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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Mike Powell | All | DAY1SVR: Day 1 Convective |
June 26, 2024 9:18 AM * |
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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 $$ --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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