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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Mike Powell | All | Enhanced Storm Risk NE/KS |
June 2, 2024 8:39 AM * |
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ACUS01 KWNS 021244 SWODY1 SPC AC 021242 Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0742 AM CDT Sun Jun 02 2024 Valid 021300Z - 031200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON INTO EARLY TONIGHT ACROSS NE AND NORTHERN KS... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are forecast across much of the Plains region this afternoon and evening, especially across the central Plains of Nebraska and northwest Kansas. Very large hail of 2-3 inches in diameter, severe gusts of 60-80 mph, and a couple of tornadoes are expected. ...Central Plains through tonight... Within generally zonal flow aloft, a low amplitude shortwave trough will progress eastward from the northern Rockies to the northern Plains through tonight. Lee cyclogenesis is expected across western NE/northeast CO near the southern influence of this midlevel trough, with a weak cold front farther north into the Dakotas. The surface front/cyclone, as well as a lee trough farther to the south will help focus thunderstorm development this afternoon and storms will spread eastward through tonight. Slightly elevated thunderstorms are ongoing in clusters this morning from eastern NE to eastern KS in association with low-level warm advection on the edge of the surface warm sector. These storms could pose a marginal hail/wind threat before weakening later this morning. Farther west, a few thunderstorm clusters persist from central NE to the TX Panhandle. Like the elevated storms to the east, these storms are also expected to weaken later this morning. In the wake of the morning storms, surface temperatures will warm into the 80s with boundary-layer dewpoints mainly in the upper 50s to lower 60s, beneath steep midlevel lapse rates. The net result will be a corridor of large buoyancy (MLCAPE of 2500-4000 J/kg) and minimal convective inhibition by mid afternoon from west TX to NE to the east of the lee trough/dryline, when thunderstorm development is expected. Somewhat stronger forcing for ascent will contribute to storm clustering/upscale growth from western into central NE, where MCS development is likely. The initial storms in western NE into northwest KS could be supercells capable of producing isolated very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter), before upscale growth leads to an increasing threat for damaging winds of 60-80 mph as storms surge eastward during the late afternoon/evening. Any tornado threat will be tied to the more discrete initial supercells, or fortuitous storm interactions. ...Northern Plains this afternoon/evening... The warm sector will narrow and buoyancy will weaken with northward extent from SD into ND, ahead of the surface cold front. This front, and ascent related to the approaching midlevel trough, will help focus a line of thunderstorms along the front in central ND by early-mid afternoon (possibly evolving from the ongoing storms near the southwest ND border), and storms will subsequently spread eastward toward western MN in the evening and develop southward into SD. The initial storms, or any embedded supercells, will pose a threat for large hail of 1-1.75 inches in diameter, while damaging gusts of 60-70 mph will become the more common threat once a linear mode is established (and before the storms move too far east of the primary buoyancy corridor). ...Southern High Plains this afternoon into tonight... The ongoing storm cluster in the eastern TX Panhandle may persist for a few hours this morning, though its longevity and influence on afternoon convection are uncertain. At least widely scattered storms are expected by mid-late afternoon along the dryline from the TX Panhandle into west central TX, potentially aided by a subtle southern-stream shortwave trough moving over NM this morning. 40-50 kt flow above the 500 mb level will help elongate hodographs and favor supercells capable of producing isolated very large hail (2-3 inches in diameter). Though storm coverage will be a primary driver of any damaging-wind threat, thermodynamic profiles will favor intense downdrafts capable of producing isolated significant outflow gusts of 75-80 mph. The afternoon/evening storms will spread eastward into northwest TX and western OK before beginning to weaken late tonight. ...Southern LA to central/north TX this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development will be possible in a loosely focused corridor from southern LA into parts of southeast, central and north TX along a remnant outflow/returning moisture gradient. Though storm development in any particular area is low confidence, a few storms in this area could pose a threat for isolated large hail/wind damage given large CAPE and sufficient deep-layer shear/hodograph length for at least some supercell potential. ..Thompson/Grams.. 06/02/2024 $$ --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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