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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Mike Powell | All | DAY2SVR: Nws Storm Predic |
June 6, 2024 4:04 PM * |
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ACUS02 KWNS 061733 SWODY2 SPC AC 061731 Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1231 PM CDT Thu Jun 06 2024 Valid 071200Z - 081200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF NEBRASKA AND NORTHERN KANSAS... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are possible from the central and southern High Plains into the central Plains on Friday. ...Central and southern High Plains east to the Mid-Missouri Valley... As weak short-wave troughing embedded within west-northwesterly flow aloft crosses the Intermountain West and begins to emerge into the High Plains, weak central Plains cyclogenesis is expected. This will help draw a return of low-level moisture (60s dewpoints) northward into Kansas and Nebraska, near and south of an evolving Nebraska warm front. Afternoon heating of the moistening low-level airmass will result in moderate destabilization, with greater mixing westward toward the High Plains resulting in a deep boundary layer. Isolated storms should initiate near a lee trough/dryline, from Nebraska southward to northeastern New Mexico and the Texas Panhandle, spreading eastward with time and -- due to cold pool generation -- possibly growing upscale into one or more clusters of storms. Damaging wind gusts would be the primary severe risk with this convection. Additional storm development may occur farther east in Nebraska, near the warm front, as a south-southwesterly low-level jet evolves beginning in the early evening. Initial storm development here would likely be supercellular, given moderately strong mid-level west-northwesterlies atop the low-level southerlies yielding favorable shear for organized/rotating storms. While a tornado would be possible -- particularly with a storm evolving near the warm front, damaging winds and, locally, hail, would be the more likely severe-weather risks. With time, this convection may also grow upscale, possibly merging with a eastward-moving cluster of ongoing convection and then growing further upscale, spreading across the Mid-Missouri Valley overnight. Storms would eventually weaken, due to thermodynamic deficiencies east of the Valley, but modest severe risk may extend as far east as southwestern Iowa and western Missouri. ..Goss.. 06/06/2024 $$ --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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