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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Mike Powell | All | DAY1SVR: Day 1 Convective |
August 24, 2024 10:11 AM * |
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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 $$ --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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