 211300Z - 221200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe storms capable of all hazards are possible this
    afternoon and evening across portions of the southern High Plains.

    ...Southern High Plains...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a potent mid- to upper-level
    low and associated trough moving east across AZ. An associated
    70-kt 500-mb speed max will round the base of the trough and move
    into central NM by early evening before weakening overnight as it
    moves into the TX Panhandle. Southerly low-level flow will maintain
    a fetch of seasonably rich moisture across the region today
    (reference 12 UTC Del Rio, TX and Midland, TX raobs; 18.3 and 14.9
    g/kg lowest 100-mb mean mixing ratios, respectively). Early morning
    surface analysis places a cold front pushing southward over the
    central High Plains and this boundary will reach northeast NM and
    parts of the Panhandles late this afternoon/early evening.

    Some continuation of ongoing shower/thunderstorm activity may
    continue through the morning across eastern NM into the TX
    Panhandle, lending some uncertainty in airmass
    destabilization/recovery in wake of this convection. 06z model
    guidance (particularly the NAM) seemed to reasonably depict the
    low-level moisture plume emanating from the Rio Grande
    Valley/Edwards Plateau northwestward into the southern High Plains.
    Steep 700-500 mb lapse rates (7.5 to 8.0 deg C/km) sampled this
    morning from Albuquerque and Midland will combine with daytime
    heating to yield a moderately unstable airmass by afternoon across
    eastern NM into west TX. Increasing large-scale deep-layer ascent
    approaching from the west and frontal/orographic lift will likely
    contribute to scattered thunderstorms developing relatively early
    this afternoon. Forecast hodographs indicate supercells will evolve
    within this environment. The risk for large hail/severe gusts will
    likely accompany the stronger storms, and a threat for a few
    tornadoes may be realized later this afternoon/early evening from
    eastern NM into parts of adjacent west TX.

    ...Upper Midwest to Mid MO Valley...
    A northern-stream short-wave trough will continue to move eastward
    from southern MB/Dakotas into MN/northwest ON during the period.
    A surface cold front will advance into MN-western IA-southern NE by
    midday, before accelerating east into the Upper Great Lakes, while
    the trailing portion of the boundary pushes south-southeast into
    central KS by early to mid afternoon. This boundary will serve as
    the focus for potential convective development during the late
    afternoon, though surface heating is not expected to be particularly
    strong ahead of the wind shift. With the strongest forcing expected
    to spread across northwest ON, convection may be more isolated along
    the front trailing across the Upper Midwest. Even so, some hail/wind
    threat will exist with this activity which should peak in intensity
    during the early evening.

    ...Western PA into western VA...
    Weak short-wave trough will dig southeast across the upper OH Valley
    later this afternoon with modest mid-level northwesterly flow
    expected to extend across western PA/VA. This feature will encourage
    scattered convection later this afternoon along a frontal zone that
    will be draped across the Delmarva-western PA into western NY.
    Models suggest scattered storm coverage and forecast soundings would
    imply some of the stronger storms being capable of an isolated risk
    for wind damage (50-60 mph) and perhaps some hail. This activity
    will likely diminish by early evening coincident with nocturnal
    cooling.

    ..Smith/Broyles.. 09/21/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Sep 22 08:37:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 221240
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 221238

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0738 AM CDT Sun Sep 22 2024

    Valid 221300Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
    WEST TEXAS THROUGH THE OZARKS AND INTO THE LOWER OHIO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible from west Texas to
    western Kentucky.

    ...West Texas into the Ozarks and lower OH Valley...
    An upper low over CO will continue to slowly weaken as it migrates
    eastward into the central Great Plains through early Monday morning.
    A belt of moderate southwesterly mid-level flow will reside in
    between the closed circulation and a flattening anticyclone centered
    over the northwest Gulf of Mexico. In the low levels, a south and southeastward movement of a surface front is forecast through today
    as it moves through the Corn Belt and areas farther southwest in the
    southern Great Plains.

    Showers and isolated thunderstorm activity this morning extends
    along and behind the front from OK northeastward into the lower MO
    Valley and western Great Lakes. Considerable cloud cover will
    contribute to limited diurnal heating, especially from near the Red
    River northeastward into the Ozark Plateau. Morning surface
    analysis shows a reservoir of lower 70s deg F dewpoints over the
    Edwards Plateau (reference the 12 UTC Del Rio, TX raob showing a
    capped but deep moist layer) with 65-70 F farther northeast from OK
    through the Ozarks. Forecast soundings later this afternoon
    indicate 500-2000 J/kg MLCAPE---supporting a risk for a few stronger thunderstorms near/behind the boundary/wind shift. Strong to
    locally damaging gusts (50-60 mph) and perhaps hail up to around 1
    inch in diameter are possible mainly this afternoon into the early
    evening.

    ..Smith/Broyles.. 09/22/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Sep 23 08:58:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 231236
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 231235

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0735 AM CDT Mon Sep 23 2024

    Valid 231300Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE OZARKS
    TO THE OHIO/TENNESSEE VALLEYS REGION...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible mainly this
    afternoon into the early evening from the Ozarks into parts of the
    Tennessee and lower Ohio Valleys.

    ...Ozarks into TN/OH Valleys and southern Appalachians...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a digging trough over eastern
    MT with it forecast to move into the Dakotas this afternoon. A
    positive-tilt mid-level trough over the central Plains will move
    east and deamplify over the MS Valley overnight. This evolution is
    expected to aid weak surface wave/low development along the synoptic
    front over the Ozarks before moving to the IL/IN border by early
    Tuesday morning. Ongoing showers/thunderstorms over southeast MO
    will continue east into the lower OH Valley this morning and temper destabilization through at least midday. In its wake, models
    indicate MLCAPE in excess of 1000 J/kg developing from AR into
    western KY/TN, coincident with modest 0-6km bulk shear. The surface
    boundary will serve as the focus for scattered convection later
    today with some of the stronger storms potentially capable of a
    localized severe threat. This activity is expected to diminish
    during the evening.

    Farther east, isolated to scattered thunderstorms will probably
    develop near the ridge tops of the southern Appalachians and
    adjacent parts of the Carolinas Piedmont this afternoon. Moist low
    levels coupled with heating will result in around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE.
    Some modest multicell organization may occur due to adequately
    strong upper-level westerly flow. However, weak flow in the lowest
    5 km and modest lapse rates will probably temper the overall
    potential for localized strong gusts (40-55 mph).

    ..Smith/Broyles.. 09/23/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Sep 24 08:20:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 241243
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 241242

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0742 AM CDT Tue Sep 24 2024

    Valid 241300Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM CENTRAL
    KENTUCKY INTO SOUTHERN OHIO AND WEST VIRGINIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible mainly this
    afternoon across portions of the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys into the central/southern Appalachians. A few strong/severe storms are also
    possible across portions of the southern Plains.

    ...Ohio and Tennessee Valleys to southern Appalachians...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a mid-level vorticity maximum
    moving across the middle MS Valley and into the OH Valley. A belt
    of moderate to strong southwesterly 500-mb flow (25-50 kt) will
    overspread KY and the surrounding states, with the strongest flow
    generally within the Slight Risk bounds. Bands of showers/weak
    thunderstorms are ongoing this morning from middle TN into OH, and
    in a separate area over eastern IL immediately ahead of the surface
    low. This low will migrate east-northeast into southern Lower MI by
    early evening with a frontal zone extending south-southwest into the
    Mid South. In wake of the early morning convection, some cloud breaks/destabilization is forecast with upwards of 750-2000 J/kg
    MLCAPE from the southern Great Lakes into the southern Appalachian
    states. Ample deep-layer speed shear (via mostly southwesterly flow
    through the troposphere) will aid in storm organization into
    organized multicells and probably several supercells. Only notable
    change this outlook update was to include portions of the southern
    Great Lakes in low-severe probabilities for potential activity
    near/ahead of the surface low. The primary concern across the
    general region will likely be damaging winds with the stronger
    storms.

    ...OK vicinity...
    An amplifying large-scale trough over the MS Valley will feature a
    60-kt 500mb speed max moving southward into the central Great Plains
    by early evening on the backside of the upper trough. Left exit
    region of this feature will encourage large-scale ascent, and a weak
    surface wave/low should evolve over southwest KS/northwest OK by
    early afternoon. Strong heating will contribute to 750-1250 J/kg
    MLCAPE by mid afternoon across OK with flow veering and
    strengthening with height. Elongated hodographs will support the
    potential for hail growth with a few of the stronger/sustained
    updrafts that evolve. An isolated threat for large hail (1 to 1.75
    inches in diameter) and/or severe gusts (60-70 mph) will probably
    peak during the 23z-03z period before storms weaken during the late
    evening.

    ..Smith/Broyles.. 09/24/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Sep 24 12:43:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 241647
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 241645

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1145 AM CDT Tue Sep 24 2024

    Valid 241630Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF TN/KY/OH/WV AND CENTRAL OK...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible mainly this
    afternoon across portions of the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys into the central/southern Appalachians. Severe storms will also be possible
    across portions of Oklahoma.

    ...Ohio and Tennessee Valleys to southern Appalachians...
    Have spatially adjusted/expanded the Slight Risk based on
    observational trends and somewhat stronger destabilization across
    areas such as northern/middle Tennessee. Water-vapor imagery shows a
    mid-level vorticity maximum moving across the middle Mississippi
    Valley and into the Ohio Valley. A belt of moderate to strong
    southwesterly 500-mb flow (25-50 kt) will overspread Kentucky and
    the surrounding states. A surface low will migrate east-northeast
    into southern Lower Michigan by early evening, where isolated severe
    storms are possible, with a frontal zone extending south-southwest
    from this low into the Mid South.

    In the wake of early morning convection, modest cloud
    breaks/destabilization is forecast with upwards of 750-2000 J/kg
    MLCAPE from the southern Great Lakes into the southern Appalachians,
    with the strongest destabilization expected across Tennessee into
    southern Kentucky and possibly the western Carolinas pending the timing/abatement of lingering cloud cover. Regionally, ample
    deep-layer speed shear will aid in storm organization into organized
    multicells and probably several supercells. Damaging winds will be
    the most common hazard, but isolated large hail will be possible,
    and some tornado risk may exist as well.

    ...Oklahoma/North Texas...
    Have upgraded portions of central Oklahoma for what is expected to
    be a semi-focused regional corridor of large hail potential late
    this afternoon and early evening. The region will be influenced by
    the immediate backside of a southeastward-moving upper-level trough
    centered over the Lower Missouri Valley. A considerably
    strengthening cyclonically curved belt of westerlies aloft will
    influence Oklahoma, overspreading a relatively moist air mass, with
    lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints likely to persist
    through the diurnal heating/mixing cycle.

    Near a deepening surface low and nearby triple point/warm front, at
    least isolated storms are expected to develop as early as
    mid-afternoon (3-4pm), becoming more probable with a greater
    coverage through sunset. Overall buoyancy will not be robust, with
    MLCAPE generally not expected to exceed 1000 J/kg later this
    afternoon. However, this buoyancy, along with steep lapse rates and
    robustly vertically veering wind profiles, accentuated by 35-45 kt northwesterly mid/upper-level flow, should support initial
    supercells capable of large hail (potentially golfball size), along
    with some potential for damaging wind gusts.

    These storms will persist generally southeastward through the
    evening into southern/southeast Oklahoma, and probably north Texas
    overnight. Overall intensity will tend to wane nocturnally after
    sunset, but some severe hail/wind potential will probably linger,
    particularly on the west/southwest flank of any evolving clusters of
    storms, which will be increasingly elevated to the east of the warm
    front.

    ..Guyer/Lyons.. 09/24/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Sep 25 09:31:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 251323
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 251323

    Day 1 Convective Outlook RESENT 2
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0823 AM CDT Wed Sep 25 2024

    Valid 251300Z - 261200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE
    GULF COAST INTO THE SOUTHERN/CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND FLORIDA PENINSULA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe storms are possible this afternoon from parts of the
    Southeast and central/southern Appalachians to the Texas/Louisiana
    Gulf Coast. Some tornado threat may develop across the Florida
    Peninsula by this evening, in association with Tropical Cyclone
    Helene.

    ...Southeast and southern Appalachians...
    Widespread precipitation is expected from parts of the Southeast
    into the southern Appalachians, due to the combined influence of the mid/upper-level flow to the west and moisture streaming north from
    the Gulf of Mexico and Helene. While this will tend to limit
    available buoyancy in some areas, strong to locally severe storms
    will be possible with initial development, with preconvective MLCAPE
    of around 1000 J/kg possible. This will generally be coincident with
    favorable deep-layer shear, especially across the southern
    Appalachians vicinity where a few supercells could occur pending
    sufficient destabilization. Locally damaging wind gusts and perhaps
    a tornado could accompany the strongest storms, before low/mid-level
    lapse rates and buoyancy become increasingly weak with time, and an outflow-reinforced front sags southward across the region.

    ...Texas Gulf Coast/Middle Gulf Coast...
    Somewhat stronger diurnal destabilization will be possible from
    parts of central/east Texas into Louisiana, and perhaps into
    Mississippi, with MLCAPE potentially increasing above 1500 J/kg.
    Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorm development will be
    possible near a southward-moving cold front. Effective shear will
    generally range from 25-35 kt, and a few modestly organized storms
    are possible. Isolated damaging gusts could accompany the strongest
    storms within this regime.

    ...Florida Peninsula and Keys...
    Helene's wind field is forecast to be rather large, especially on
    the east side of the circulation, associated with what is expected
    to be a strengthening Helene through the afternoon and night.
    Reference the National Hurricane Center for the latest Helene
    details. This scenario will result in modestly strengthening
    low-level shear/SRH across the Florida Peninsula during the day, but
    more so into the evening and overnight after the peak diurnal
    instability cycle. Instability will likely remain rather weak
    overall, and details regarding the intensity of any outer rain bands
    remain uncertain. However, some tropical-cyclone tornado threat
    could evolve across parts of the Florida Peninsula and Keys, mainly
    into tonight.

    ...Eastern Washington/northern Idaho/northwest Montana...
    While buoyancy is expected to remain quite weak, relatively steep
    mid-level lapse rates will support thunderstorm potential late this
    afternoon through early evening from eastern Washington into
    northern Idaho and northwest Montana, in advance of the approaching
    shortwave trough. Most guidance suggests that instability will
    remain too weak for an organized severe threat, although rather
    strong deep-layer flow/shear could support a strong storm or two
    with locally gusty winds and small hail. Subsequent outlooks will
    reevaluate the possibility of introducing low severe probabilities.

    ...Upper Ohio Valley to the Lower Great Lakes...
    Weak to locally moderate buoyancy may develop later today from parts
    of the upper Ohio Valley into the lower Great Lakes region, between
    a weakening cold front approaching from the west, and a slow-moving
    warm front draped from central Pennsylvania into western New York.
    Moderate southwesterly midlevel flow will support effective shear of
    35-45 kt, sufficient for storm organization. However, with
    persistent cloud cover and mid-level lapse rates expected to remain
    rather weak, storm intensity and any attendant severe threat could
    be relatively limited. Confidence in sufficient destabilization
    remains too low to add severe probabilities.

    ..Guyer/Broyles.. 09/25/2024
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Sep 25 20:22:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 260101
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 260059

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0759 PM CDT Wed Sep 25 2024

    Valid 260100Z - 261200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
    SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS INTO PARTS OF THE SOUTHEAST AND FLORIDA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe storms are possible this evening from the
    southern Appalachians into parts of the Southeast. Some tornado
    threat may develop later tonight over Florida, in association with
    Hurricane Helene.

    ...Florida...
    Hurricane Helene is forecast to intensify and move north to
    north-northeastward across the southeast Gulf of Mexico tonight; see
    NHC forecasts/advisories for more information. Helene's large wind
    field will continue to overspread the Florida Peninsula and Keys
    tonight, with low-level shear/SRH becoming increasingly favorable
    for low-topped supercells with a potential tornado threat.
    Low-topped supercell potential prior to 12Z Thursday morning remains
    uncertain, with inland instability expected to remain relatively
    limited. Outer rain bands could begin to affect the western
    Peninsula later tonight, while convection may persist near a
    convergence zone near the east coast.

    ...Southern Appalachians vicinity into parts of the Southeast...
    Widespread precipitation is ongoing this evening within a corridor
    from the FL Panhandle into western NC/VA, but weak to locally
    moderate buoyancy persists east of this band, with regional VWPs and
    the 00Z RNK sounding depicting vertically veering wind profiles
    favorable for organized convection. Generally weak low/midlevel
    lapse rates will tend to limit storm intensity, but marginal
    supercell potential may persist through the evening, with a threat
    of isolated damaging gusts and possibly a tornado.

    ...Northern ID/northeast WA/northwest MT...
    While low-level moisture is limited, steep lapse rates and ascent
    attendant to an approaching mid/upper-level shortwave trough are
    supporting a high-based storm cluster currently moving across the ID
    Panhandle. This cluster has a history of 60-65 mph gusts, and will
    move across northwest MT early this evening, with a continued threat
    of strong to locally severe gusts.

    ..Dean.. 09/26/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Sep 28 09:00:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 281240
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 281238

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0738 AM CDT Sat Sep 28 2024

    Valid 281300Z - 291200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    The mid/upper-level pattern features mean ridging over the West and
    troughing in the East. The pattern is anchored by a large, nearly
    stacked cyclone -- resulting from the combination of an antecedent
    midlatitude low with the post-tropical remnants of Helene. The
    cyclone should remain centered over the lower Ohio Valley region, drifting/wobbling erratically eastward over northern KY through the
    period, while continuing to fill. The strongest associated mid/
    upper-level winds should remain mostly behind a low-level frontal
    zone extending from the northern Gulf across northern FL to the
    coastal Carolinas. South of the boundary across parts of peninsular
    FL, sufficient low-level moisture remains -- amid weak to negligible
    MLCINH and a deep troposphere with modest but sufficient lapse rates
    for convection. This will support scattered thunderstorms today
    over FL, with isolated thunderstorm potential over coastal areas of GA/Carolinas near the boundary. Dry midlevel air and lack of
    greater flow/shear should keep severe potential too isolated and
    disorganized for an outlook.

    Elsewhere, just east of the mean ridge and amid northerly flow very
    peripheral to the cyclone, a patch of marginally favorable low/
    middle-level moisture should combine with diurnal heating of higher
    terrain over parts of northern NM and southern CO. Scattered
    showers are expected this afternoon, with isolated to widely
    scattered convection extending above a mid/upper-level stable layer
    and into icing regions suitable for lightning generation. Isolated thunderstorms also are possible amid weak but sufficient low-level
    moisture and instability around parts of the eastern Great Lakes.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 09/28/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Sep 29 09:54:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 291230
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 291228

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0728 AM CDT Sun Sep 29 2024

    Valid 291300Z - 301200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not forecast for today.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    A highly amplified, slow-moving, mid/upper-level pattern will
    persist over much of the CONUS, south of a progressive northern
    stream near and north of the Canadian border. A norther-stream
    trough, nearly synoptic in scale, is apparent in moisture-channel
    imagery from central/southwestern BC to near-coastal WA/OR. This
    feature should amplify and move eastward across southwestern Canada
    and the interior Northwest through the period, reaching east- central/south-central SK, central MT and western WY by 12Z tomorrow.
    Weak, basal height falls and modest midlevel moisture will
    contribute to the potential for isolated, high-based convection over
    portions of UT, some of which may extend deep enough to generate
    lighting and strong gusts, into a deeply mixed boundary layer. Weak moisture/buoyancy (MLCAPE generally less than 100 J/kg) precludes an unconditional severe area.

    As the northern-stream trough moves away from CA, a formerly cut-off
    low now moving ashore into south-central CA will become cut off
    again, and drift southward/southwestward back toward the Pacific by
    the end of the period. Ridging will weaken greatly over the
    northern Plains and Upper Midwest ahead of the northern-stream
    trough, but will persist at its root over the Four Corners region.
    To its east, a longstanding, stacked, gradually filling cyclone will
    drift erratically eastward over the TN/KY border area, possibly
    devolving into an open-wave trough by the end of the period.
    Associated convection to its east will encounter a relatively warm/
    stable layer in mid/upper levels, limiting but not entirely
    suppressing potential for convection to reach into icing layers
    suitable for lightning. As such, isolated thunder will be possible
    from the central Appalachians to the Tidewater. Although warm
    midlevels will extend southward to most of FL, rich boundary-layer moisture/theta-e south of a quasistationary frontal zone over
    northern FL will support sporadic thunderstorm potential, mainly
    from midday through early evening.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 09/29/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Sep 30 09:18:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 301239
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 301237

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0737 AM CDT Mon Sep 30 2024

    Valid 301300Z - 011200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today, though a few strong
    storms may affect central/eastern North Carolina.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    The main belt of mid/upper-level, midlatitude westerlies will
    continue to traverse the northwestern/north-central CONUS and central/southwestern Canada, buckled cyclonically around a prominent
    synoptic trough now located from eastern SK to central MT and
    western WY. This trough should phase with another now over central
    mainland Arctic Canada by the end of the period, resulting in a
    500-mb low over southeastern Nunavut, with trough trailing over
    western Hudson Bay, northwesternmost ON, MN, and IA.

    Strongly difluent flow aloft will take shape southeast of the
    trough, across the Mississippi Valley, the Great Lakes from
    Michigan/Huron on down, the Ohio Valley, and much of the
    Appalachians. As that occurs, a longstanding, filling, weakening
    low now over southwestern WV will devolve today to an open-wave
    trough, losing amplitude rapidly and drifting eastward over the
    central Appalachians through the period. Part of a basal shortwave trough/vorticity lobe -- now apparent in moisture-channel imagery
    over eastern TN -- will eject eastward across northern NC and
    southern VA from this afternoon through tonight.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a quasistationary front across
    northern SC to just south of the southern Outer Banks, extending
    from a triple-point low near CAE. This boundary should shift
    northward over central/eastern NC through the day. Meanwhile, a
    cold front -- related to the strong northern-stream trough -- was
    drawn from central/southern MB across southern ND, central SD,
    northwestern NE, and southern WY. This front should sweep across
    most of the Great Plains and upper Mississippi Valley through the
    period, reaching northern Lower MI, IL, southwestern MO, southern
    OK, and the TX South Plains by 12Z.

    ...Central/eastern NC...
    Widely scattered showers and thunderstorms are expected to develop
    this afternoon over the Piedmont and coastal plain, in an
    environment characterized by rich boundary-layer moisture (surface
    dewpoints commonly in upper 60 to mid 70s F) very weak ambient
    MLCINH easily removed by diurnal heating, but weak mid/upper-level
    lapse rates. This will result in 500-1200 J/kg MLCAPE over most of
    the area from he Piedmont to the Sounds, beneath a belt of
    sufficiently strong mid/upper flow to yield around 35-45-kt
    effective-shear magnitudes.

    Low-level hodographs over central/eastern NC this afternoon, from
    model forecast soundings, reasonably show curvature near the frontal
    zone, but with weak speeds in the lowest couple km that
    substantially limit SRH and vector shear. However, above 1 km,
    hodographs are somewhat long and straight, suggesting the potential
    for low-end supercells amidst the mode common multicellular modes.
    At this time, forecast shear appears too weak to support an
    unconditional tornado-threat area, but the scenario will be
    monitored for any mesoscale enhancement to shear (especially along
    boundaries) that may introduce such a risk. The gust threat appears
    subsevere at this time, though localized gusts approaching severe
    limits cannot be ruled out.

    ..Edwards/Broyles.. 09/30/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Oct 1 09:28:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 011227
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 011225

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0725 AM CDT Tue Oct 01 2024

    Valid 011300Z - 021200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, the main belt of westerlies is expected to
    remain near the Canadian border through the period, extending across
    more of the Great Lakes with time. That will occur as a synoptic-
    scale trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery from a low over
    westernmost parts of Hudson Bay across northwestern ON to the upper
    Mississippi Valley -- ejects northeastward over northern ON, and
    James and Hudson Bays, through the period. This stronger flow will
    remain well poleward of thunder potential today near a weakening/
    ejecting trough over the Tidewater region, south of a weak front
    over FL, and under or south of a weakening synoptic ridge over parts
    of CO/NM/AZ. Vertical shear and lapse rates aloft will be too weak
    in any of those areas to support organized severe potential.
    Locally strong gusts may accompany the high-based convection in AZ,
    with a deep/well-mixed subcloud layer, but only modest (5-15 kt)
    midlevel easterlies. A cold front sweeping across the Great Lakes,
    Ohio Valley, lower Mississippi Valley, and southern Plains, should
    encounter a marginally moist/unstable airmass for isolated thunder,
    within a band of convection over parts of the eastern Great Lakes.

    ..Edwards/Dean.. 10/01/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Oct 2 08:09:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 021235
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 021233

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0733 AM CDT Wed Oct 02 2024

    Valid 021300Z - 031200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected through tonight.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    The mid/upper-level pattern will be characterized by a belt of
    gently difluent, west-northwesterly northern-stream flow from the
    Pacific Northwest to the Great Lakes. This flow will weaken
    considerably and become much more difluent over the Ohio Valley, mid Mississippi Valley and Appalachians. The strongest flow aloft will
    be well-displaced from any substantial low-level moisture/theta-e,
    which is expected to remain along and south of a quasistationary
    front draped across north-central FL.

    Scattered daytime thunderstorms are expected to form along FL East
    and West Coast sea breezes, shifting inland as the boundaries
    (including outflows from the first generation of convection nearer
    the coasts) merge. Weak deep-layer flow and lack of shear will
    preclude organized severe potential. Localized strong gusts are
    possible in wet downbursts with enhanced lift along colliding
    boundaries, 1500-2000 J/kg preconvective MLCAPE, and rich inflow-
    layer moisture (surface dewpoints 70s F and PW commonly over 2
    inches). Elsewhere, very isolated/brief lightning may occur near
    the AZ/NM border and Mogollon Rim, but with barely enough moisture
    for convection, coverage is expected to be too small for a 10% area.

    ..Edwards/Dean.. 10/02/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Oct 3 09:27:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 031238
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 031236

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0736 AM CDT Thu Oct 03 2024

    Valid 031300Z - 041200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected through tonight.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    In mid/upper levels, a nearly zonal northern-stream pattern will
    prevail either side of the Canadian border, from the Pacific Coast
    across the Great Lakes to New England. The main feature perturbing
    that belt for this period will be a strongly positively tilted
    trough, currently over south-central parts of SK/MB northwestward to north-central AB. This trough will amplify and pivot southeastward/
    eastward across northern ON, northern MN and Lake Superior into
    tonight. By 12Z, the trailing part of this feature should be moving
    across the western U.P of MI, northern WI and central MN. A weak
    shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery over eastern
    OR and southwestern ID -- may reach the Quad Cities area of IA/IL by
    12Z tomorrow and phase with the larger trough.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a frontal wave low over
    northwestern KS, with warm front eastward to west-central/
    northwestern MO, and cold front across east-central CO. The low
    should migrate eastward through the period, reaching north-central/ northwestern MO by 12Z, with cold front trailing across southern KS,
    western OK and the TX South Plains, and warm front extending to
    east-central MO and southern IL.

    ...Mid/upper Mississippi Valley...
    Capping and meager boundary-layer moisture will inhibit convective
    potential today along/ahead of the front and low. However, an area
    of isolated to scattered elevated thunderstorms is possible
    overnight northeast of the low, supported by large-scale DCVA/lift
    ahead of the ejecting shortwave trough, and warm advection/
    isentropic lift to LFC of increasingly moist parcels above the
    surface. Activity should be rooted in the 700-800-mb layer, amidst
    MUCAPE roughly 500-800 J/kg, and around 35-40 kt effective-shear
    magnitudes. This may support small hail, especially early in the
    convective cycle when cells are still at least somewhat discrete.
    Modes should become messier and precip more expansive fairly
    quickly, as inflow-layer moisture and MUCAPE only slowly increase in
    the immediate upstream airmass to the southwest. The overall severe
    threat appears too limited and conditional for an outlook at this
    time.

    ..Edwards/Dean.. 10/03/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Oct 4 09:42:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 041250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 041248

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0748 AM CDT Fri Oct 04 2024

    Valid 041300Z - 051200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today and tonight.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    Elevated thunderstorms ongoing across west-central IL should
    continue for a few more hours this morning, aided by modest warm
    advection in the 850-700 mb layer and ascent on the southern
    periphery of a shortwave trough over the Upper Midwest. With a
    mainly linear mode now dominant, severe hail appears unlikely. This
    activity should gradually diminish in coverage and intensity through
    the remainder of the morning.

    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms will be possible today from
    parts of the Mid-Atlantic southwestward to the Gulf Coast/Southeast.
    Weak flow and related deep-layer shear will limit the overall severe
    threat with any convection that develops across these regions. A
    pronounced shortwave trough will move across the Pacific Northwest
    and northern Rockies/Plains through tonight. While large-scale
    forcing and mid-level flow associated with the upper trough passage
    will be strong, thunderstorm coverage is expected to remain sparse
    due to a rather dry airmass present across these areas.

    ..Gleason/Dean.. 10/04/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Oct 5 07:43:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 050600
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 050559

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CDT Sat Oct 05 2024

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    NORTHERN WISCONSIN AND ADJACENT PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN UPPER MICHIGAN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms may produce hail and gusty
    winds across parts of northern Wisconsin into the Upper Peninsula of
    Michigan this evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    Flow aloft will remain generally weak over the southern half of the
    U.S. today, where upper ridging will prevail. This ridging will --
    however -- be interrupted by an elongated/weak trough comprised of
    several smaller-scale vorticity maxima, extending from the
    southeastern states west-southwestward across the Gulf of Mexico to
    northern Mexico.

    Farther north, a faster belt of westerly flow will prevail, with an embedded/potent short-wave trough forecast to move across the
    northern Plains through the day, and then the Upper Mississippi
    Valley/Upper Great Lakes region overnight.

    Accompanying the upper trough, a surface low is forecast to advance east-northeastward across the Canadian Prairie, and into
    northwestern Ontario through latter stages of the period. A
    trailing cold front will shift eastward across the north-central
    U.S. and southward across the Plains -- reaching a position from
    Lower Michigan southwestward to the Ozarks, and then
    west-southwestward across Oklahoma to Far West Texas by Sunday
    morning.

    ...Central and northern Wisconsin north to Lake Michigan...
    As a cold front advances across the Upper Midwest area through the
    afternoon, a capped boundary layer should hinder convective
    development. As the boundary crosses the Upper Mississippi Valley
    around sunset, and the upper system advances, the combination of
    strong ascent and steepening lapse rates aloft should permit
    eventual development of showers and scattered thunderstorms.

    With a rather dry -- and nocturnally stabilizing -- boundary layer
    expected ahead of the front, convection should evolve within a
    slightly elevated but amply unstable layer. Strong southwesterly
    flow aloft will provide sufficient shear for organized/rotating
    storms -- and thus risk for hail is evident. Additionally, the
    strongly dynamic upper system/strong mass response suggests
    potential for downward transport of strong flow aloft -- potentially manifesting as severe-caliber wind gusts at the surface. Given the
    overall severe risk, will introduce a small SLGT/level 2 risk across
    this area, with the primary risk expected to be hail. However,
    potential for strong/gusty surface winds may also -- depending upon boundary-layer evolution -- warrant upgrade to 15% probability in
    later outlooks.

    ..Goss/Squitieri.. 10/05/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Oct 6 10:00:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 061246
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 061245

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0745 AM CDT Sun Oct 06 2024

    Valid 061300Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    EASTERN OHIO...WESTERN NEW YORK/PENNSYLVANIA...AND THE NORTHERN WEST
    VIRGINIA PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms should occur this
    afternoon and evening from parts of eastern Ohio into western New York/Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and western Maryland. Damaging
    winds and hail should be the main threats.

    ...Upper Ohio Valley into the Lower Great Lakes and Central
    Appalachians...
    A vigorous upper trough over Ontario and the Great Lakes will
    continue advancing eastward across parts of Quebec and the Northeast
    today. A related surface low over northern Ontario this morning will
    slowly occlude through the day, while a cold front extending across
    the upper Great Lakes and Midwest advances southeastward over the OH
    Valley and western Mid-Atlantic by this evening. A narrow corridor
    of modest low-level moisture will return northward ahead of this
    cold front, with surface dewpoints generally in the 50s to perhaps
    low 60s. Modestly steepened mid-level lapse rates overspreading the
    warm sector through the day, in tandem with diurnal heating, should
    support around 500-1500 J/kg of MLCAPE by mid afternoon. A belt of
    enhanced (50-60 kt) mid-level flow attendant to the upper trough
    will move over parts of the upper OH Valley, lower Great Lakes, and
    western Mid-Atlantic this afternoon and evening. This strong flow
    aloft will contribute to substantial deep-layer shear (around 35-50
    kt) and organized severe convection.

    Current expectations are for robust thunderstorms to develop along
    the cold front in eastern OH/western NY and northwest PA around
    20-22Z. This initial development may be supercellular given the
    strong deep-layer shear, with an associated threat for severe hail
    given favorable lapse rates aloft. A brief tornado or two may also
    occur. But, a fairly quick transition to a line is anticipated given
    the linear forcing of the cold front. As this occurs, the threat for
    scattered damaging winds should quickly increase as convection moves east-southeastward from eastern OH across western NY/PA and into
    WV/western MD. Given the fairly narrow warm sector, this activity
    should weaken by mid evening with the loss of daytime heating, and
    as it encounters a much less unstable airmass in the central
    Appalachians.

    ..Gleason/Dean.. 10/06/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Oct 7 09:52:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 071236
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 071234

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0734 AM CDT Mon Oct 07 2024

    Valid 071300Z - 081200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms appear unlikely today and tonight.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    Greatest thunderstorm potential today should exist across south FL
    and the Keys, along and south of a ill-defined front draped across
    the FL Peninsula. A weak surface low is present over the eastern
    Gulf of Mexico this morning, and it is forecast to redevelop off the
    southeast FL Coast by this evening. Some modest enhancement to the
    low-level flow should occur through the day over south FL and
    vicinity, but poor lapse rates should hinder robust updrafts even as
    daytime heating occurs. While occasional strong/gusty winds appear
    possible with any convection that can develop in this regime, the
    overall severe threat appears too limited to include any
    probabilities at this time.

    Otherwise, thunderstorms will continue moving eastward across parts
    of southern New England this morning ahead of a front, with
    additional isolated development possible later this afternoon across
    parts of the Carolinas. Occasional lightning flashes may also be
    noted across parts of the Great Lakes, with low-topped convection
    possible beneath cold mid-level temperatures associated with an
    upper trough over eastern Canada. Finally, isolated high-based
    thunderstorms may develop along parts of the Sierra into NV this
    afternoon as a weak shortwave trough moves eastward.

    ..Gleason/Dean.. 10/07/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Oct 8 07:44:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 081232
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 081230

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0730 AM CDT Tue Oct 08 2024

    Valid 081300Z - 091200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL/SOUTH FLORIDA AND THE KEYS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    An isolated tornado threat associated with Hurricane Milton may
    develop late tonight into early Wednesday morning across parts of
    the central/southern Florida Peninsula and the Keys.

    ...Florida...
    Ongoing thunderstorm activity this morning over south FL and
    vicinity along/near a weak baroclinic zone should generally remain
    sub-severe through the day, with modest low/mid-level flow limiting
    deep-layer shear. The latest NHC forecast shows Hurricane Milton
    moving into the southeastern Gulf of Mexico late tonight into early
    Wednesday morning. Milton's wind field is also forecast to expand
    through the period, with enhanced low-level southerlies expected to
    gradually overspread parts of the Keys and south FL late tonight
    (mainly after 06Z). A corresponding slow increase in low-level shear
    is anticipated in this time frame, which should support some
    potential for updraft rotation and isolated tornado/waterspout
    threat with any cells in outer rain bands on the eastern periphery
    of Milton's center. Still, there is a fair amount of guidance which
    shows that any outer rain bands that do manage to form late tonight
    into early Wednesday morning may tend to remain offshore from the
    Keys and southwest FL Coast. Even with this uncertainty, some threat
    for a couple of brief tornadoes may exist across these areas, mainly
    in the 06-12Z time frame. The threat for a few tornadoes is expected
    to increase into the Day 2/Wednesday time frame (after 12Z/8 AM EDT
    Wednesday morning) across a greater portion of central/south FL and
    the Keys as Milton approaches the FL Gulf Coast.

    ..Gleason/Jewell.. 10/08/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Oct 10 08:03:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 101224
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 101222

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0722 AM CDT Thu Oct 10 2024

    Valid 101300Z - 111200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today and tonight.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    With Milton having moved east and off the FL Atlantic Coast,
    thunderstorms are not expected over FL through the rest of the
    period. Otherwise, isolated convection that may produce occasional
    lighting appears possible across parts of the southern Plains and
    southeast AZ/southern NM. The activity over the southern Plains will
    largely be tied to modest low-level warm advection and weak ascent
    associated with a shortwave trough moving southward from NE/KS.
    Instability is forecast to remain weak, and severe thunderstorms are
    not expected.

    ..Gleason/Jewell.. 10/10/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Oct 11 08:27:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 111245
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 111244

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0744 AM CDT Fri Oct 11 2024

    Valid 111300Z - 121200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorm potential will remain low today.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    Isolated showers and thunderstorms producing occasional lighting may
    persist for a few more hours across eastern/southern OK and vicinity
    before diminishing as modest warm advection with a
    south-southwesterly low-level jet weakens later this morning.

    A cold front will advance southeastward across the Upper Midwest and
    Great Lakes through the period. While low-level moisture and related instability are expected to remain quite limited ahead of the front,
    cool mid-level temperatures and strong ascent with the upper trough
    may support isolated thunderstorms across parts of northern MI this
    afternoon and evening. Some of this activity could produce
    occasional gusty winds given strengthening low/mid-level flow
    through the day, but the overall severe threat still appears low.
    The front and upper trough will continue across the Northeast
    tonight. But, instability is forecast to remain minimal, which
    should hinder thunderstorm potential.

    Convection should also develop this afternoon across parts of south
    FL and the Keys. Even with poor mid-level lapse rates and warm
    temperatures aloft, some of this activity could produce isolated
    lightning flashes.

    A shortwave trough will move across the northern CA/western OR
    vicinity this evening and overnight. Thunderstorms may occur
    offshore, but potential for lightning over land appears limited.

    ..Gleason/Jewell.. 10/11/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Oct 12 08:57:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 121236
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 121234

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0734 AM CDT Sat Oct 12 2024

    Valid 121300Z - 131200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms appear unlikely today and tonight.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    Within broad upper troughing over central/eastern Canada, an
    embedded mid-level perturbation will gradually amplify as it moves southeastward over the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes through the
    period. At the surface, a weak low will gradually develop eastward
    across the Midwest and eventually reach the northwest OH vicinity by
    late tonight. An associated cold front will continue moving
    southward across the central Plains and upper/mid MS Valley, while a
    warm front extending eastward from the surface low remains across
    northern IL/IN/OH through this evening.

    Limited low-level moisture and weak large-scale forcing across the
    warm sector suggest that surface-based thunderstorm potential should
    remain low today across the Great Lakes/OH Valley region. However,
    most guidance does show some elevated convection developing by late afternoon/early evening across southern Lower MI and vicinity.
    00/06Z NAM runs show much more instability present compared to most
    other guidance, with a general consensus that around 500 J/kg of
    MUCAPE may exist when convection initiates.

    Even with strong shear in the cloud-bearing layer, the weak
    instability forecast should tend to limit the threat for severe hail
    with any thunderstorms that can form over Lower MI and subsequently
    spread east-southeastward across northern IN/OH this evening and
    overnight. Still, small hail may occur with the more robust cores.
    Occasional gusty winds may also be able to reach the surface given
    the forecast strength of the low/mid-level flow, presence of a
    somewhat dry sub-cloud layer/weak DCAPE, and relatively shallow
    near-surface stable layer.

    ..Gleason/Jewell.. 10/12/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Oct 13 08:56:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 131247
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 131246

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0746 AM CDT Sun Oct 13 2024

    Valid 131300Z - 141200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL/SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong to locally severe thunderstorms are possible, mainly this
    evening, across parts of the central/southern Appalachians and
    Tennessee Valley. Isolated wind damage and marginally severe hail
    should be the main threats.

    ...Central/Southern Appalachians into the Tennessee Valley...
    Ongoing elevated thunderstorms across northeast OH and western PA
    should continue eastward this morning in tandem with an enhanced west-southwesterly low-level jet. This activity is expected to
    outpace low-level moisture return and related destabilization today,
    and eventually weaken. But in the short term, small hail remains
    possible. Meanwhile, a vigorous shortwave trough over the Upper
    Midwest will dig southeastward through the base of a large-scale
    mid/upper trough, and yield amplification of this trough southward
    across the Great Lakes through Monday morning. Ascent preceding this
    shortwave trough will overspread parts of the central/southern
    Appalachians into the TN Valley, mainly during the evening and
    overnight.

    A leading and weaker mid-level perturbation will encourage the
    primary surface low to develop eastward across PA this afternoon
    through early evening. A surface cold front will extend southwest of
    this low into the TN Valley. Convective development along the front
    appears likely to be delayed until early evening, as the
    strengthening large-scale ascent aids in increasing low-level
    convergence along the front amid generally veered flow within the
    warm sector. Surface dew points should largely range from the mid
    50s in WV to a narrow corridor of low 60s in TN, yielding a plume of
    MLCAPE around 500-1500 J/kg amid initially steep mid-level lapse
    rates.

    Recent guidance still differs regarding storm coverage along/ahead
    of the cold front this evening, from almost none to scattered. This
    is perhaps in response to the ascent with the shortwave trough
    strengthening after peak diurnal heating. The strongest 700 mb
    westerlies (around 40-55 kt) should be confined to mainly northeast
    of the TN Valley. Forecast hodographs above this level appear small,
    owing to weakening winds with height as fast mid/upper flow lags to
    the north-northwest. This suggests supercell structures may struggle
    to develop/be sustained. But the strong 700 mb flow could support
    localized damaging winds in any multicell clusters that can form.
    Farther southwest, somewhat greater buoyancy could foster small to
    marginally severe hail as well. The overall severe threat appears
    likely to remain rather isolated, and no changes have been made to
    the Marginal Risk with this update.

    ..Gleason/Jewell.. 10/13/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Oct 14 08:37:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 141233
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 141232

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0732 AM CDT Mon Oct 14 2024

    Valid 141300Z - 151200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today and tonight.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    Isolated thunderstorms will remain possible this morning and
    afternoon across parts of New England as an upper trough continues
    eastward. Other low-topped convection will be possible today beneath
    the upper trough over portions of the Great Lakes, with seasonably
    warm lake temperatures and cold mid-level temperatures supporting
    modest buoyancy and occasional lightning flashes. Finally, isolated thunderstorms may occur this afternoon and evening across parts of
    UT and northern AZ into western CO, as a weak shortwave trough moves
    slowly southeastward over the Great Basin and Southwest. Weak
    instability across all these regions should greatly limit potential
    for severe thunderstorms through the period.

    ..Gleason/Jewell.. 10/14/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Oct 15 09:08:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 151242
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 151241

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0741 AM CDT Tue Oct 15 2024

    Valid 151300Z - 161200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected through tonight.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    A highly amplified mid/upper-level pattern will persist over the
    CONUS, characterized by an elongated cyclone over the Great Lakes
    and Northeast, with a primary center initially over the lower St.
    Lawrence River region. The associated 500-mb low should drift
    erratically near its present location for most of today, then move northeastward toward the easternmost extension of QC overnight. A
    strong, basal trough was evident in moisture-channel imagery over
    the Lower Great Lakes and southern Upper Great Lakes region,
    westward across the upper Mississippi Valley. This trough will
    pivot southeastward through the period, then by 12Z tomorrow, extend
    from offshore of New England across VA, the western Carolinas,
    northern GA, to central MS and the Arklatex region. Associated cold
    air aloft, steep low/middle-level lapse rates (aided by
    boundary-layer flow off the relatively warm lakes) and weak moisture
    will foster isolated thunderstorm potential south of portions of
    Lakes Erie and Michigan today.

    Elsewhere, thunderstorms have persisted all night in a residual, quasistationary, convectively reinforced baroclinic zone draped
    across the Bahamas and southern/western Straits of FL. This thunder
    potential should persist episodically through the period, with some
    inland development possible this afternoon across the Everglades and
    perhaps adjoining southern parts of metro South FL. A stronger
    boundary, moving southward through northern/central FL as a cold
    front, may support isolated thunder near that part of the FL East
    Coast today, amid modest moisture/lift. In the Four Corners region,
    isolated to widely scattered, high-based thunderstorms are expected
    this afternoon as heating/mixing reduce generally 30s F surface
    dewpoints into the 20s, but still just enough moisture to support
    weak (generally less than 200 J/kg) peak MLCAPE.

    ..Edwards.. 10/15/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Oct 16 09:26:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 161214
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 161213

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0713 AM CDT Wed Oct 16 2024

    Valid 161300Z - 171200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Organized severe thunderstorms are not currently expected on Wednesday.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    In mid/upper levels, a highly amplified, yet still quite progressive
    pattern will persist through the period over the CONUS. A leading
    synoptic trough was initially positioned from a low near Anticosti
    Island in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, southwestward across New
    England, the near-coastal Mid-Atlantic region, and the southern
    Appalachians, to parts of AR and eastern OK. The southern
    Appalachian part of the trough is expected to consolidate into a
    closed cyclone as it moves eastward across the Carolinas and VA,
    with a well-defined 500-mb low expected over the Outer Banks
    vicinity by 12Z tomorrow. However, associated surface frontal-wave cyclogenesis and related elevated thunder potential in the wrapping
    conveyor both should remain offshore. The trailing cold front --
    analyzed at 11Z from central FL across the north-central Gulf to
    near CRP and across south-central TX -- will support isolated
    thunderstorm potential today over parts of south FL and deep south
    TX before moving south of both areas.

    Meanwhile, a synoptic-scale trough -- with several embedded small shortwaves/vorticity lobes -- is apparent in moisture-channel
    imagery from the AK Panhandle south-southeastward, just offshore of
    and parallel to the CONUS Pacific Coast. As these features move
    ashore today, preceded by several other vorticity lobes, height
    falls and colder air aloft will spread inland, steepening midlevel
    lapse rates atop marginal low/middle-level moisture over parts of
    the Pacific Northwest and a broad area of the Intermountain West/
    Great Basin, with low-level warm advection and diabatic heating also
    aiding instability in the interior swath. Isolated thunderstorms
    should result.

    ..Edwards/Goss.. 10/16/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Oct 17 08:58:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 171233
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 171231

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0731 AM CDT Thu Oct 17 2024

    Valid 171300Z - 181200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Organized severe thunderstorms are not expected through tonight.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a highly amplified yet progressive pattern will
    persist through the period, as a strong, synoptic-scale ridge shifts
    eastward over the Great Lakes, and the Mississippi/Ohio/Tennessee
    Valleys. Upstream, a strong trough now near the coastal Pacific
    Northwest will dig southeastward across interior parts of the West
    Coast States today into this evening, and much of the western Great Basin/Intermountain regions overnight. By 12Z, a 500-mb low should
    form over eastern NV, along a trough extending from the northern
    Rockies to the lower Colorado River Valley. As that occurs, a
    weaker, shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery near
    the NV/UT and CA/AZ borders, should eject northeastward over the
    central Rockies and central/northern High Plains, while weakening.
    By the end of the period, broadly cyclonic flow will cover most of
    the western CONUS.

    Ahead of the strengthening main (Pacific Northwest) trough, height
    falls and areas of DCVA/cooling aloft are forecast. Those will
    overlie a southeastward-surging low-level cold front across the
    Intermountain region, and support isolated to widely scattered
    thunderstorm potential over a vast swath of the West, either side of
    the front. Meager but sufficient low/midlevel moisture -- mostly
    with distant/indirect origins in the subtropical gulfs either side
    of northern Mexico -- will support this convection. Strong gusts
    may accompany some of the afternoon and early evening activity
    along/ahead of the cold front across northern parts of NV/UT, amidst strengthening deep shear. However, overall moisture/buoyancy appear
    too meager to outline an unconditional severe area at this time.

    ..Edwards/Goss.. 10/17/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Oct 18 08:42:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 181253
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 181251

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0751 AM CDT Fri Oct 18 2024

    Valid 181300Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN ROCKIES AND SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe hail, damaging gusts and a tornado or two will be
    possible this afternoon and evening over parts of the southern
    Rockies and southern High Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a heretofore progressive and high-amplitude
    pattern will slow down temporarily, across the western half of the
    CONUS. A strong trough is apparent in moisture-channel imagery from
    the northern Rockies south-southwestward across the Great Basin to
    near the lower Colorado River Valley. A 500-mb low is forming along
    the trough in NV -- and will deepen through the period while
    anchoring an increasingly pronounced and slower-moving cyclone. By
    00Z, the low should be over central AZ between FLG-PHX, then wobble
    erratically over the same area through the remainder of the period.

    At 11Z, the surface analysis showed a cold front from northwestern
    MN, through a low between PIR-HON, then southwestward to another low
    near AKO and into central CO. This front should shift slowly
    southeastward through the period, to a position from northeastern MN
    to northeastern NE to near RTN by 12Z. There it should connect to
    another cold front now analyzed from a surface low over southeastern
    UT, southwestward across northern/southwestern AZ. The western
    front should move east-southeastward into central NM tonight, then
    decelerate in step with the associated mid/upper cyclone. A vast,
    continental anticyclone surrounds a high analyzed over western PA,
    and covers most of the CONUS from the Mississippi Valley eastward,
    with ridging southwestward across south TX. The high should remain
    over the interior Mid-Atlantic region through the period, while
    ridging persists southwestward through south TX.

    ...Southern Rockies/High Plains region...
    A band of convection -- now producing considerable lighting from
    southeastern UT into northern AZ -- should persist through much of
    the period and shift eastward-southeastward, reaching from the San
    Juan Mountains of southwestern CO across much of western NM between
    00Z-03Z this evening. While isolated strong gusts or small hail may
    occur with this partly frontally forced activity, very limited
    buoyancy should preclude an organized severe threat. Farther east,
    isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms should form in the warm
    sector this afternoon, over and near the ranges from the Guadalupe
    Mountains northward to the east side of the Sangre de Cristos.
    Convection also may develop over adjoining Plains, given diurnal
    heating in a weakly capped setting that lacks an antecedent EML.
    Some of this activity may become supercellular amidst increasing
    deep shear, with isolated damaging gusts and severe hail possible.
    Tornado potential still appears marginal.

    A host of mostly offsetting factors continue in the forecast
    environment in and near the outlook area today, keeping the
    unconditional severe probabilities in the marginal range for this
    cycle. Thermodynamically, the immobility and intensity of the
    low-level anticyclone over the East will limit favorable moisture to
    a narrow, only partially Gulf-modified return-flow corridor through
    the period. 50s F surface dewpoints -- already common at lower
    elevations in eastern NM, should mix into the 40s F where diurnal
    heating is most sustained today over the Plains. Upper 40s to lower
    50s dewpoints may persist farther northwest under more persistently
    cloudy areas, leading to greater RH and lower LCL, but amid cooler
    surface temperatures. However, at higher elevations, this still may
    support surface-based effective-inflow parcels. With the coolest
    midlevel temperatures and strongest DCVA aloft lagging closer to the
    cyclone core, and mostly behind the low-level cold front, poor
    midlevel lapse rates will limit buoyancy over the region. This, and
    lack of richer moisture, should keep MLCAPE generally in the 300-800
    J/kg range -- and highly variable depending on elevation and patchy heating/mixing.

    Vertical shear amid southwest flow aloft will strengthen through the
    evening along/ahead of the western frontal zone as the cyclone digs
    into AZ. Enlarging hodographs and low-level shear will accompany a strengthening low-level jet and greater moisture this evening and
    tonight over much of eastern NM, along/ahead of the slow-moving
    frontal convective arc. However, this also will coincide with
    nocturnal boundary-layer stabilization and likely an increasingly
    messy convective mode. A window of tornado potential may exist from
    late afternoon into early evening during that transition, especially
    at higher elevations of the Plains/mesa country, but still appears
    too isolated and conditional for more than marginal probabilities.

    ..Edwards/Goss.. 10/18/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Oct 21 08:58:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 211247
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 211246

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0746 AM CDT Mon Oct 21 2024

    Valid 211300Z - 221200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS LATER THIS
    AFTERNOON/EVENING FOR CENTRAL KS INTO SOUTH CENTRAL NE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few severe thunderstorms with large hail are possible across parts
    of central Kansas into south central Nebraska, mainly from mid
    afternoon to early evening.

    ...Central Plains through this evening...
    A midlevel low over CO this morning will continue to evolve into an
    open wave while progressing eastward over KS/NE today to IA/MO
    overnight. Largely elevated convection is ongoing this morning in a
    broken band from the TX Panhandle into western KS, in the zone of
    ascent preceding the midlevel trough. Isolated, marginally severe
    hail and gusty outflow winds will be possible this morning with
    these storms, given MUCAPE up to 1000 J/kg and midlevel lapse rates
    near 7.5 C/km. In the wake of the morning convection, a narrow
    corridor of low-level moisture (boundary-layer dewpoints in the 50s)
    and surface heating will precede the midlevel trough and an
    associated lee surface trough from the eastern TX Panhandle into
    western and central KS/NE.

    A few thunderstorms will be possible along/immediately east of the
    lee trough by mid-late afternoon this afternoon as convective
    inhibition diminishes with at least weak ascent. Forecast profiles
    suggest the potential for isolated supercells capable of producing
    large hail (1-1.75 inches in diameter), isolated strong outflow
    gusts of 50-60 mph, and potentially a tornado or two. The severe
    threat will peak late this afternoon before decreasing near/after
    sunset as the low levels begin to stabilize and the zone of ascent
    shifts east of the confined moist sector.

    ..Thompson/Goss.. 10/21/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Oct 22 08:40:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 221128
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 221126

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0626 AM CDT Tue Oct 22 2024

    Valid 221300Z - 231200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today through tonight.

    ...Synopsis...
    A midlevel shortwave trough over IA/MO will continue eastward toward
    Lower MI/IN/OH and lose amplitude, while phasing gradually with an
    upstream trough now over MT. Isolated, elevated thunderstorms will
    be possible this morning across the middle MS Valley in the zone of
    ascent. Weak buoyancy and ascent will come out of phase by later
    this afternoon into tonight, when the threat for thunderstorms will
    diminish. Farther north, weak convection and isolated lightning
    flashes may occur across northeast MN in a band of ascent and
    minimal buoyancy along a cold front this afternoon/evening.

    Elsewhere, lingering low-level moisture, a subtle midlevel trough,
    and surface heating over higher terrain could support isolated
    thunderstorms this afternoon over the Davis Mountains in southwest
    TX.

    ..Thompson/Goss.. 10/22/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Oct 23 08:21:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 231222
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 231221

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0721 AM CDT Wed Oct 23 2024

    Valid 231300Z - 241200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are unlikely through tonight.

    ...Upper OH Valley into western NY this evening...
    A midlevel shortwave trough over the upper MS Valley this morning
    will progress east-southeastward to NY/PA and the Mid-Atlantic by
    the end of the period. Ascent preceding the midlevel trough and an
    associated surface cold front could support some shallow convective
    showers late this afternoon/evening from northeast OH to western NY.
    However, marginal low-level moisture and minimal buoyancy suggest
    that thunderstorms are unlikely.

    ...Northern AR to central OK this afternoon...
    Boundary-layer dewpoints near 60 F and surface heating will drive
    surface-based buoyancy this afternoon along a slow-moving front from
    northern AR into central OK. Thermodynamic profiles suggest some
    potential for deep convection, but forcing for ascent will remain
    shallow/weak at best. Overall, thunderstorm potential appears too
    limited for an outlook area.

    ..Thompson/Goss.. 10/23/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Oct 24 09:02:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 241231
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 241230

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0730 AM CDT Thu Oct 24 2024

    Valid 241300Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS EVENING
    INTO EARLY TONIGHT FROM EASTERN KS TO NORTHERN MO AND IA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated large hail (1-1.75 inch diameter) and isolated strong gusts
    (50-60 mph) will be possible from eastern Kansas into northern
    Missouri and much of Iowa this evening into early tonight.

    ...Eastern KS/northern MO/IA this evening into tonight...
    A midlevel shortwave trough over western WY this morning will
    progress to the central Plains this evening and the mid MS Valley by
    early Friday. Downstream from this midlevel trough, lee
    cyclogenesis is expected across the central High Plains this
    afternoon, which will aid in northward advection of a partially
    modified Gulf air mass (boundary-layer dewpoints of 55-60 F).
    Strong surface heating/mixing across KS/OK will result in a narrow
    surface warm sector with moderate buoyancy (MLCAPE near 1000 J/kg)
    by mid-late afternoon across eastern KS. The eastern extent of the
    surface warm sector will be demarcated by a warm front into western
    MO.

    Surface-based thunderstorm development will be possible by roughly
    22-00z along a surface trough/cold front across eastern KS, with
    subsequent expansion of elevated convection farther northeast across
    northern MO/southern IA through early tonight in a zone of
    strengthening low-level warm advection. Isolated strong outflow
    gusts (50-60 mph) will be possible with the initial storms across
    eastern KS this evening in the zone of steeper low-level lapse
    rates. Steep midlevel lapse rates, moderate buoyancy, and
    sufficiently long/curved hodographs will support some potential for
    embedded supercells capable of producing isolated large hail (1-1.75
    inch diameter) into early tonight. The area from eastern KS to
    northwest MO was considered for a SLGT risk upgrade, and this area
    will be monitored closely in later outlook updates.

    ..Thompson/Goss.. 10/24/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Oct 25 10:02:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 251230
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 251228

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0728 AM CDT Fri Oct 25 2024

    Valid 251300Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today.

    ...Discussion...
    A modestly amplified/progressive large-scale pattern will persist
    over the CONUS, including the deamplification of an eastward-moving
    shortwave trough over the Midwest/Ohio Valley. A cold front will
    similarly continue east-southeastward across the Ohio
    Valley/Mid-South toward the Appalachians and Tennessee Valley
    through tonight. Widely scattered thunderstorms are ongoing this
    morning across the Ozarks near the cold front, and also
    northeastward into Indiana and Ohio to the north of a warm front
    across the Lower Ohio Valley. A modest increase in thunderstorm
    coverage should regionally occur into the afternoon, but weak/thin
    buoyancy and meager effective shear within the more unstable warm
    sector are expected to limit severe thunderstorm potential.

    ..Guyer/Goss.. 10/25/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Oct 25 15:13:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 251954
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 251952

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0252 PM CDT Fri Oct 25 2024

    Valid 252000Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected through tonight.

    ...20Z Update...
    Minor changes were made to the general thunderstorm forecast based
    on current observations and recent model guidance. See the previous
    discussion for additional details.

    ..Wendt.. 10/25/2024

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1100 AM CDT Fri Oct 25 2024/

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    A modestly amplified and progressive large-scale pattern will
    persist over the CONUS today, including the deamplification of an eastward-moving shortwave trough over the Midwest/OH Valley. A
    surface cold front will similarly continue east-southeastward across
    the OH Valley/Mid-South toward the Appalachians and TN Valley
    through tonight. Isolated thunderstorms should continue this
    afternoon across the Ozarks near the cold front, and also
    northeastward into IN/OH to the north of a warm front across the
    lower OH Valley. Weak/thin buoyancy and meager effective shear
    within the more unstable warm sector are expected to limit severe
    thunderstorm potential through the period. Occasional lightning
    flashes may also occur across parts of the U.P. in MI and adjacent
    Lake Superior this evening/tonight as cold mid-level temperatures
    associated with an upper trough support weak instability.

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Oct 26 07:25:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 260539
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 260537

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1237 AM CDT Sat Oct 26 2024

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Little thunderstorm activity is forecast across the contiguous
    states; however, an isolated weak thunderstorm cannot be ruled out
    near the ArkLaTex, and across the southern Appalachians.

    ...Discussion...

    Large-scale pattern remains seasonally tranquil with mean upper
    ridging holding across the Rockies and a broader trough noted across
    the eastern US. This flow regime ensures richer moisture/instability
    will remain suppressed across lower latitudes as northwesterly flow
    aloft dominates much of the country east of the Rockies.

    Deep northwesterly flow will encourage a surface high to settle
    across the Midwest and the leading edge of this air mass will extend
    into the southern Appalachians-mid South-Arklatex. Latest model
    guidance suggests a surface front will arc from western NC-northern MS-northeast TX by 18z. Boundary-layer heating will be prominent
    across the southern Arklatex and from northern AL into SC. As a
    result, weak buoyancy will develop in both of these regions. With
    higher PWs noted along this corridor, forecast soundings suggest
    some potential for lightning discharge in the deepest updrafts. Even
    so, convection is expected to remain rather sparse, and likely
    concentrated in the afternoon into early-evening hours.

    ..Darrow/Lyons.. 10/26/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Oct 27 15:05:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 271927
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 271926

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0226 PM CDT Sun Oct 27 2024

    Valid 272000Z - 281200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today and tonight.

    ...20Z Update...
    No changes were needed with this update. See the previous discussion
    below for details.

    ..Weinman.. 10/27/2024

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1105 AM CDT Sun Oct 27 2024/

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    Strong height falls will occur across the Pacific Northwest today as
    a shortwave trough moves eastward over this region. Cooling
    temperatures aloft will encourage steepening mid-level lapse rates
    as thermodynamic profiles gradually become favorable for isolated
    weak convection. Various NAM/RAP forecast soundings suggest parcels
    could attain heights necessary for occasional lighting discharge by
    late this morning into the afternoon, with continued thunderstorm
    potential this evening and overnight.

    Convection along/near a surface front in southeast AR and northern
    MS will remain capable of producing isolated lightning in the short
    term given the presence of weak MUCAPE. Even though large-scale
    ascent will remain weak, additional thunderstorms may develop this
    afternoon farther south along/near the front as daytime heating
    occurs across parts of the ArkLaTex.

    A low-amplitude shortwave trough will spread southeastward across
    the southern Appalachians during the late afternoon. Based on where
    a surface front is currently located, this feature should support
    convection generally remaining off the SC Coast, where low-level
    convergence and instability will be maximized over the Gulf Stream.

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Oct 28 09:19:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 281230
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 281229

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0729 AM CDT Mon Oct 28 2024

    Valid 281300Z - 291200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today.

    ...Discussion...
    Deep convective potential will remain limited today with severe
    storms not expected. This will be influenced by an amplifying
    large-scale pattern, highlights by strong height falls over the
    West, particularly across the Great Basin to central/southern
    Rockies. In this scenario, steep lapse rate profiles may support a
    few flashes of lightning with shallow convection near the Pacific
    Coast today. Increasing forcing for ascent and steepening lapse
    rates across the interior Great Basin/Four Corners may contribute to
    isolated convection, some of which may generate lightning later this
    afternoon into evening.

    Later tonight, primarily after 03Z, elevated thunderstorms are
    expected to develop and spread east-northeastward across the Upper
    Great Lakes. This will be a byproduct of a robustly strong
    southwesterly low-level jet and warm advection regime emanating from
    the central Plains toward the upper Mississippi Valley.

    ..Guyer/Leitman.. 10/28/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Oct 29 08:34:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 291224
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 291222

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0722 AM CDT Tue Oct 29 2024

    Valid 291300Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm development may occur late tonight from the Upper
    Mississippi Valley south-southwestward across the central and
    southern Plains, with some potential for storms to produce severe
    hail and/or wind.

    ...Central/Southern Plains...
    A prominent mid/upper-level trough centered over the Great Basin and
    Southwest Deserts will continue generally eastward toward the
    central/southern Rockies through late tonight. Preceding this upper
    trough will be a nocturnally maximized strong southwesterly
    low-level jet, with a strengthening lee trough and increasing
    warm-sector low-level moisture in advance of a cold front (and
    southern Plains surface trough/dryline), that will generally extend
    by late tonight from the Upper Midwest southwestward across
    Nebraska/Kansas into the southern High Plains.

    Given limited initial height falls and modest-quality autumnal
    low-level moisture, it is likely that a mid-level cap generally
    based around 800 mb will persist regionally through the peak heating
    cycle, with increasing prospects for deepening convection focused in
    the overnight and early morning hours of Wednesday. This could start
    across central Nebraska/northern Kansas near the cold front as early
    as late evening or early in the overnight, with a subsequent
    southward expansion across Kansas into western Oklahoma and possibly
    the far eastern Texas Panhandle through the predawn hours, where a
    conditional potential for near-surface-based storms may exist
    coincident with roughly 60-63F surface dewpoints. Given the strength
    of the wind field and increasing moisture/modest buoyancy
    regionally, organized thunderstorms are possible with some localized
    potential for severe hail and wind late tonight.

    ..Guyer/Leitman.. 10/29/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Nov 1 09:27:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 011255
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 011254

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0754 AM CDT Fri Nov 01 2024

    Valid 011300Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe hail and/or gusts are possible across parts of the
    southern High Plains, from this evening into the overnight.

    ...Synopsis...
    Today will mark the start of a substantial mid/upper-level pattern amplification over the CONUS. This will be mainly related to a
    strong shortwave trough now digging southeastward over the Pacific,
    offshore from OR, and south of a cyclone now covering the BC Coast
    and adjacent waters. The cyclone will move inland and devolve to an
    open-wave trough, but also, will phase better with the amplifying
    shortwave trough. By the end of the period, this should result in a
    major synoptic-scale trough from southern BC over the Pacific Coast
    States and offshore from Baja. Associated cyclonic flow then will
    cover nearly all the CONUS from the High Plains westward, with
    height falls from the northern/central Rockies to the southern High
    Plains.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a low over southern QC, with a
    cold front southwestward across western portions of NY/PA/WV,
    eastern KY, middle TN, northern MS, to east and south-central parts
    of TX. The western part of this frontal zone will decelerate today,
    become more diffuse, and merge with an inland-shifting, older,
    marine/warm frontal zone now lying quasistationary near the LA
    coastline and over deep south TX. The latter boundary will
    demarcate the northern extent of optimal Gulf moisture, and should
    shift northward/inland through tonight, but remain southeast of west
    TX and eastern NM until day 2. Another low, with a weak cold front
    arching southward over the central High Plains, will dissipate
    through the period, as lee troughing intensifies just to the west
    (in advance of the strengthening mid/upper trough).

    ...Southern High Plains...
    Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are expected to form over
    portions of far west TX and southeastern NM from late afternoon into
    evening, as gradually increasing boundary-layer moisture becomes
    available to diurnally heated higher terrain in the region.
    Thunderstorm coverage should increase from late this evening through
    the overnight hours, and begin training within a southwest/
    northeast-oriented plume from far west TX to southern KS. This
    convective growth will be related to strengthening low-level theta-e
    and moisture, WAA-related large-scale ascent, and weakening MUCINH.
    The most intense cells embedded in this regime may produce severe
    hail or gusts, but the overall areal severe threat still appears to
    be on the marginal side, due to lack of greater
    instability/buoyancy.

    In response to trough amplification aloft over the West, low-level
    warm advection and moisture transport will persist and enlarge into
    the southern High Plains region, with a 30-40-kt LLJ progged to
    develop overnight. However this will be an early stage of the
    return-flow process under modest lapse rates aloft, with
    considerable residual continental trajectories still involved in low
    levels, and the most-favorable, Gulf-modified parcels not forecast
    to reach the region until day-2 and beyond. Though upper 50s to low
    60 F surface dewpoints should spread into the Permian Basin region
    of west TX and southeastern NM tonight, the area of strongest lift
    farther northwest will have less moisture. MUCAPE of 500-800 J/kg
    is expected around the time of most of the convective development,
    increasing to the 1000-1500 J/kg range in non-convective inflow
    sector by the end of the period. A layer of weaker midlevel flow
    above the LLJ will restrict vertical shear, keeping effective-shear
    magnitudes under 30 kt over most of the area. As such, any
    supercell processes should be isolated and transient in character,
    especially considering the anticipated upscale evolution to a
    relatively dense convective-precip corridor.

    ...TX Rio Grande Valley between DRT-LRD...
    Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms should develop this
    afternoon as the easterly/upslope component of flow impinges on
    higher terrain of the Serranias del Burro of northern Coahuila, and
    adjoining higher slopes in the direction of the Rio Grande.
    Isolated large hail and damaging gusts are possible, but
    predominantly on the Mexican side of the border. The boundary layer
    in the valley will be strongly heated and richly moist, with
    dewpoints from the upper 60s to low 70s F. Given the lack of
    stronger midlevel flow, however, two related factors render a highly conditional potential on the TX side:
    1. Modest deep shear, despite strong veering with height from
    surface into midlevels. Forecast soundings suggest just 30-35-kt effective-shear magnitudes.
    2. Uncertainty about whether orographically initiated convection
    can remain organized/severe long enough to reach the border.

    Early-stage supercells, if any, may not survive far enough eastward
    in that mode, but outflow-dominant/forward-propagating multicellular
    clusters might. As such, a very conditional severe-gust threat may
    reach TX. Given the absence of a robust EML and of related MLCINH,
    deep convection also may develop in the warm sector east of the Rio
    Grande, amid strong diurnal heating and rich moisture, but the foci
    for lift are quite unclear at this time. With all these
    uncertainties, will refrain from an unconditional severe area for
    this outlook cycle.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 11/01/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Nov 1 13:22:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 011618
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 011617

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1117 AM CDT Fri Nov 01 2024

    Valid 011630Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe hail and/or gusts are possible across parts of the
    southern High Plains, from this evening into the overnight.

    ...Southern High Plains...
    Visible-satellite imagery late this morning shows patches of
    stratocumulus over the Pecos River Valley. This low-level moisture
    coincides with the northwesterly fringe of richer moisture located
    over the Hill Country and Deep South TX. The timelapse of
    water-vapor imagery shows the onset of an amplifying large-scale
    trough over the West. A lead lower-latitude disturbance over
    northern Baja and Sonora will shift eastward along the Mexican
    border during the period and aid in the development of a lee trough
    over the southern High Plains beneath moderately strong
    southwesterly mid-level flow.

    A gradual intensification of low-level warm-air advection downstream
    of the upper trough will occur through tonight across the southern
    High Plains. Model guidance continues to indicate widely
    spaced/isolated thunderstorms will develop late this afternoon and
    into the evening across Far West TX into southeastern NM as 500-1000
    J/kg MLCAPE develops coincident with the increase in low-level
    moisture. Thunderstorm coverage should increase from late this
    evening through the overnight hours, and begin training within a southwest/northeast-oriented plume from far west TX to southern KS.
    This convective growth will be related to strengthening low-level
    theta-e and moisture, WAA-related large-scale ascent, and weakening
    MUCINH. The most intense cells embedded in this regime may produce
    severe hail or gusts, but the overall areal severe threat still
    appears to be on the marginal side, due to lack of greater instability/buoyancy.

    ..Smith/Moore.. 11/01/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Nov 2 09:33:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 021248
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 021246

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0746 AM CDT Sat Nov 02 2024

    Valid 021300Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE PERMIAN
    BASIN AND SOUTH PLAINS INTO PORTIONS OF OKLAHOMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe storms will be possible later today and
    tonight, primarily from the Permian Basin and South Plains into
    southwest Oklahoma during the late afternoon and early evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, a full-latitude trough is located from BC down
    the West Coast States to Baja. A series of accompanying shortwaves
    and speed maxima -- predominantly remaining behind the height axis
    -- will contribute to the trough's eastward shift across the western
    parts of the CONUS and Canada through the period. By 12Z tomorrow,
    the trough should extend from the Mackenzie River Valley of
    northwestern Canada, across the length of AB, to western MT, the central/eastern Great Basin, western/central AZ, Sonora, and
    southern Baja. An extensive fetch of southwest flow aloft and
    height falls will precede the trough over the U.S Rocky Mountains
    and Great Plains.

    In the slower southern part of that southwest flow, a basal
    shortwave trough was evident in moisture-channel imagery over parts
    of AZ and the eastern Sonora/western Chihuahua area. This feature
    is augmenting the more diffuse, large-scale support from the
    synoptic trough for the warm/moist advection regime and related,
    extensive band of thunderstorms and precip observed from southern NM
    to southern KS. This perturbation should reach eastern NM and far
    west TX by 00Z, then perhaps with convective vorticity enhancement,
    eject northeastward into portions of KS and western OK overnight.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a cold front over the Atlantic
    well offshore from the Mid-Atlantic region, becoming quasistationary
    across northern FL, the north-central Gulf Coast vicinity and
    southeast TX, then a warm front over central/northwest TX. The
    western segment of this boundary should move slowly and diffusely
    northeastward today into OK as a warm front.

    ...Southern High Plains to portions of OK...
    Scattered to numerous thunderstorms in a southwest/northeast-
    oriented band should shift eastward over the outlook areas today
    into this evening, offering mainly isolated damaging gusts and
    marginally severe hail, with a low-end threat for embedded/QLCS
    mesovortex tornadoes. Hail and tornado potential will be greatest
    farther southwest today over parts of west TX and extreme
    southeastern NM.

    Available/modified RAOB data and objective SPC mesoanalyses indicate
    effective inflow parcels already are surface-based south and west of
    the effective warm front, across western OK, northwest TX, and the
    South Plains to the Permian Basin. This should remain the case
    throughout today, as muted diabatic heating and theta-e advection
    slowly destabilize the warm sector south of the convective boundary.
    This will combine with mid 60s to low 70s F surface dewpoints,
    offsetting modest midlevel lapse rates enough to support
    peak/preconvective MLCAPE ranging from around 2000 J/kg over
    southeastern NM and the South Plains/Permian Basin regions, to
    around 500 J/kg near the diffuse warm front in central OK. The
    approaching synoptic and shortwave troughs will tighten height
    gradients enough to boost deep shear, contributing to around
    35-45-kt effective-shear magnitudes. Meanwhile, low-level
    hodographs should exhibit enough size/curvature and lowest-km RH to
    suggest at least marginal tornado potential.

    While the parameter space (as sampled by various model soundings)
    will be favorable for the full range of severe hazards in and near
    the "slight risk" corridor today, a somewhat anafrontal character to
    the convective band is expected, given that it will be nearly
    parallel to the flow aloft and slowly progressive due to quasi-
    linear outflow effects. Sustained and/or discrete supercell
    potential appears greatest near the southern end of the regime over
    the Permian Basin region, where instability should be greatest today
    amid favorable shear, thereby relatively maximizing overall
    probabilities for tornadoes and large to significant-severe (2+
    inch) hail.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 11/02/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Nov 3 09:28:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 031250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 031249

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0649 AM CST Sun Nov 03 2024

    Valid 031300Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Multiple rounds of strong-severe thunderstorms are possible today
    through tonight over parts of the southern Plains. Tornadoes,
    damaging winds and large hail are possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    A full-latitude, mid/upper-level trough will move slowly eastward
    across the western CONUS, while evolving into a split-flow regime.
    The more-influential southern section of the trough is expected to
    amplify considerably as a shortwave perturbation and associated
    speed max -- now located over the southern Great Basin -- pivot
    through the base of the synoptic trough. By 00Z, the shortwave
    trough should dig southeastward to southern AZ and adjoining
    portions of Sonora. A leading vorticity lobe should eject to
    eastern NM by the end of the period, within a broader area of
    enhanced cyclonic flow extending across AZ, northern Chihuahua, and
    west TX. A 500-mb low may form by 12Z tomorrow near the center of
    that curvature, across central NM. In response to these
    developments, strengthening/difluent flow and height falls will
    spread eastward ahead of the synoptic trough -- across the southern
    Plains and west TX.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed an outflow boundary fronting an
    MCS from the western Ozarks southwestward to northwest TX. The
    boundary should shift into AR and southeastern OK through the
    remainder of the morning before stalling, while the segment from the
    Red River region southwestward across the Big Country and northern
    Permian Basin already has become very slow-moving to stationary.
    The boundary should retreat northward through the period, with
    uncertainty remaining as to how far and with what specific timing,
    given a substantial cold pool evident across central/western OK and
    the South Plains/Panhandle region. A dryline -- initially analyzed
    over southeastern NM and far west TX -- should shift eastward to the
    southern Panhandle/south Plains and across the Permian Basin through
    the afternoon. A surface low initially near the central CO/KS
    border should move northeastward to central/north-central NE by 00Z,
    with cold front southwestward to another low in southeastern CO. A
    lee trough and more diffuse dryline will take shape and move
    eastward across the central High Plains into western KS, before
    being overtaken by the cold front.

    ...Southern/central Plains...
    A QLCS began the period arching from the western Ozarks across
    southeastern OK and parts of north-central/northwest TX. The
    central/northern part of this complex is outrunning favorably
    unstable inflow and should continue a broader weakening trend
    through the remainder of the morning. Meanwhile the southern part
    -- over southern OK and north TX -- has more buoyancy and still-
    favorable vertical shear to its east and southeast. However, that
    segment of convection is decelerating and non-severe. It also is
    located behind the associated outflow boundary, which is exhibiting
    anafrontal characteristics.

    As it retreats northward across the Red River Valley today into this
    evening, the outflow boundary should become more diffuse, with a
    loosening baroclinic gradient. This will occur amidst broader,
    synoptically driven theta-e advection. Meanwhile this feature and
    the dryline to its southwest should focus additional widely
    scattered to scattered thunderstorm development. Convection also
    may form in the warm/moist sector east of the dryline and south of
    the outflow boundary, given the lack of a substantial EML and
    typically accompanying capping. With favorable low-level and deep-
    layer shear expected, supercells and bowing QLCS configurations are
    possible, offering all severe hazards (hail, gusts, tornadoes). The
    greatest potential for relatively discrete/sustained supercells
    appears to be near the retreating boundary in northwest TX and parts
    of southern/central OK, and significant-severe hail may occur with
    some of that convection.

    Multiple convective episodes are expected from the afternoon's
    greatest boundary-layer heating through late overnight, when
    large-scale ascent will increase again due to both warm advection/
    LLJ processes and DCVA/cooling aloft ahead of the approaching
    trough. These will overlap rich low-level moisture (surface
    dewpoints near and south of the boundary in the mid 60s to low 70s
    F). By late overnight, airmass recovery may extend into much of
    western/central OK, supporting another round of severe potential
    there. A more-concentrated mesoscale-focused severe threat
    (especially for tornadoes and/or severe gusts) may develop today
    into this evening near the residual boundary, but uncertainty on
    convective mode/coverage remains too large to assign greater
    unconditional probabilities at this cycle.

    Farther north, diurnally destabilized but convectively processed
    trajectories will temper the overall threat into the central Plains, along/ahead of the dryline and cold front. However, a few strong-
    severe thunderstorms are possible, mainly this afternoon into early
    evening.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 11/03/2024

    $$
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    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Nov 5 09:30:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 051251
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 051250

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0650 AM CST Tue Nov 05 2024

    Valid 051300Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS A PORTION
    OF THE SABINE TO LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS...AND CENTRAL TO SOUTHERN WISCONSIN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A brief tornado or two and locally damaging winds may occur across a
    portion of the Sabine to Lower Mississippi Valleys, and central to
    southern Wisconsin.

    ...Synopsis...
    Mid/upper-level longwave troughing has become well-established over
    the western CONUS. That will persist through this and more outlook
    periods, as a series of synoptic to large shortwave troughs
    traverses the associated cyclonic-flow field. The leading such
    perturbation -- now located from the central Plains south-
    southwestward over the southern High Plains to far west TX -- will
    eject northeastward and weaken. By 00Z, the residual, strongly
    positively tilted trough should extend from a vorticity max over
    western WI, across central/southwestern MO to central TX. The
    perturbation will deamplify greatly overnight and accelerate to a
    position near the western QC/ON border, Lake Huron and IN by 12Z.
    Meanwhile, an upstream shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-
    channel imagery over ID -- will dig southeastward and strengthen
    greatly through the period. By 12Z, it should be oriented
    northeast/southwest through a developing 500-mb low over the Four
    Corners.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed an elongated area of low pressure
    from southern WI to northwestern MO, with cold front through central
    OK and north-central/central TX. The front was preceded by an
    extensive convective band and associated outflow boundary from
    central IL to central AR, east TX, and deep south TX. By 00Z, the
    front should catch up (or nearly so) to what remains of the
    convective boundary, with the combined baroclinic zone extending
    from a consolidated low over northern WI across the Mid-South region
    to the northwestern Gulf shelf waters off TX. By 12Z, the front
    should extend from Lower MI across western portions of KY/TN/MS to
    southwestern LA and the northwestern Gulf.

    ...Sabine to Lower Mississippi Valleys...
    The ongoing convective band, near the western edge of the "Marginal
    Risk" area, should weaken overall through mid-morning. However, an
    isolated damaging gust or brief tornado cannot be ruled out in the
    meantime with any associated or preceding cell that may take
    advantage of lingering favorable deep shear and high theta-e, in a northward-narrowing corridor.

    After a relative lull of a few hours, widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are forecast along the boundary this afternoon into
    early evening, with isolated damaging gusts and/or a tornado
    possible. Afternoon boundary-layer destabilization is anticipated
    ahead of the convective boundary, from both fragmented/cloud-
    modulated surface heating and low-level theta-e advection. A
    corridor of surface dewpoints in the upper 60s to low 70s F will
    persist an expand slightly northward ahead of the boundary. With no
    antecedent EML and minimal MLCINH, this should offset modest
    midlevel lapse rates enough to result in effectively uninhibited
    buoyancy, supporting an increase in convective coverage and local
    intensity this afternoon. Peak MLCAPE should range from around
    500-800 J/kg over a narrow corridor of the Mid-South,
    widening/increasing to around 1000-1500 J/kg over southern LA. By
    contrast, lift along the boundary, and in the form of deep-layer
    ascent preceding the weakening mid/upper trough, will be greater
    over the Mid-South, until some nebulous point where too little
    instability exists to support organized convection. The outlook has
    been elongated northward somewhat to cover the marginal-buoyancy
    plume near the Mississippi River.

    ...WI...
    Isolated to widely scattered, shallow thunderstorms are possible
    this afternoon, in an arc near the front and the organizing surface
    low. A few cells may produce damaging gusts. A brief tornado also
    may occur, especially with any cells that can linger within a narrow
    zone of overlap between favorably, isallobarically backed near-
    surface winds and weak boundary-layer instability. A low-confidence
    and quite conditional scenario exists here, with abundant antecedent
    clouds and precip likely to limit destabilization for most of the
    day. Forecast soundings suggest enough large-scale ascent aloft to
    cool midlevels a degree or two C, though lapse rates still will be
    meager. Areas that can experience a couple hours of relatively
    unimpeded heating may attain 250-500 J/kg MLCAPE.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 11/05/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Nov 6 08:40:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 061249
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 061248

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0648 AM CST Wed Nov 06 2024

    Valid 061300Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE LOWER
    FLORIDA KEYS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple of brief tornadoes will be possible within outermost
    fringes of the circulation of Hurricane Rafael, from late morning
    into the evening, across the Keys and the far southwestern Florida Peninsula.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, mean troughing will remain over the Rocky
    Mountain States as a strong subsynoptic trough -- now evident in moisture-channel imagery over the Four Corners region -- strengthens
    to a closed cyclone. The associate 500-mb low is expected to become better-developed throughout the period as it closes off and
    retrogrades south-southwestward across AZ. In response to these
    developments, height rises are forecast across the southern Plains
    and Gulf Coast region, while ridging also builds westward from the
    Bermuda high. In turn, this should shift Hurricane Rafael westward
    toward the central Gulf, following today's crossing of western Cuba,
    per NHC forecast.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a frontal-wave low over ON north
    of Lake Huron, with cold front across Lower MI, IN, western parts of
    KY/TN/MS, central LA, and the shelf waters off the TX Gulf Coast.
    Under height rises and weakening/largely parallel flow aloft, the
    frontal segment south of about I-40 should become quasistationary
    through the remainder of the period. Given those factors, weak
    midlevel lapse rates, and negligible mid/upper support, associated thunderstorms should have an unconditional severe potential below 5%
    for gusts and less than 2% for tornado, with no large-hail threat.

    ...FL Keys and vicinity...
    Although Rafael will be pivoting more westward away from the region
    than previous forecast cycles suggested, and is a relatively small
    hurricane, the influence of ambient shear imparts a northeastward
    tilt to the overall convective pattern. This will lead to the
    passage of peripheral cells and perhaps (over the Lower Keys)
    banding features. The track forecast also should result in the
    largest low-level shear remaining west and south of EYW, but
    still-favorable hodographs passing across the outlook area from this
    afternoon into tonight. As such, the outlook lines are shifted
    slightly westward, in keeping with NHC track-forecast trends, but
    still kept at 5% "slight" levels over the Lower Keys for this cycle.

    See latest NHC advisories for forecast track/intensity of Rafael,
    and tropical-related watches/warnings.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 11/06/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Nov 7 08:51:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 071250
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 071248

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0648 AM CST Thu Nov 07 2024

    Valid 071300Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    WEST TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Large hail, isolated severe thunderstorm gusts, and a tornado or two
    are possible this evening and tonight across parts of west Texas.

    ...Synopsis...
    A closed and temporarily cut-off, mid/upper-level cyclone was
    drifting eastward to southeastward over the Desert Southwest and
    Four Corners regions, and centered near INW. A large, well-
    developed, baroclinic-leaf formation was apparent in IR and
    moisture-channel imagery in its eastern semicircle, across much of
    NM and CO, and extending across the central High Plains. The 500-mb
    low is forecast to move slowly to central NM through the period,
    while a shortwave trough now north of the low pivots around the southern/southeaster side of the cyclone tonight. Associated height
    falls and large-scale ascent will gradually overspread west TX and
    the southern High Plains, both in the form of DCVA nearer to the
    cyclone core, and warm advection over much of the southern Plains to
    its east.

    Meanwhile, per latest NHC forecasts, Hurricane Rafael will continue
    to move westward away from the Keys and Cuba, toward the central/
    south-central Gulf. This will occur south of an arc of mid/upper
    ridging extending from the subtropical Atlantic across FL and the
    north-central to southwestern Gulf.

    At the surface, the key feature for today's forecast will be a cold
    front -- drawn at 11Z from the Ohio Valley across central AR, to
    near a TXK-ERV line and becoming stationary to warm westward to a
    low near the Rio Grande, south of 6R6. Another low was drawn
    between MAF-FST, and warm frontogenesis apparent to its east-
    southeast likely will persist and result in effective northward
    displacement of the western segment of the main frontal zone with
    time today. As the aforementioned shortwave trough pivots toward
    the region, surface cyclogenesis is expected over the lower Pecos Valley/Permian Basin region of west TX, consolidating the previously
    elongated, multi-centered low-pressure area. The low should move
    northward or north-northeastward tonight, toward the Caprock region
    of northwest TX, with a cold front to its south extending to the Big
    Bend region. Meanwhile, the warm-frontal segment should advance
    northward over west-central TX, though considerable mesoscale
    uncertainty remains as to how far, given:
    1. The strength of the ambient continental/polar airmass to its
    north and
    2. Probable reinforcement by convection/precip on the cool side
    much of today.

    ...West and central TX...
    Predominantly elevated thunderstorms are expected to develop today
    and gradually increase in coverage while moving northward over
    central and northwest TX, in a weakly capped plume of strengthening
    warm advection, moisture transport and ascent to LFC. Isolated
    severe hail is possible with this activity, though lack of
    substantial buoyancy should limit overall severe potential to
    marginal in coverage and intensity.

    As that process continues, a diurnally heated slot of return-flow boundary-layer air, containing increasingly unstable, surface-based
    parcels, will spread from south-central TX, the Rio Grande Valley
    and the southern Hill Country northwestward toward the frontal and
    cyclogenetic regimes. Diurnal heating and moist advection are
    expected to yield favorable warm-sector destabilization. Surface
    dewpoints increasing into the low 60s F in northern areas and upper
    60s to near 70 F over southern parts of the outlook will yield peak/preconvective MLCAPE in the 1500-2000 J/kg range ahead of the
    cold front and south of about I-20, with sharp reductions across the
    front toward the upper cyclone, and northward into the ambient
    rain-cooled airmass.

    Meanwhile, large-scale ascent will continue to increase gradually on
    both sides of the front, peaking late overnight. These processes
    will support isolated to scattered thunderstorm development from
    late afternoon into tonight, along the front and over higher terrain
    in the Big Bend region. Some of this activity may be supercellular
    for a few hours, with all severe hazards possible. Forecast
    hodographs indicate some tornado potential, especially near the low
    and if a discrete storm can interact with a favorably aligned
    segment of the front while maintaining warm-sector surface inflow. Aforementioned mesoscale uncertainties preclude a more-focused,
    unconditional 5% tornado area at this time. The delay in the
    strongest forcing for ascent after the peak buoyancy and the
    potential for evolution to extensively messy modes also renders
    tornado potential quite conditional. Convective coverage overall
    should increase to scattered/numerous, expand to both sides of the
    front as cooling aloft overspreads the region, and render much
    messier convective mode. Large hail will be possible on either side
    of the front, especially with relatively sustained/discrete cells,
    and damaging gusts will be most probable with convection moving
    into/through the warm sector.

    ..Edwards/Mosier.. 11/07/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Nov 8 09:14:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 081254
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 081252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0652 AM CST Fri Nov 08 2024

    Valid 081300Z - 091200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER NORTH-CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe-thunderstorm threat exists from north Texas to the Hill
    Country and parts of central/east Texas through this evening. The
    most focused tornado, damaging-wind and hail potential appears to be
    over north-central Texas.

    ...Synopsis...
    The mid/upper-level pattern features a closed, temporarily cut-off, synoptic-scale cyclone, initially centered over central NM. As a
    strong, basal shortwave trough pivots northeastward across eastern
    NM and the TX Panhandle today, the 500-mb low will shift east-
    northeastward toward CAO by 00Z. Overnight, the low should track north-northeastward, reaching the GLD vicinity by 12Z. Height falls
    should occur over central/north TX today, then becoming neutral to
    slightly rising overnight.

    The 11Z surface analysis showed a frontal-wave low near SWW, with a
    cold front south-southwestward between DRT-6R6. A warm front was
    drawn from the low through some rain-cooled air to near MWL, then east-southeastward over southern fringes of the Metroplex to between
    LFK-ESF. The low is expected to move northward to near the
    northeastern corner of the TX Panhandle by 00Z and occlude, while
    the occluded/cold front reaches western OK, north-central/central
    TX, to near LRD. The warm front should drift northward over north- central/northeast TX, with its progress slowed by increasing
    precip/convection to its north. By 12Z tomorrow, the low should get
    stacked with the 500-mb center over northwestern KS, with the cold
    front reaching east TX and the shelf waters off the TX Gulf Coast.

    Meanwhile, Hurricane Rafael is forecast to remain well-removed from
    land this period, moving generally westward over the central to
    west-central Gulf then slowing/meandering after this period. See
    NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity info on Rafael.

    ...North to central TX...
    An ongoing area of convection over parts of north TX and southern OK
    is expected to shift northward over increasingly elevated and less-
    unstable inflow parcels and weaken through midday. Meanwhile,
    closer to the cold front, scattered thunderstorms are expected to
    develop over the next several hours through early afternoon,
    evolving into a nearly solid convective band with embedded
    supercells and bow/LEWP formations possible. This activity should
    shift eastward over central and north TX through early evening,
    offering at least marginal potential for all severe hazards.

    Meanwhile, isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible in the
    warm sector and along/north of the warm front. This activity should
    move northward to northeastward. Any sustained, relatively discrete
    cells with prolonged access to surface-based parcels in the warm
    sector, and especially interacting with the warm front, may rotate
    with a threat for all hazards (hail, damaging to severe gusts and
    mesoscale peak in tornado potential) also present. The associated theta-e/instability gradient is expected to align northwest/
    southeast very near or even across the DFW Metroplex. This will
    yield an increased severe threat from north to south into more-
    unstable inflow air, and within the southern part of the relatively high-vorticity gradient itself. Given the superposition of these
    foci and the expected favorable parameter space, the north-central
    TX part of the outlook is being upgraded for all hazards this cycle.

    Upper 60s to low 70s F surface dewpoints already are present in the
    warm sector, and will shift north slowly, in step with the warm
    front, before the main north-south band overtakes the region. This
    should occur during the afternoon when low-level, warm-sector
    instability is maximized away from convection. Despite modest lapse
    rates aloft (manifest in mid/upper-level stable layers sampled by
    the 12Z FWD sounding), a northwestward-narrowing, triangular
    corridor of 1000-1500 J/kg peak MLCAPE is expected. Veering winds
    with height are forecast to continue, with hodograph curvature/size
    largest along the warm front, and enough deep shear (effective-shear
    magnitudes 35-45 kt in central/north TX, weakening southward and
    eastward) to support occasional supercell structures. Overnight,
    supportive large-scale ascent and the elevated LLJ each should shift
    northward away from the area, while the main band of convective-
    scale forcing shifts into east TX and weakens.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 11/08/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Nov 9 09:05:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 091226
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 091224

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0624 AM CST Sat Nov 09 2024

    Valid 091300Z - 101200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected over the conterminous U.S.
    through tonight.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    The mid/upper-level pattern across the CONUS will lose amplitude
    through the period, as a synoptic-scale cyclone now centered near
    GLD weakens, ejects northeastward, and rejoins the prevailing
    westerlies. The associated 500-mb low should reach central NE by
    00Z, then across northwestern IA by 12Z tomorrow. Meanwhile, the
    NHC forecasts Hurricane Rafael to move slowly west-northwest across
    the west-central Gulf through tonight, remaining far from land,
    while weakening due to deep shear and dry-air involvement.

    In between, a plume of partly modified return-flow air, marginally moist/unstable for deep convection, will support isolated to widely
    scattered thunderstorms in a broad swath from the TX/LA Gulf Coast
    to parts of IA/IN and much of IL. Effective inflow to convection in
    this swath should be elevated over the mid Mississippi Valley and
    similar latitudes, where deep shear is greatest. As shear weakens
    with southward extent from the Mid-South to the coast, especially
    south of a warm front now over north-central LA, surface-based
    parcels amid weak lapse rates will prevail. By afternoon, the warm
    front will angle northward into parts of eastern AR, and MLCAPE
    should range from around 500 J/kg over the Mid-South to near 1000
    J/kg just inland from the coast. Organized severe potential will be
    stunted by lack of stronger lift and shear where buoyancy is
    sufficient.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 11/09/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Nov 10 09:51:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 101228
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 101226

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0626 AM CST Sun Nov 10 2024

    Valid 101300Z - 111200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The risk for severe thunderstorms appears minimal through tonight.

    ...Synopsis...
    General upper-air pattern deamplification is expected over most of
    the CONUS through the period, except over:
    1. The West Coast (height falls ahead of an approaching,
    high-amplitude synoptic trough) and
    2. The Great Lakes (height falls preceding the ejection of the
    cyclone now centered over northwest IA). The formerly
    cut-off/larger cyclone is rejoining the prevailing westerlies, and
    will accelerate eastward and weaken over the Great Lakes. This will
    happen as a strong shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel
    imagery over eastern/southern AB -- digs east-southeastward toward
    Lake Superior by 12Z tomorrow, while forming a closed or nearly
    closed 500-mb low.

    Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Rafael continues to weaken as its low-
    level center and deep convection get more displaced from each other,
    per NHC discussions. The circulation is forecast to continue
    weakening, as the low-level vortex loops around the central/west-
    central Gulf today, then shift southwestward thereafter. Refer to
    NHC advisories for latest forecast track/intensity of Rafael.

    In between those features, a plume of moist low-level air, cooling
    northward at the surface and aloft, will support isolated to
    scattered thunderstorms, near and east of an occluded/cold frontal
    zone drawn at 11Z from southern IL across westernmost portions of
    KY/TN, western MS, central/southwestern LA, and TX coastal waters.

    ...Gulf Coast to Ohio Valley...
    Overall severe potential will be limited by lack of stronger shear
    in the south (closer to the coast) where low-level theta-e is
    largest, and lack of surface-based instability in the north. Some
    model soundings suggest that surface-based parcels and marginal deep
    shear (effective-shear magnitudes in the 30-40-kt range) may overlap
    this afternoon over portions of the Tennessee Valley to lower Ohio
    Valley. While this will need to be monitored, lack of backing in
    low-level flow will limit both convergence and hodograph size, amid
    weak deep-layer lapse rates and potentially messy convective mode.
    At this time, the severe threat appears too low and conditional for
    an outlook area.

    ..Edwards/Bentley.. 11/10/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Nov 11 08:50:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 110521
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 110520

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1120 PM CST Sun Nov 10 2024

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The risk for severe thunderstorms appears negligible across the U.S.
    today through tonight.

    ...Synopsis...
    Models indicate that a modestly amplified wave within the
    mid-latitude westerlies across the eastern Pacific will split while
    progressing inland of the Pacific coast during this period. One
    emerging smaller-scale perturbation is forecast to contribute to
    cyclogenesis to the lee of the Canadian Rockies, while another
    impulse digs inland across the Sierra Nevada into the southern Great
    Basin by late tonight. In lower-levels a cold front may precede the
    trailing short wave through much of the West, advancing into the
    Southwest and approaching the southern Rockies by daybreak Tuesday.

    As downstream ridging develops eastward through interior North
    America, it appears that mid-level troughing will amplify to its
    east, as one notable embedded short wave digs across the lower Great
    Lakes vicinity through the northern Atlantic Seaboard. This is
    forecast to be accompanied by a reinforcing cold intrusion southeast
    of the Upper Midwest through much of the Northeast, Ohio and
    Missouri Valleys. A preceding front is likely to advance through
    much of the southern Mid Atlantic, while stalling/weakening over the
    Gulf Coast states.

    ...Southeast...
    In advance of the lead cold front, models suggest that a mid-level
    perturbation will be in the process of accelerating east of the
    southern Appalachians by 12Z this morning. It appears that forcing
    for ascent may be accompanied by some risk for thunderstorm
    development near the coastal Carolinas at the outset of the period.
    However, guidance suggests that the more substantive destabilization
    and higher probabilities for thunderstorm initiation will generally
    focus offshore of coastal areas during the mid to late morning.

    ...Pacific Northwest into northern Sierra Nevada...
    Beneath a tongue of relatively cool mid-level air (-26 to -28C
    around 500 mb) forecast to spread inland of the coast during the
    day, destabilization may become sufficient to support convection
    capable of producing lightning across coastal Washington/Oregon into
    the western slopes of the Cascades, and perhaps along the western
    slopes of the Sierra Nevada.

    ..Kerr/Thornton.. 11/11/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Nov 12 10:03:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 121254
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 121252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0652 AM CST Tue Nov 12 2024

    Valid 121300Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms may impact parts of the
    Texas South Plains and Oklahoma/Texas Panhandle vicinity this
    evening, perhaps accompanied by some risk for hail and gusty winds.

    ...Southern High Plains...
    An upper trough over the Great Basin will advance eastward across
    the Rockies today, reaching the Plains late tonight into early
    Wednesday morning. Large-scale ascent preceding this feature will
    encourage modest surface cyclogenesis across parts of the
    northern/central High Plains. Low-level moisture will return
    northward today over portions of the southern High Plains, although
    its depth and quality will remain limited. It appears unlikely that
    convection will develop this afternoon across northwest TX into the
    OK/TX Panhandles, as a cap and weak instability should inhibit
    initiation.

    A somewhat better opportunity for thunderstorms will exist this
    evening across this area, mainly around/after 00-04Z, as warm
    advection and lift associated with a strengthening low-level jet
    increases, and as a surface cold front overtakes the lee trough.
    While MUCAPE is expected to remain rather weak (generally 500-1000
    J/kg or less), strong deep-layer shear will support organized
    updrafts with any sustained convection. Isolated hail appears to be
    the main threat, as thunderstorms should have a tendency to remain
    slightly elevated. But, some chance for strong/gusty winds may also
    exist. The window for severe hail should remain small in space and
    time this evening, as convection will likely grow upscale fairly
    quickly. Even so, small hail may occur farther north/east into parts
    of KS and OK overnight into early Wednesday morning.

    ..Gleason/Bentley.. 11/12/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Nov 13 08:53:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 131300
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 131258

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0658 AM CST Wed Nov 13 2024

    Valid 131300Z - 141200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND COASTAL PACIFIC NORTHWEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few strong to severe thunderstorms may occur today across the
    lower Mississippi Valley, posing a risk for isolated severe gusts
    and perhaps a tornado or two. Occasional severe winds may also
    develop along parts of the coastal Pacific Northwest.

    ...Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Rich low-level moisture will continue to stream northward today
    across parts of the lower MS Valley into the Mid-South as an upper
    trough over the Plains continues eastward towards the OH Valley.
    Primary surface low and better forcing associated with this upper
    trough are forecast to remain well north of the inland-advancing
    warm sector. Even so, scattered surface-based thunderstorms should
    develop by this afternoon as a remnant/weak surface low off the LA
    Coast moves slowly inland. Filtered daytime heating of the moist
    low-level airmass should result in modest instability developing by
    this afternoon, even though mid-level lapse rates will remain poor
    (see 12Z JAN/LIX soundings). Low-level southerly flow will not be
    overly strong across the lower MS Valley, but gradual veering and
    strengthening of winds with height through mid levels should support
    sufficient deep-layer shear for modest updraft organization.

    A few marginal supercells/clusters may pose an isolated threat for
    strong to damaging winds as they spread eastward across LA/MS this
    afternoon and evening. Enough low-level shear should also be present
    to foster some updraft rotation and the threat for a tornado or two,
    with an isolated severe threat potentially continuing into tonight
    across parts of southwest AL and vicinity. The warm sector will
    become increasingly pinched off with northward extent in MS and
    western TN, with convection generally expected to outpace the
    low-level moisture return. Given the expected mismatch of stronger forcing/shear farther north and better instability to the south,
    have opted to maintain the Marginal Risk this update, with some
    expansion based on latest guidance trends.

    ...Coastal Pacific Northwest...
    Cold mid-level temperatures (around -24 to -26C at 500 mb) and
    modestly steepened mid-level lapse rates associated with an
    eastward-moving upper trough will help support weak instability
    today across parts of the coastal Pacific Northwest (reference 12Z
    UIL sounding). Persistent large-scale ascent across this region will
    support both low-topped cells and bands of convection moving
    eastward through this afternoon and early evening. Given the
    forecast strength of the low-level winds, some of this activity may occasionally produce strong to severe wind gusts, and perhaps small
    hail. Tornado potential remains unclear, as low-level flow will have
    a tendency to veer more to southwesterly through the day, which
    should limit 0-1 km SRH.

    ..Gleason/Bentley.. 11/13/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Nov 14 09:27:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 141251
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 141250

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0650 AM CST Thu Nov 14 2024

    Valid 141300Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    COASTAL NORTH CAROLINA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms posing a risk for gusty
    winds and perhaps a tornado may occur across parts of coastal North
    Carolina this evening/tonight.

    ...Coastal Carolinas...
    A pronounced upper trough will continue eastward today from the
    OH/TN Valleys and Midwest towards the southern Mid-Atlantic. As this
    occurs, a weak surface/coastal low will develop in response across
    the eastern Carolinas this afternoon/evening and adjacent coastal
    waters tonight. Most guidance suggests this surface low will remain
    very near/along the immediate coast, or just offshore. Recent RAP
    runs are a notable exception, showing a slightly more inland track.
    Regardless, sufficient low-level moisture and related weak
    boundary-layer instability should be present by this evening across
    parts of coastal NC and the Outer Banks. Any surface-based
    convection that can be sustained tonight in the favorably sheared
    environment may pose an isolated threat for strong to severe wind
    gusts, and perhaps a tornado. Greater severe potential remains
    evident just offshore and over the Gulf Stream, but there still
    appears to be enough severe potential over land to maintain the
    Marginal Risk with this update.

    ..Gleason/Bentley.. 11/14/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Nov 16 12:24:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 161629
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 161628

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1028 AM CST Sat Nov 16 2024

    Valid 161630Z - 171200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected today.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    Morning water-vapor imagery depicts a midlevel shortwave trough
    tracking eastward from eastern MT into the Dakotas. This feature
    will continue eastward across the northern Plains/Canadian Prairies
    into the overnight/early morning hours. In the 04-12Z time frame,
    associated cooling aloft atop a cool/stable boundary layer will
    contribute to weak elevated instability across the Upper Midwest.
    Given strong low-level warm advection and midlevel ascent preceding
    the trough, isolated thunderstorms are possible.

    Farther south, a separate low-level jet will promote a band of
    showers over the Upper TX Coast during the overnight hours. Related
    low-level warming/moistening will contribute to weak instability,
    though dry air aloft should generally limit lightning potential.

    ..Weinman.. 11/16/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Nov 17 12:24:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 171632
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 171630

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1030 AM CST Sun Nov 17 2024

    Valid 171630Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected to develop across parts
    of west/northwest Texas into southwest Oklahoma this evening and
    continuing through daybreak on Monday, posing a risk for severe wind
    gusts and a few tornadoes.

    ...Synopsis...
    Water-vapor imagery this morning shows a potent mid-level low/trough
    over northwest Mexico with a downstream ridge centered over the
    eastern Gulf of Mexico. A mid-level vorticity maximum near the
    middle part of the Gulf of California will pivot east into Chihuahua
    by mid evening while the larger-scale trough becomes negatively
    tilted and moves northeastward into the southern High Plains. In
    the low levels, cyclogenesis over northern Mexico will gradually
    evolve today before the surface low deepens tonight reaching the
    northwest TX/western OK vicinity at the end of the period.
    Seasonably moist air via southeasterly flow from the western Gulf
    will advect into west TX before a Pacific front sweeps eastward
    across the Chihuahuan Desert and portions of the southern High
    Plains tonight. An attendant warm frontal zone will advance
    northward from north TX into OK late.

    ...Southern Great Plains...
    The 12 UTC Fort Worth, TX observed sounding showed an adequately
    moist/deep moist layer featuring a mean mixing ratio of 12.6 g/kg.
    The richer low-level moisture, featuring dewpoints in the mid-upper
    60s as of late morning, is currently near the I-35 corridor from the
    Metroplex and areas south/southeast. Moisture advection will
    contribute to gradual destabilization through this evening across
    parts of west TX northeastward into southwest OK despite
    considerable cloud cover through the day. As an intense 100-kt
    500-mb speed max moves from Chihuahua into west TX overnight,
    large-scale ascent will favor the development of scattered
    thunderstorms initially developing near the Permian Basin vicinity
    and becoming more widespread as very strong low-level warm advection
    attendant to an intensifying LLJ develops tonight. Model guidance
    indicates 250-1000 J/kg MLCAPE across the destabilizing warm sector.
    A forced band of storms will likely evolve tonight across west TX
    and rapidly move northeast in the area southeast of the surface low
    track. As the squall line matures, the propensity for severe gusts
    will probably increase despite relatively poor lapse given the
    intense flow expected to develop. It remains uncertain if cellular
    development will occur either ahead of the line or be loosely
    maintained in parts of the larger band of storms. Nonetheless,
    elongated and enlarged hodographs will favor a risk for scattered
    severe gusts and possibly a tornado risk, especially as the squall
    line encounters greater moisture from west-central TX northeastward
    into southwest OK late.

    ..Smith/Weinman.. 11/17/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Nov 18 09:34:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 181301
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 181259

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0659 AM CST Mon Nov 18 2024

    Valid 181300Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...AND FROM PORTIONS OF EAST TEXAS INTO LOUISIANA
    AND FAR SOUTHERN ARKANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms may continue to produce occasional strong to severe
    gusts and perhaps a couple brief tornadoes across parts of north
    Texas into central Oklahoma this morning. A threat for a few
    tornadoes and damaging winds will also exist this afternoon and
    evening from parts of east Texas into Louisiana and vicinity.

    ...Synopsis...
    A negatively tilted shortwave trough over the southern High Plains
    this morning will eject northeastward across the central Plains and
    mid MO Valley through this evening. Attendant 80-100 kt mid-level
    jet will likewise overspread OK/KS into western MO by late
    afternoon, while a strong (50-60+ kt) southerly low-level jet aids
    in northward moisture transport across parts of the southern/central
    Plains and lower/mid MS Valley. At the surface, a deep low over
    western OK will develop northeastward through the day in tandem with
    the ejecting shortwave trough, eventually reaching the Upper Midwest
    late tonight. A related cold front will sweep quickly eastward
    across the southern/central Plains and into the mid MS Valley
    through the period, before decelerating over the lower MS Valley
    late tonight into early Tuesday morning.

    ...Southern Plains...
    With low-level winds remaining very strong per area VWPs (up to
    50-60 kt at 1 km AGL), an ongoing QLCS across central/southern OK
    into north-central TX may continue to pose a risk for occasional
    strong to severe winds in the short term this morning as it moves east-northeastward. Ample low-level shear will also support a
    continued threat for embedded circulations and a couple brief QLCS
    tornadoes this morning. This line is expected to outpace better
    low-level moisture return and already weak instability in the next
    couple of hours (see very weak surface-based instability in 12Z
    soundings from OUN/FWD). Accordingly, nearly all guidance shows
    gradual weakening of the line over the next several hours as it
    moves into eastern OK and northeast TX. Still, at least an isolated
    threat for strong to damaging winds and perhaps a tornado could
    persist, even as the thermodynamic environment becomes increasingly
    marginal with eastward extent.

    ...East Texas into the Lower Mississippi Valley...
    The southern portion of the squall line along/ahead of the cold
    front should tend to remain weak through early afternoon, before
    potentially restrengthening by mid/late afternoon into the early
    evening. This should occur as the line/cold front encounters a more
    buoyant airmass across parts of east TX into LA and southern AR,
    where MLCAPE may reach up to 500-1000 J/kg with daytime heating,
    even though mid-level lapse rates will remain poor. This region will
    remain displaced well south of better forcing associated with the
    ejecting shortwave trough. Even so, strengthening mid-level
    southwesterly flow through the day will support 40-50 kt of
    deep-layer shear and some threat for supercells ahead of the front.
    Sufficient southerly low-level winds will also support adequate 0-1
    km shear and a threat for a few tornadoes. Most high-resolution
    guidance shows either the line restrengthening and/or supercells
    developing ahead of it by late afternoon. Have therefore included a
    Slight Risk from parts of east TX into LA and vicinity to account
    for this potential.

    ...Central Plains/Ozarks into the Mid Missouri Valley...
    Later today, a secondary area of thunderstorms may form closer to
    the surface low and behind the initial QLCS from north-central OK
    into central/eastern KS and eventually the mid MO Valley. This
    convection may develop in a modestly steep mid-level lapse rate
    environment amid more unidirectional southwesterly deep-layer flow
    near the exit region of the mid-level jet. Even though instability
    will remain weak, a couple of strong to severe thunderstorms may
    pose an isolated risk for gusty winds, a tornado, and perhaps
    marginally severe hail. Based on latest guidance trends, have
    expanded the Marginal Risk northward some to include parts of the
    mid MO Valley.

    ..Gleason/Kerr.. 11/18/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Nov 19 10:18:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 191254
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 191252

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0652 AM CST Tue Nov 19 2024

    Valid 191300Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms producing isolated strong wind gusts and perhaps a
    tornado are possible across the central Gulf Coast vicinity today.

    ...Central Gulf Coast...
    The primary upper cyclone, with multiple embedded shortwave troughs,
    will evolve into a closed mid/upper-level low over the northern
    Plains and Upper Midwest today. A deep surface low over MN this
    morning should continue to slowly occlude as it moves northward into
    Canada by this evening. A cold front extends southward from this low
    to the lower MS Valley/central Gulf Coast states. Showers and
    thunderstorms are ongoing this morning across southern LA/MS/AL
    along and ahead of the front. Poor lapse rates noted on the observed
    12Z sounding from LIX, along with cloudiness and widespread
    pre-frontal precipitation will generally hinder any more than weak destabilization from occurring over land through this afternoon.
    Even so, the southern extent of a 30-40 kt south-southwesterly
    low-level jet is forecast to migrate slowly eastward today across
    the central Gulf Coast vicinity. A brief waterspout and/or tornado
    appears possible with low-topped rotating cells along or very near
    the coast given adequate 0-1 km SRH and greater low-level moisture
    present (generally 70s surface dewpoints). Otherwise, isolated
    damaging wind gusts may occur with convection moving eastward along
    or just ahead of the front. Meager instability should keep the
    overall severe threat isolated.

    ..Gleason/Kerr.. 11/19/2024

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1)
  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Nov 22 09:26:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 221243
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 221242

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0642 AM CST Fri Nov 22 2024

    Valid 221300Z - 231200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are unlikely through tonight.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    A well-amplified mid/upper-level pattern features synoptic-scale
    cyclones on either side of the CONUS:

    1. In the East, the cyclone core is elongated west-southwest/east-
    northeast from WV to southern New England, occasionally exhibiting
    two centers at 500 mb. This cyclone should pivot offshore
    gradually, with a more consolidated center south of RI and east of
    NJ by 12Z tomorrow. Associated thunder tonight should remain
    offshore.

    2. For the Pacific cyclone, a double center was evident as well,
    with the strongest, closest, and most important one being near
    45N131W. This is becoming the primary low as the other one well to
    the west devolves into an open shortwave trough. The eastern low
    should pivot northward, offshore from the Northwest Coast, toward
    Vancouver Island. Meanwhile, a series of small shortwaves and
    vorticity lobes will move ashore in the preceding southwest flow,
    predominantly this afternoon through tonight -- each contributing
    shots of cooling/destabilization aloft, and atop the weakly unstable
    marine air mass. Forecast soundings accordingly suggest that the
    midlevel inversion should rise/cool such that modest buoyancy
    (overland MUCAPE generally under 250 J/kg) extends upward into icing
    layers suitable for at least isolated/brief lightning, especially
    from around 00Z onward. A few thunderstorms are possible near the
    coast, as well as embedded in the deep low/middle-level moisture
    fetch impinging on higher terrain in northern CA.

    ..Edwards.. 11/22/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sat Nov 23 10:56:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 231243
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 231241

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0641 AM CST Sat Nov 23 2024

    Valid 231300Z - 241200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are unlikely through tonight.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    In mid/upper levels, the presence of a cyclone near the coastal
    Northeast, and progressive synoptic ridging moving eastward over the
    central CONUS, should contribute to keeping most of the lower 48
    states too dry and/or stable in low/middle levels for thunderstorms.
    A substantial synoptic-scale trough is apparent in moisture-channel
    imagery from north-central BC south-southwestward, offshore from the
    Pacific Northwest and CA. Shortwave troughs and vorticity lobes
    will continue to eject inland within southwest flow, across the
    Pacific Northwest and northern Rockies, as a cutoff cyclone forms
    offshore from Vancouver Island and retrogrades southwestward.

    One of those shortwave perturbations is evident from central OR to
    northern CA, and will destabilize a marginally moist low/middle-
    level profile enough to support isolated thunderstorms as far inland
    today as portions of MT. This feature should develop a small,
    closed cyclone overnight near the southern part of the AB/SK border,
    while a trailing perturbation crosses northern CA and the northern
    Great Basin. Ahead of that feature, and beneath cold midlevel
    temperatures closer to the cyclone core, isolated thunderstorms will
    be possible near the Pacific Coast, from northwestern CA to the
    Olympic Peninsula. The greatest buoyancy and deepest convective
    towers accessing the marine layer should remain offshore, though
    strong gusts or small hail may accompany the strongest near-shore
    cells inland a short distance. Severe potential appears too
    isolated and conditional to warrant an outlook area.

    ..Edwards/Leitman.. 11/23/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Nov 24 09:57:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 241232
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 241231

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0631 AM CST Sun Nov 24 2024

    Valid 241300Z - 251200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are unlikely through tonight.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    In mid/upper levels, a belt of relatively strong flow will bend
    cyclonically from CA to the central Great Plains, changing curvature
    through a low-amplitude, eastward moving synoptic ridge over the
    Upper Great Lakes and Ohio Valley, then cyclonically again across
    the Mid-Atlantic and New England. A long-lasting, deeply occluded
    cyclone will move eastward from the Canadian Maritime Provinces
    through the period. Upstream, a smaller cyclone -- initially
    located over southern SK -- will move slowly eastward to southern MB
    by 12Z tomorrow, with trough southward over the Dakotas. However,
    too little moisture will be available for a general thunderstorm
    outlook. Farther west, a synoptic-scale cyclone offshore from the
    Olympic Peninsula and Vancouver Island will pivot slowly southward
    then eastward through tonight, but will remain over Pacific waters.
    Intervening ridging should remain over the northern Rockies and
    vicinity. However, cold air aloft and steep low/middle-level lapse
    rates will overlie a moist marine layer, supporting isolated to
    widely scattered, episodic thunder mainly offshore. Some of this
    activity may move inland before dissipating in more-stable low-level conditions.

    A shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel imagery south and
    east of the ridge from the Yellowstone region across the northern
    Great Basin to central CA -- is forecast to move quickly eastward
    across the central Rockies and central Plains through the period,
    phasing with the SK/MB low by 12Z tomorrow. The associated cold
    front was drawn at 11Z today across an area of low pressure
    extending from northeastern NE to southwestern KS, then arching over southeastern CO. A warm front was drawn over southeastern KS and
    southwestern MO, with a secondary warm front over southern IA and
    northern IL. The low should consolidate today across northeastern
    KS into northern MO, and move to near the southwestern shore of Lake
    Michigan by the end of the period, when the cold front reaches to
    near a line from BMI-STL-FSM-SPS-HOB. Scattered elevated showers
    are possible late tonight near and north of the warm front, across
    parts of northeastern IL, WI, Lower MI, IN, and OH. However, the
    warm conveyor will lack rich moisture, and forecast soundings
    reasonably suggest buoyancy will be too shallow and strongly capped
    for an areal thunderstorm threat.

    ..Edwards/Leitman.. 11/24/2024

    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Mon Nov 25 10:02:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 251228
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 251226

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0626 AM CST Mon Nov 25 2024

    Valid 251300Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    No severe-thunderstorm areas are forecast through tonight.

    ...Synopsis/Discussion...
    A progressive, lower-amplitude pattern will prevail across the CONUS
    this period, compared to the preceding week. A small cyclone now
    centered over the southern SK/MB border area is forecast to
    accelerate slightly and elongate southeastward, reaching that part
    of ON just north of the MN border by 12Z tomorrow. As this occurs,
    a basal shortwave trough -- apparent in moisture-channel imagery
    from eastern SD to western CO -- should move eastward. This trough
    will cross the mid/upper Mississippi Valley in the 21-03Z time
    frame, then become negatively tilted, reaching Georgian Bay,
    southern ON, and Lake Erie by 12Z.

    The associated surface frontal-wave low was analyzed at 11Z from a
    low over northern IL, southwestward near STL, FYV and ADM, to a weak
    low near HOB. By 00Z, the main/northern low should reach eastern
    Lower MI, with cold front across western parts of OH/KY/TN, northern
    parts of LA/MS, and the TX Gulf Coastal Plain. By 12Z, the cold
    front should extend from eastern PA across western parts of VA/NC,
    northern GA/AL, southern MS/LA, and across the northwestern Gulf
    shelf waters to near BRO.

    Farther west, another mid/upper-level cyclone was centered over
    Pacific waters west of OR, near 44N130W. This feature is expected
    to devolve to an open-wave, positively tilted trough as it
    approaches the coast today. The trough should cross the coast
    between the Olympic Peninsula and northwestern CA obliquely, from
    north-south, from 00Z to 12Z. Preceding the trough, DCVA/cooling in
    midlevels will steepen lapse rates and support potential for
    isolated thunderstorms, particularly over the relatively moist
    Pacific boundary layer near the coast.

    ...Lower Mississippi to Tennessee Valleys...
    Stronger deep-layer/large-scale lift will occur near the front in
    the Ohio Valley to north-central Appalachians, but with poor
    moisture return greatly limiting overall buoyancy. Somewhat greater
    moisture -- but still in quite incompletely modified return-flow
    trajectories with dewpoints generally low/mid 60s F in a shallow
    layer -- is forecast in a narrow prefrontal corridor over the lower
    Mississippi to Tennessee Valleys from late afternoon through this
    evening. However, weak low/middle-level lapse rates (only barely
    above moist adiabatic) will limit buoyancy there, with MLCAPE mostly
    remaining under 500 J/kg. Briefly enlarged low-level hodographs
    appear in some forecast soundings along or just east of the
    prefrontal moist axis, especially from northern/eastern LA to
    northern MS, suggesting non-zero storm-scale rotation potential for
    any cell(s) that can mature fast enough before moving out of
    surface-based inflow. At this time, severe risk appears too minimal
    and conditional for an outlook. However, the scenario will be
    revisited for evidence of greater unconditional potential, in
    succeeding outlook cycles.

    ..Edwards/Leitman.. 11/25/2024

    $$
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