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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Mike Powell | All | DAY1SVR: Day 1 Convective |
June 17, 2024 8:29 AM * |
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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) |
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